Saturday, November 28, 2009

Swiss Will Not Release Polanski Before Monday


ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss authorities will not release Roman Polanski into house arrest at his luxury Alpine chalet until Monday at the earliest as bail conditions still have to be met.

A spokesman for the Justice Department said on Friday Polanski would not be allowed to travel to his holiday home in the ski resort of Gstaad until next week. The department will issue a statement as soon as he is freed, the spokesman said.

"The conditions have not yet been fulfilled," he said.

Polanski's is fighting extradition to face U.S. sentencing over a 1977 case of unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl.

The Swiss government announced on Thursday it would not appeal against a court ruling allowing Polanski to be freed as soon as electronic monitoring is ready and he posts $4.5 million bail, surrenders his identity and travel documents.

The 76-year-old Oscar-winning director, who holds dual French and Polish citizenship, was arrested at the request of the United States when he flew into Switzerland on September 26 to receive a lifetime achievement prize at a film festival.

Polanski was originally indicted on six charges, including rape, for having sex after plying the girl with champagne and drugs. He pleaded guilty to one count of sex with a minor.

But he skipped bail and fled before the case was concluded, believing a judge would sentence him to prison despite a plea for time already served.

The Swiss Justice Department is expected to decide "within weeks" on Polanski's possible extradition, but he could still appeal, potentially dragging out the dispute for months. He faces up to two years in a U.S. prison if he is extradited.

Polanski's films include "The Pianist" in 2002 for which he won an Academy Award, "Rosemary's Baby," "Repulsion" and "Knife in the Water."



:Article Source:abcnews.go.com

HSBC, Standard Chartered Lead Dubai Loans

4:00 PM London, 11:00 AM New York – UK stocks rebounded after early losses on the worries that Dubai debt rollover may presage a wider problem in the region. The banks in the UK and Europe dropped more than 5% after RBS confirmed that UK banks have $50 billion of loan exposure to UAE.

UK stocks managed to erase losses in the day on the worries that Dubai loan rescheduling may generate losses at UK banks. Royal Bank of Scotland said that UK banks have nearly $50 billion of loans exposure to U.A.E.

RBS also said that French banks have loans $11.3 billion and German banks have loaned $10.2 billion. Swiss banks have loaned $4.3 billion and Italian banks have lent $1.9 billion to the emirates. The data reflect direct lending at the end of June and does not capture the bonds issued and securitized by banks.

According to the data available from Bank of International Settlements and Emirates Banks Association said that HSBC had the highest loan exposure to UAE that may be as high as $11 billion followed by Standard Chartered Bank with $7.8 billion.

The FTSE 100 Index closed higher 60.24 or 1.1% to 5,254.37 and the pound edged lower to close at $1.643 and at €1.102.

Gainers & Losers

Accident Exchange Group Plc closed unchanged at 14.00 pence.

Ascent Resources Plc dropped 4.0% to 6.24 pence after the oil and gas explorer has conditionally raised £6 million through the sale of 120 million new ordinary shares at a price of 5 pence per share.

The Carphone Warehouse Group PLC rose 0.9% to 194.10 pence after the mobile phone retailer said first-half revenues rose 13% to £789 million from £697 million a year ago. Net profit for the first-half fell 96.5% to £20 million or 2.2 pence per diluted share compared to net profit of £574 million or 62.6 pence per share a year ago.

Chamberlin plc closed unchanged at 50.50 pence after the foundry and engineering firm said that demand has largely stabilized in most areas of the business and some sectors appear to be showing signs of recovery.

Domino''s Pizza UK & IRL plc rose 1.0% to 298.00 pence.

Hilton Food Group Plc increased 3.3% to 186.00 pence after the meatpacker said that it has signed a long term agreement with Coop Danmark, Denmark’s leading food retailer, to supply retail packaged fresh meat from 2011.

Hogg Robinson Group plc closed unchanged at 38.00 pence an international corporate travel services company said first-half revenues fell 9% to £155.3 million from £171 million a year ago. Net profit for the first-half fell 50% to £1.7 million or 0.5 pence per diluted share compared to net profit of £3.4 million or 1.1 pence per share a year ago.

Holidaybreak plc added 2.4% to 255 pence after the travel group said full-year revenues rose 4% to £473.4 million from £455.1 million a year ago. Net profit for the full-year fell 84% to £2.8 million or 4.7 pence per diluted share compared to net profit of £18 million or 31.3 pence per share a year ago.

International Public Partnership Limited the public and social infrastructure investment group rose 0.2% to 114.00 pence.

Morgan Sindall plc the contractor fell 0.5% to 529.50 pence.

Pinewood Shepperton plc fell 3.8% to 126.00 pence after the film studio said the planning application was refused on October 21, principally on the grounds that the development is in the green belt. The company will contest this application.

The Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc the bank added 1.5% to 33.50 pence and the bank has agreed to join the Asset Protection Scheme proposed by the UK government which will be put to the shareholders’ approval on December 15.

The bank also led the consortium of banks to raise debt for Dubai and said that UK and European banks are lead lenders to Dubai World.

RPC Group Plc advanced 4.7% to 226.00 pence after the manufacturer of rigid plastic packaging said first-half revenues fell 7.6% to £351.9 million from £381 million a year ago. Net profit for the first-half was £8.0 million or 8.0 pence per diluted share compared to net loss of £3.1 million or 3.1 pence per share a year ago.

SnackTime PLC the vending machine operator increased 5.4% to 192.50 pence.
:Article Source:ticker.com

Lauren DeTurk is now playing professional volleyball

Former Yucaipa High alumnus Lauren DeTurk is currently playing professional volleyball in Switzerland for the Saignelegier club team. DeTurk was offered the contract after playing at Northeastern University in Boston where she was Colonial Athletic Association 2008 Player Of the Year.

DeTurk is helping Saignelegier toward the “B” League championship which has already qualified for the Swiss Cup. There are three other Californians on her Saignelegier team: Kristin Kelly, Devon Sutherland and Emily Day. Their coach is Kevin Wray, a former assistant at Golden West College in Hun-tington Beach. There are a total of six American players on the Saignelegier team. “Lauren really enjoys it there and with the other English speaking girls, can travel around the country,” said DeTurk's mother, Betsy. According to Betsy DeTurk, her daughter signed a one-year contract and will return to America in April, when she will tryout for an Associated Volleyball Professionals beach team. She will ultimately return to Northeastern to complete her coursework for a biology degree. “It’s funny that the United States has some of the best Olympic volleyball, yet has no professional team leagues.”

Betsy DeTurk is the current boys junior varsity coach at Yucaipa High. She said that professional volleyball is very big around the world. “Six-figure salaries are common and in Russia, professional male players can earn $600,000 per season.”

After playing four years at Yucaipa High for coach Gail Diliberto, DeTurk earned a scholarship to Northeastern, a NCAA Division 1 school founded in 1898. Along with a number of All-League honors, DeTurk led Northeastern to the CAA League title in 2008 with a 12-2 record (19-11 overall). She was the sixth player in school history to surpass 1,000 kills and digs. Her 1,330 kills were third in school history. DeTurk was first team all-Colonial Athletic Association and East Region honorable mention.

She was a member of Northeastern’s track team, increasing her personal best in the javelin throw at every meet. She placed third in the javelin at the 2008 Eastern Regionals.

:Article Source:newsmirror.net

Ex-Canuck loving it in Switzerland

ZURICH, Switzerland -- Josh Holden is not easy to spot on the ice at Hallenstadion.

Nor are any of his EV Zug teammates or host ZSC Lions opponents because Swiss National League A uniforms are plastered with sponsors' logos from helmets to ankles. The leading scorers wear golden jerseys sponsored by Switzerland's post office.

The 1996 Vancouver Canucks' first round pick's name is on his lower back, not shoulders, and his number 27 is barely visible. He does get noticed when he sets up Fabian Schnyder for their club's only goal midway through the game. The chanting, scarf-waving fans from Zug (pronounced Zoog) enjoy a lone moment to rejoice during the 4-1 Thursday loss.

"They're right into the game," Holden says. "Back home it's a pastime to go and enjoy hockey, sit and watch and analyze. Here they come and jump and bang drums, scream and holler and throw beer."

Teams play 50-game regular seasons. The top eight make the playoffs while the bottom four play their own post-season tournament to decide which team gets relegated to the B-division. The three-metres-wider international rinks mean the hockey is more tactical and less physical. The shorter season in a small country also means less travel. Zug is just a half-hour from Zurich. The team's longest road trip is just over three hours by bus to Geneva.

"You can store more energy and rely on your strength and power," he said. "Even if you have an injury too you can wear it off and be ready for the next game.

The 31-year-old Calgary native, who has four children, had stints with Vancouver, Carolina Hurricanes and Toronto Maple Leafs before going to Finland's HPK Hameenlinna to keep working amid the 2004-2005 NHL lockout. Holden is in his second year in Zug, his third stop in the Swiss league after two years with Fribourg-Gotteron and one in Langnau.

:Article Source:vancouver.24hrs.ca

Touring: 28 trains later

Dave Richardson jumps onboard a Great Rail Journeys escorted tour to Switzerland and, with only one 10-minute delay, discovers travel that runs like clockwork

It was good of the hotel manager to invite us for a welcome drink, but we didn’t expect him to turn up in cloak and deerstalker hat sucking a long curling pipe. He didn’t say, “Elementary, my dear Watson” – but he really looked the part of Sherlock Holmes. His appearance was appropriate, as the Park Hotel du Sauvage in the Swiss resort of Meiringen is where the great fictional detective stayed the night before his “death”. Built in grand Belle Epoque style in 1880, this was our base for seven nights on Great Rail Journeys’ Jungfrau Express escorted tour.

The next day we took the first of many mountain trains, up to the Reichenbach Falls above Meiringen. A plaque marks the spot where Holmes and the dastardly Professor Moriarty plunged to their deaths in a story called The Final Problem, but as all Holmes fans know, it didn’t happen. Author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, although bored by his creation, had to bring Holmes back from the dead by popular demand.
There’s also a Sherlock Holmes museum in a former chapel next to the hotel, and the Holmes connection certainly added mystique to the holiday. Most people came for the scenery, and fortunately everyone enjoyed rail travel as there was plenty of it.

Tour manager

As on nearly all Great Rail Journeys’ European tours, the holiday started with a Eurostar train from London St Pancras. After taking five trains with one overnight stop, we arrived in Meiringen a leisurely 26 hours later. The tour manager plays a huge part in any escorted tour, and ours – an avuncular chap in his sixties – looked much like a typical client. He had plenty of responsibility looking after our large group of 38, including one with obvious walking difficulties. The age range was typical of escorted tours, mainly from mid-forties to mid-seventies. He did his best to integrate the group including three travelling alone, and gave out the first of his daily handwritten bulletins at St Pancras with details of train times and stops. A tour manager needs to be friendly but also authoritative, and he fitted the bill perfectly. He had a half sympathetic, half bemused expression which said, “I share your pain” – and that first appeared in Paris. The only problem I found was that you have to heave your own luggage on and off trains, although this was done for you at hotels in Meiringen, Cologne on the return trip, and at Brussels when changing to Eurostar.

Switzerland

We had to take a coach between stations in Paris, and due to station restrictions it was parked some distance away meaning elderly people had a struggle. But this was forgotten when we reached Switzerland, the perfect destination for a rail holiday as public transport – including lake steamers and buses – works so well. It’s a country of green meadows, steep mountains and placid lakes, and on all our excursions around the Bernese Oberland we saw fat, contented cows, and wooden houses with window boxes full of flowers. Highlights were a lake cruise from Lucerne; a trip up Rothorn mountain behind a gutsy little steam engine; and finally a trip up the Jungfrau, one of Europe’s highest mountains at 3,454 metres. The railway here is carved out of tunnels through the mountain, and on a clear day the views from the top are sublime, if very chilly.

Just one 10-minute delay

Only once did the tour nearly descend into chaos, as even the Swiss are prone to human error and seat reservations failed to materialise on one of four crowded trains used to reach the Jungfrau. Texts flew furiously back and forth to Great Rail Journeys’ HQ in York, and the tour manager’s “I share your pain” expression became set in stone. “There’s only one thing for it – use your elbows!” he declared. By the time we returned to London after 10 days, we had taken 28 trains (four of them optional) and only one had been late, by 10 minutes. By now we were firmly with the escorted tour mentality, and looked in vain for the tour manager to give us our tickets and lead us into the Underground. Suddenly we had to think for ourselves – and it didn’t come easily!

On track: more rail facts

Great Rail Journeys uses first-class travel wherever possible, including Eurostar. Another of its brands, Treyn Holidays, uses standard class travel and tourist class hotels, and it operates a rail and hotel booking service for independent travellers (www.railselect.com).

Other operators specialising in rail holidays and selling through agents include Ffestiniog Travel’s See the World by Rail (www.festtravel.co.uk), French Travel Service (www.f-t-s.co.uk), GW Travel (www.gwtravel.co.uk), Orient-Express (www.orient-express.com) and Dertour (www.dertour.co.uk). Explore (www.explore.co.uk) also has a rail brochure.

Group sizes vary, but are generally between 10 and 40.

Book it

Great Rail Journeys’ Jungfrau Express is priced at £1,598-£1,628 for 10 days including breakfast, dinner and all excursions, with one free day. Departures are weekly, with a few exceptions, from May 6 until September 30, 2010.
www.greatrail.com


:Article Source:ttglive.com

Reporter at large in Budapest


THERE are so many cakes on the table I have to stand up and move back to take a photograph. The best angle is a wide aerial. Our guide Katalin has ordered our small party a "sample selection" of treats at the character-filled Cafe Ruszwurm on Castle Hill high on the west (Buda) side of the Danube.

It is morning tea time, about an hour before we will have lunch and at least 10 minutes since Katalin braked suddenly at a mobile van near Matthias Church on our sightseeing stroll for us to try a chimney cake. It is so called, she says, because the mixture originally was rolled around a chimney to form its cylindrical shape.

It sounds like the fanciful stuff of fairytales but the vendor is indeed twirling a doughy mixture around a dowel-like spit until it crisps; then he rolls the hollow confection in cinnamon sugar and almonds and wraps it with a stiff twist of paper. It's like a crunchy Cornetto cone, without the filling.

And now we are cake-taking at the two-roomed Cafe Ruszwurm, a coffee house and confectioner since 1827. It's cosy and cheery in a time-stalled way with its tiled stove, lace doilies and cherrywood Biedermeier cabinets. There are chandeliers and brocade banquettes and a row of outdoor tables where students are smoking, drinking coffee and polishing off sugar-dusted slices.

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Katalin recites what she has ordered, pointing to each groaningly full plate. There are apricot jam-filled biscuits, poppyseed and sour cherry strudels, rich walnut Esterhazy cake layered with cream and topped with fondant, and slabs of crumbly Linzer torte. Then she suggests a slug of "Hungarian penicillin": a dose of Palinka, or schnapps. There's plum, pear and apricot: we take too long to decide so she orders the lot.

Next stop is the Central Market, in the 9th district on the east (Pest) side of the river, where there's a small chance to walk off some of the morning's excesses. It's the largest covered market in Hungary, about the size of an aircraft hangar, and ignoring Katalin's entreaties to try pickles and pressed meats from the basement stalls, we scurry around the main floor, only briefly pausing to admire strings of enormous garlic, missiles of extra-hot paprika and "goose-liver specialities".

The three-storey market, with its tiled floors and high vaulted roof inlaid with glass, was opened in 1897 and has been recently restored; you could easily spend half a day here, perhaps picking up the makings of a superior picnic.

As a former vegetarian (now an occasional meat-eater), I am terrified by the market's forests of salami and the prospect of pig's heads with hazy eyes. "The iron curtain might have vanished but the pork curtain was safely intact," notes my colleague James Jeffrey in Paprika Paradise, a rollicking travel narrative about his motherland. "The Hungarians applaud flesh in all its forms," he writes. "My favourite line in Lonely Planet's guide to Hungary was, until it was edited out, an overheard snippet of a waiter berating some helpless backpacker thus: If you don't want meat, go to Romania!"

Leaving my little group of fellow travellers, I take afternoon tea at Cafe Gerbeaud, founded in 1858 by a Swiss confectioner, and still one of Budapest's most popular. In a setting of tall ceilings and marble floors, there are elegant silver stands and glass-fronted cabinets filled with the likes of hazelnut truffle cakes, Sacher torte and flaky pastries chunky with apples and poppyseed. Chocolate cakes come with an astonishing six layers and even the cottage-cheese cakes (surely, comparatively light) look sinful.

And all to be washed down with hot chocolate (an alp of whipped cream on top) or a slug of that racy Palinka spirit.

Cafe Gerbeaud includes a pub and also serves meals (goose liver reigns) in its adjoining restaurant. It's a convivial spot to start the day with a continental breakfast, which includes sweet and salty rolls and a seasoned cottage-cheese platter.

On the afternoon of my visit, on its terrace overlooking tree-lined Vorosmarty Square, couples are rugged in coats against the early autumn coolness, small dogs on long leads waiting expectantly at their heels, no doubt ready to snap up any stray strudel flakes.

Should I also mention that on this piggy day I call into (but do not eat at) the sumptuous fin-de-siecle Cafe New York, its odd name attributed to the New York Life Insurance company, which opened it, on the ground floor of a palatial office building, in 1894? Once the haunt of playwrights and poets, its grandeur matches anything to be found in Vienna; or it did, until it was rammed by a Russian tank in 1956. Now it Is part of the New York Palace Hotel, glammed-up and re-ornamented by Italy's Boscolo Hotels group.

With parquet floors, tall mirrors and painted ceilings worthy of an Italian duomo, Cafe New York is extravagant beyond measure.

Should I confess that I lunch at the busy little Cafe Kor, in the 5th district, where the schnitzels are the size of hot-water bottles and pancakes come loaded with nuts and raisins, doused with sugar powder and chocolate sauce?

Or that I almost have to be carried to my room at the utterly lovely Four Seasons Gresham Palace, as stuffed as a cabbage? I lie down and try valiantly to balance Paprika Paradise on the expanded acreage of my stomach.

After a good night's sleep, you have to love a hotel that offers a breakfast menu featuring goose liver and wild mushroom omelet with roesti and a slug of Zwack Unicum herb liqueur "to make your stomach-ache go away".

Susan Kurosawa was a guest of Singapore Airlines and Four Seasons Gresham Palace.

* * *

Checklist
The art nouveau Four Seasons Gresham Palace, converted from a grand apartment building, is beautifully located at Roosevelt Terrace on the east (Pest) side of the river. Its Gresham Kavehaz serves freshly baked pastries and cakes in a classic setting. More: fourseasons.com.

Most traditional cafes in Budapest offer meals and teas all day; Cafe Gerbeaud, for example, opens from 9am to 9pm. All cafes mentioned, except Ruszwurm, are on the east side of the Danube.

Paprika Paradise: Travels in the Land of my Almost Birth by James Jeffrey (Hachette, $35) is available at sites such as shop.abc.net.au.

:Article Source:theaustralian.com.au

Club Focus - Milan - Missed opportunity to qualify



By Rami Soufi
Il Diavolo did not take advantage of hosting Marseille as the Rossoneri players failed to impress the tifosi with a shaky performance. For the sake of not being repetitive, the same problems singled out in previous segments of the Milan Club Focus surfaced once again to prove the positive run was not a precursor for better things to come. The usual concerns about the goalkeeping position and both full-backs have recently been compounded by the lack of an effective midfielder who can help shield Milan’s defensive line.



The outburst of midfield general Gennaro Gattuso highlights the problem further as he voiced to Sky Italia his displeasure at not featuring in Milan’s starting line-up. This helped fuel the profuse rumours about his potential departure from the San Siro. Gattuso has been linked with a number of clubs in both Italy and England according to the Italian and English Press. The latest addition to the list of interested parties would reunite Gattuso with a familiar face in the shape of former Coach Carlo Ancelotti, who is now managing Chelsea, the leading team in the Premier League.



It remains to be seen whether the hard-tackling midfield dynamo will leave after more than 10 seasons with the club. Even if Gattuso remains with the side, his presence will not properly address the doubts over the anchor position in midfield as he is out of form and is in steady decline from a physical standpoint. The other reserve midfielder, Mathieu Flamini, has failed to impress since his move from Arsenal in 2008. The Frenchman is a shadow of the player who imposed his game and stamped his authority while featuring for Arsène Wenger’s side. The two starters, in the shape of aging captain Massimo Ambrosini and the inconsistent Andrea Pirlo, do not offer the adequate protection for the defense. The talented Pirlo has been mediocre at best this season while Ambrosini performed admirably in a very limited number of matches, most notably in the Champions League against Real Madrid. The signing of a solid defensive midfielder ought to be one of Coach Leonardo’s priorities as he looks to shuffle his side.






Turning attention back to the Champions League encounter against the French side, the Rossoneri midfield was outplayed while full-back Massimo Oddo’s performance ought to be forgotten and his early substitution (though some attributed it to an injury later confirmed on Milannews.it) is perhaps an indication of his woeful display. Oddo cannot be blamed since he no longer has the legs to duplicate his impressive performances during his Lazio days, when he would roam forward to whip in dangerous crosses, provide extra impetus to attacks and even contribute with assists and goals.



He was most culpable for the goal scored by Marseille but his fellow defenders were not any better. Alessandro Nesta had a rare off-night which made the home side look quite shaky at the back as Gianluca Zambrotta also failed to deliver on the left-flank while Thiago Silva was perhaps the best of a flailing bunch. As disappointing as the draw and the performance were, all is not lost for Leonardo and his troops since a victory against Swiss side Zürich would guarantee safe passage to the next round. Alexandre Pato and Ronaldinho put in a decent performance while Marco Borriello scored again to confirm his role as the leading front man for the club, pushing Klaas-Jan Huntelaar even further out of the San Siro.



The Rossoneri’s upcoming Serie A fixture will see the side travel to Catania in a tricky encounter since Milan suffers when playing against minnow teams which defend vigorously and use an aggressive approach to overpower the players. Midfield schemer Pirlo will be missing as he serves a one-match suspension, which could be a blessing in disguise as a more robust midfielder is perhaps better equipped to face Catania’s players.



Leonardo will be hoping the Brazilian contingent will continue their steady performances, although Dida remains an unknown entity, going from hero to zero in the space of minutes. The Brazilian tactician is probably anxious for the December break so as to offer his old and tired players a welcome rest. He will be hoping the side has remained in Europe by then in order to have more funds to bring in some decent signings. In an inconsistent season the best the rookie Coach can hope for is to take things one step at a time and focus on the next game, a fixture that is certainly winnable.






Milan Club Focus 2009/10


Pre-season

Pre-season expectation - August 18, 2009



Week 1

Leonardo breathes as Brazilians relieve pressure - August 25, 2009



Week 2

Kaka returns to the San Siro - August 27, 2009

How to play 4-3-1-2, a lesson from their rivals - September 1, 2009

Reshuffle the current squad, regain the winning mentality - September 4, 2009



International week (Georgia-Italy, Italy-Bulgaria)

Leonardo's time to react - September 7, 2009



Week 3

Livorno springs opportunity to end crisis - September 11, 2009

Serie A slides down priority list - September 15, 2009

Leonardo lurches into decision-making territory - September 18, 2009



Week 4

Off the pitch rumours continue to swirl - September 22, 2009



Week 5

Old legs cannot win forever, will Berlusconi follow in Della Valle's footsteps? - September 25, 2009



Week 6

A powerhouse that no longer strikes fear - September 29, 2009



Week 7

Time is running out to save il Diavolo's season - October 2, 2009

A draw as bitter as a defeat - October 6, 2009

The club is not for sale - October 9, 2009



International week (Republic of Ireland-Italy, Italy-Cyprus)

In search of strikers and defenders - October 13, 2009



Week 8

Berlusconi reiterates he will not sell as the Rossoneri prepare for Roma - October 16, 2009

Brazilian duo see off Roma - October 20, 2009



Week 9

Rossoneri record famous win in Madrid - October 23, 2009

Leonardo stumbles upon the 4-2-3-1 - October 27, 2009



Week 10

Two precious points dropped - October 30, 2009



Week 11

Borriello strikes twice as Milan continue climbing the table - November 3, 2009

A bitter draw after Pato’s disallowed ‘goal’ as Huntelaar emerges unscathed - November 6, 2009



Week 12

The Rossoneri challenging Juventus for second place - November 10, 2009



International week (Italy-Holland, Italy-Sweden)



Week 13

Crucial stretch begins as Dzeko linked again - November 20, 2009

Rossoneri continue impressive run - November 24, 2009



Week 14

Missed opportunity to qualify - November 27, 2009

:Article Source:footballitaliano.co.uk

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IRS goes global


Corruption in the government strikes yet again. This time, however, we're exporting.

For those who feared the rest of the world could not possibly hate us any more, think again. Over 14,000 Americans disclosed the existence of offshore bank accounts following investigations by the IRS with the cooperation of Swiss bank UBS. While most citizens use such accounts simply for ease of travel when overseas or to hide funds from exes , there are also many individuals who use such accounts to shelter funds from the government as a measure of tax evasion. Those who disclosed the information shall not be subject to criminal penalties so long as they pay back taxes based on the value of such accounts.

This deception is bad enough. The real issue here, however, is the plan by the IRS to expand its global workforce by 800 members, and beef up its international presence at existent branches such as Hong Kong, while also opening new satellite branches in Beijing and Sydney.

That's what will get the world to love us again: spreading the joy of the IRS, a corrupt organization that most Americans can't even stand to deal with. Spreading the "charms" of this group will not help our standing in the international community in the least. In fact, it will most likely draw sharp criticism and hatred,seen as the US attempting to police the world again, this time in a bureaucratic manner.

Here's a proposal (one which admittedly requires a bit of thought and a good deal of faith in the American people). Let's get rid of the income tax, and the IRS. What's most likely to happen?

We've already cut out a major government organization, that costs around $12 billion dollars.
Americans have more money to spend, which helps struggling families and, by extension, the economy.
Those looking to shelter their earnings from taxation have no reason to go through the trouble of setting up offshore accounts, thus most likely bring more money back into America.
Maybe, just maybe, Americans and politicians see that bigger government isn't always better, and we begin to trim back the size to only the necessary functions.
Smaller government requires fewer taxes to run; currently the federal income tax covers only about 45% of the cost of running the Government.
Of course this is a hypothetical situation. One thing to keep in mind, however, is that the income tax as we know it did not exist until the passage of the 16th Amendment in 1913. Bear in mind that in the 127 years from independence to the ratification of the 16th Amendment, there were only 8 economic crises (panic, recession, or depression), most due to governmental interference (such as the Depression of 1807, resulting primarily from the Embargo Act). Since the establishment of the income tax, there have been 14 such crises.

For more info:

Federal Income taxes legal?

Source of Taxation Powers


US Recession History




WEIGH IN BELOW: Is it a good idea for the IRS to go global to combat tax evasion? Should we consider abolishing the federal income tax or the IRS as an organization?

:Article Source:examiner.com

Champions League - Real Madrid edge closer


A below par Real Madrid all but assured their place in the knockout stages of the Champions League with an lacklustre 1-0 victory over FC Zurich in Group C.

Manuel Pellegrini's men barely broke sweat as they defeated the Swiss outfit at the Santiago Bernabeu. Gonzalo Higuain scored the decisive goal in the 21st minute with a straightforward finish.

The highlight of the second half was the return of Cristiano Ronaldo who replaced Raul for his first appearance in almost two months.

With Milan and Marseille drawing at the San Siro, Zurich are out, leaving Madrid two points clear at the top with a game to go.

The Rossoneri, in second place, travel to Zurich, while Marseille host the Galacticos at the Stade Velodrome needing at least a win to qualify.

Kaka looked to set the tone of the evening with an early shot that had Johnny Leoni at full stretch.

Unsurprisingly Madrid dominated the early exchanges sweeping the ball from left to right on an immaculate surface, leaving Zurich entrenched in their own half.

But for all their possession Los Blancos demonstrated very little urgency, until a lapse of concentration in the visiting defence presented Higuain with a simple chance.

Kaka drove at the heart of the Zurich rearguard, drawing Heniz Barmettler out of his central defensive position, leaving Higuain in acres of space.

The Brazilian slipped the ball through to the striker who applied a cool finish past a helpless Leoni.

Minutes later, Xabi Alonso, looking for his first Madrid goal on his 28th birthday, stung the hands of the Zurich custodian with a fierce drive from distance.

Leoni was left at the mercy of Real's firepower once again. Higuain picked out Marcelo, coiled on the edge of the box from a corner, and the South American rattled the post with a first time volley. The goalkeeper barely had time to blink.

With one eye on Sunday's Clasico against Barcelona at the Camp Nou, Manuel Pellegrini's men coasted through the first half in second gear.

The home side's dreary performance continued after the interval as they plodded along to victory against a limited Zurich side.

The second half was littered with scrappy fouls and cheap bookings as Pellegrini's troops struggled to infiltrate a wall of orange and blue.

One of the few highlights in the second period came in the 67th minute when substitute Rafael van der Vaart met Marcelo's cross with a first time volley that required a straightforward save from Leoni.

In the 70th minute Raul made way for Ronaldo, who returned to action after almost two months out with an ankle injury.

But the £80 million man failed to make an impact as Bernard Challandes' side continued to stifle.

Before the final whistle Van der Vaart and Ronaldo both missed chances to extend the Spanish giants' lead.

Ben Welch / Eurosport




:Article Source:uk.eurosport.yahoo.com

Christmas skiing in Zermatt


It's short notice, I know, but for a better-value family ski holiday (cheap might be asking a bit much at the present rate of exchange) try the week before Christmas – the only time of the winter when school holidays coincide with low-season prices. The snow is often good and the slopes are always empty

Prime candidates include Zermatt, where Europe's highest ski area straddles the Swiss-Italian border at the shoulder of the Matterhorn. Zermatt's winter season starts in October and it is one of the few resorts that puts more effort into the Christmas spirit than merely opening its shops. There are ski-testing weekends, special warm-up ski school weeks and attractive hotel-and-lift-pass packages.

This time last year they announced a new top-to-bottom ski race, The Infinity, to be held two days after the end of term. Top to bottom in Zermatt is not quite infinity, but it is about as close as skiing gets: an epic run of more than 20 kilometres for the 2,200m drop in altitude from the Klein Matterhorn (3,820m) to the village.

The format seemed surprisingly relaxed: no entry fee, few rules, and a family category with the generous provision that racers aged up to 12 would have their time divided by three. My son, who would be 12 years and 50 weeks on race day, saw his name on the trophy and a few short weeks later, as the strains of the last "O come let us adore him" rang out across the quad, we made our escape from school and a beeline for Switzerland, Infinity, and beyond.

"It must be difficult for you British this winter," said a man in a tight black vest, dumping our bags on a purple bearskin rug in our room at the hip new-look Hotel Post. "Would you like to order a packed lunch for tomorrow?" A packed lunch, in the mountain restaurant capital of the Alps? The full impact of the financial crisis hit home with a ghastly thud. A generation has passed since we were routinely patronised by hotel porters in this manner. I thanked him and said we would see how we got on.

After supper we attended a race briefing in a bar near the ice rink. Organiser Jürg Biner, a former Olympic freestyle skier, outlined his vision of Infinity. "It's a Chinese downhill," he said. "We all start together, and it's quite narrow up there, so no skating or pushing please." Jürg reckoned 11 minutes was the time to beat.

No pushing at the start? George hadn't heard anything so stupid since I asked him not to hit the ball at the opposing lady net player in the village mixed doubles. Was this a race, or a high altitude love-in? The Infinity sounded good to me: a brave throwback to the early days of skiing when our racing grandparents set off in a free-for-all "geschmozzle start" and came in with bloody noses and broken skis.

Then Jürg dropped his bombshell. With ''extreme weather'' forecast for the morning, the Infinity's chances were… infinitesimal. As a fallback he suggested catching an early train to Gornergrat for some fast skiing and an altitude drop of 1,150m on the 10km run back. Gornergrat was no substitute for Infinity, but on a day of freak storms when all Switzerland battened down the hatches, it gave us a thrilling kick-start to winter, on a longer run than top-to-bottom at most resorts. By the time we set off down it for the third time, our racecourse was more like a slalom than a downhill as the piste filled up with holiday skiers. Some stood aside and shook their fists at Jürg, while others put their heads down and joined in the fun.

As the weather deteriorated and chairlifts closed, we headed for our first post-Lehman Alpine lunch: two plates of carbo-loaded mountain fuel, a Coke, a glug of house wine, and no change from £50. Did someone mention a picnic?

Using the new high-speed rail link that has brought Zermatt an hour closer to Zurich, George and I took our act to the Bernese Oberland, swapping one Swiss beauty spot for another. "Arriving in Mürren is like coming home," George wrote in the diary I handed down as a punishment for beating me down the mountain in Zermatt. "Alan's hotel and Annelis's hotel are waiting there to welcome us, like smiling faces on the platform." It occurred to me that referring to a hotel not by its name but by that of its host is a sound measure of a good billet.

Alan (Ramsay, from Peebles) came to Mürren as a school leaver, banged on doors refusing to take no for an answer and worked bars until the owners of the wonderful Hotel Eiger ("Annelis's hotel") had the sense to entrust him with the job of reviving the run-down hotel next door. Alan and his wife have made The Eiger Guest House the perfect base for prime Swiss skiing on a budget.

Their upgrading campaign has reached a halfway stage where we can choose comfort with en suite for the parents and a bargain attic for the children. Alan pulls pints, waits tables, finds time to chat, keeps hot food waiting for late arrivals and stops working only if snow conditions absolutely require him to snatch an hour on the hill, where he skis in a kilt at high speed, as witnessed by an assortment of broken skis decorating the bar.

"What's for supper?" was George's first question. "Tongue," Alan said. "Unless you'd prefer rabbit." My son's opinion of The Eiger Guest House took an instant nose dive. He perked up when Alan produced pork and chips, and went stratospheric when he saw the games room – pool table, darts board, internet stations – empty and waiting for him. For George, pre-Christmas skiing means being able to yo-yo between Alan's pool table and Facebook at will.

Some Mürren regulars consider the Eigers – Hotel and Guesthouse – too inconveniently located for skiing, at the wrong end of the village for the serious business of the Schilthorn cable car. I enjoy the walk, but there is no denying that children take the pleasure out of a morning stroll, double its duration and start the family ski day on the wrong foot. George and I fell into the lazy habit of catching the train in the opposite direction for the five-minute journey to Winteregg, where an agonisingly slow chair lift gave us a back door into the ski area. This winter it has been replaced with something twice as fast and the new lift will enable us to ski across to the Schilthornbahn in no time, bypassing the village.

For a sleepy old resort like Mürren, this is seismic change. And it leaves the Eigers better placed than ever. Lifts open next Saturday, Alan's hotel on December 12, Annelis's hotel on December 16.

Getting there
Swiss (0845 601 0956; www.swiss.com) flies to Zurich from London City and Heathrow from £109 return, with no extra charge for ski equipment. Swiss Rail Passes at www.myswitzerland.com; from £75 for a transfer ticket (one return journey within Switzerland); children under 16 travel free.

Staying there
Zermatt Tourism (41 27 966 8100; www.zermatt.ch) can organise four nights’ b & b and four-day lift pass from £282 per person; many other packages including spa treatments, ski school and ski hire are also available.

Mürren Tourism (0041 33 8568686; www.muerren.ch) can organise two nights’ b & b and two-day lift pass at Eiger Guest House (www.eigerguesthouse.com) from £91; and Hotel Eiger (www.hoteleiger.com), from £170.

Further information
This season a six-day or longer lift pass for Zermatt or the Jungfrau region (Mürren, Wengen, Grindelwald) can be used for a day’s skiing in the other area, during the period of validity.

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Friday, November 27, 2009

AirPlus International Releases Industry Survey on the Travel Promotion Act


ALEXANDRIA, Va. - (Business Wire) AirPlus International, a global provider of corporate travel payment solutions, releases November’s The Wire…from AirPlus focused on the proposed U.S. Travel Promotion Act. Over 60 percent of respondents were not aware of the Act, with another 29 percent unsure of the details. Over 53% were unsure how the money collected would be used, and further, another 73% felt that if implemented, the fees would be reciprocated for U.S. travelers into other countries. For more details, including a complimentary PDF of the results, please visit the AirPlus Community.

“This Act will certainly have an impact on the travel industry overall, not just business travel. At AirPlus, we polled our industry colleagues to learn how they felt on the topic. Clearly, the results indicate that there is not enough awareness of the Act,” said Richard Crum, President of AirPlus International, Inc.

The Wire…from AirPlus is a monthly report on the pulse of the industry and its relevant topics. Results of this edition are based on a survey of 96 travel management professionals in North America, Europe, Africa and Asia/Pacific in November 2009. A link to the Travel Promotion Act website may be found here: http://poweroftravel.org/statistics/.

AirPlus International provides savings to over 32,000 customers worldwide through a suite of business travel payment solutions which include central bill accounts, corporate cards and online management tools. AirPlus is travel agency neutral, the leading issuer of UATP worldwide and the preferred partner of various airlines such as Air China, British Airways (NYSE:BAB), Continental Airlines (NYSE:CAL), Luxair, Lufthansa German Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Swiss International Air Lines, TAP Portugal and Singapore Airlines. For more information, please visit www.airplus.com, contribute to our community at www.airpluscommunity.com, follow us at www.twitter.com/AirPlus, and become a fan at www.facebook.com/airplusinternational. Press may contact: Rana Walker, Marketing and Communications at +1 (703) 373-0947 or rwalker@airplus.com.


AirPlus International
Rana Walker, Marketing and Communications
+1 703-373-0947

:Article Source:earthtimes.org

Doubles Game: Federer - My life with the twins


He has passed Sampras's Grand Slam record, married Mirka, and become a father – now Roger Federer hopes to close an incredible year in style at the ATP World Finals in London. He tells Paul Newman why, despite the nappies changing and sleepless nights, he's more driven than ever on court

Rich or poor, famous or humble, young or old, men are apparently the same the world over. Roger Federer, whose wife Mirka gave birth to twin daughters three months ago, knows, like most males, that when it comes to dealing with babies who cry in the middle of the night, the job is best left to an expert.


Click here or click the image on the right to launch our guide to Federer's year to remember.

"Mirka gets up more," Federer admits. "She's quick on her feet. I sleep very deeply, which actually helps me to sleep through some screaming."

Do Charlene Riva and Myla Rose wake up much during the night? "Sure. If one sleeps the other one's awake. That would be too nice of them to be asleep at the same time! They don't sleep through yet. There were times, especially at the beginning, when I woke up and helped as well. Now I think we've got into the right habits. During the day I try to help as much as I can."

Federer does "a bit of everything", including feeding the babies and changing nappies, but adds: "For Mirka, the most important thing is just that I'm there. She doesn't care too much if I change nappies or feed them. She just wants me to hold them as much as possible, because we both believe it's very important that mum and dad are both there as much as possible."

Few sportsmen and women have to travel as far and as frequently as tennis players. Federer and family were on the road within a fortnight of the twins' births, heading for Montreal, Cincinnati and New York.

"I knew that trip would give me some idea of how possible it would be to travel," Federer says. "What I have realised is that travelling with babies isn't the most difficult thing in the world. The twins are very good travellers. Of course we'd never put their health at risk for anything, because that's what's most important, but it's been fun, travelling in a big group, as a family. I'm happy because it was the way I expected it to be. I expected some more screaming along the way in planes and everything, but it's been really easy.

"We were a bit surprised when we learned that Mirka was going to have twins, and we were maybe a touch worried that it would be really difficult and stressful, but so far it's been really easy. I think we've had the right approach. Mirka is very laid-back and I'm also a calm person, so I think all of that enabled us to handle the situation."

Federer is talking at Roland Garros, home of the French Open, where he practised during last week's Masters tournament, staged on the other side of Paris. The most remarkable year of even his remarkable life will finish, in sporting terms, next week in London at the season-ending Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, which start at the O2 Arena on Sunday.

It is a year that began in tears after his defeat to Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open, and saw Federer marry his long-term girlfriend, become the father of twins, complete his set of major triumphs by winning the French Open, win an all-time record 15th Grand Slam tournament with his sixth Wimbledon title and reclaim his world No 1 ranking.

It could not be finishing in more appropriate fashion. "This is an amazing trip for me," Federer says. "It only really came to my mind when I was playing in Basel. I thought to myself: 'I'm playing here at home in Basel, where I grew up, then I'm going to Paris, where I won the French Open for the first time, then I'm going to London, where I won Wimbledon.' It's really inspirational to come back to places where you have so many memories – and these three tournaments definitely have that. These are good times."

No wonder he is in a relaxed mood as he sits back in his chair. Before the ATP Masters, the Swiss took a six-week break from tennis, before returning to a competition in his home city of Basel. Federer rarely gives the impression that he is anything but calmness personified, but the time he has been able to spend recently with his family back in Switzerland seems to have left him particularly mellow.

What was a typical day for an extraordinary family during his break? "I was just happy to be at home. We really had no plans. Friends would come over to see the babies and we would hang out with them – it was those kind of days. It's what you sometimes look forward to during the year – not having something to do at two o'clock, four o'clock, six o'clock. If we were in the mood to go out, we did.

"I tried to spend as much time as possible with the babies because I know there will be a time when we're travelling, like we are right now, and we're at the tennis, doing interviews and practising, and can't be with them."

The time at home was also beneficial from a sporting standpoint. "Babies or not, I needed that break, mentally and physically, to recuperate from a tough year," Federer says. "From Miami all the way through to the US Open was a tough stretch with a lot of emotions – getting married, expecting the births, was all energy-consuming. On top of that I had so much success, so it was a lot of things at once. But I feel like I'm refreshed again. That's great. Spending some time with the babies in a completely private way was key. I'm lucky in that I haven't spent one day apart from them yet."

Federer will go into the end-of-season finale in better shape than 12 months ago, when he had a back problem and then fell ill. He estimates that he was feeling "only at 50 per cent well" – for a while he could not even bend down to tie up his laces – and went out at the round-robin stage, ending a run of five successive appearances in the final. The knock-out blow was delivered by Andy Murray, who gave everything in a three-hour thriller that probably scuppered his own chances of beating Nikolay Davydenko in the semi-finals the following day.

Had Murray's determination to send Federer packing come as a surprise, given that the Scot had already qualified and did not need the win? "You've seen me play many dead rubbers over the years and you don't just give them away," Federer smiles. "There are too many points involved and maybe too much money. There's too much at stake, too much pride as well. Why just lose against a main rival if you don't have to? I was vulnerable and he knew that."

That result was the second of four successive defeats to Murray. When Federer ended the sequence at their most recent meeting, in Cincinnati in August, the Swiss seemed particularly fired up, although he insists: "I always have the same hunger to beat players. I'm not one for revenge, even if many people like to build that up."

There have been times, nevertheless, when Murray, a classic counter-attacker, has appeared to get under Federer's skin. After losing in Dubai last year Federer said he was surprised Murray's game had not developed and that he would "have to grind very hard for the next few years if he's going to keep playing this way."

However, Federer believes he copes with opponents like Murray better than he did in his early days against men like Lleyton Hewitt and David Nalbandian. "I had a lot of trouble against those baseliners early on just because they were too consistent. They could always get one more ball back. Maybe they didn't have the best serve, but I wasn't the best return player, so I couldn't take advantage. My serve wasn't solid enough yet, so I would always get tangled up in those horrible baseline rallies.

"Murray can still do that to some degree, but when I play too well or too offensively I can take time away from him now. And I'm too physical, whereas in the beginning I couldn't do that. I couldn't get around backhands like I can now. Now I can mix up my game too well for him to get under my skin.

"I know what I can do and I know what he can do. When we both play well it's a close match, but I always feel it's the attacker who holds the key to success, so it's up to me whether I win or lose, not up to him. That's why I don't mind the match-up, to be honest.

"It's like when [Pete] Sampras and [Andre] Agassi played. Agassi was more aggressive [than most counter-attackers], but still Sampras held the key because he was serving, pushing the limits, taking the risks. Which Murray doesn't do so much – though that doesn't take anything away from Murray. That's just his game style.

"Everybody has his own game and you can't change the way you play. It's just something you're born with. He comes to the net more, for instance, than other players. I think if you look closely, every player needs to have something aggressive in his game to play well. If you want to be a top player you need to have offensive skills."

Is he surprised that, at 22, Murray has not yet won his first Grand Slam title? "How old was I?" says Federer. He was 21. "I'm not that surprised. How many serious chances has he had to win a Slam now? Maybe six, when he's been a real contender? Before that it would have been a bit of a surprise.

"It's not that easy. I was favourite to win the French Open in 2003 and I lost in the first round in straight sets. He's done better than I did! Of course I never expected to be as dominant or as good after that, but sometimes you just have to wait and see. But at the same time he's come close a couple of times. He made the final against me [at the 2008 US Open] and the semi-finals at Wimbledon, and was able to handle the pressure there. I think he's not far off."

Woods becomes the model parent for Federer

If Roger Federer needed inspiration to maintain his winning ways after becoming a father, he need look no further than Tiger Woods, who has become a good friend. The world's best golfer has two children, the first of them born two years ago. Although the flow of victories may have slowed, the American remains the man to beat.

"When you do something best in life, you don't really want to give that up – and for me it's tennis and for him it's golf," Federer says. "Next to that I think we love being fathers of kids. And being a husband is for me as big a priority as being a father."

Although opportunities to see each other are rare, Federer and Woods support each other whenever possible and stay in contact by telephone and by text. In terms of major victories, Woods held the lead over Federer for a while, but he has been stuck on 14 since last year's US Open, four behind Jack Nicklaus's all-time record. Federer's victories this year at the French Open and Wimbledon took him on to 15 Grand Slam titles, eclipsing the previous record held by Pete Sampras.

Although Woods won in Melbourne last weekend, the American does not have to travel as far afield or as regularly as Federer. Three of golf's four majors are staged in the United States, which also hosts a year-round tour. Tennis, in contrast, visits numerous countries around the world. The four Grand Slam tournaments are staged in three different continents, while Masters Series events are held in cities as far apart as Shanghai, Cincinnati and Madrid.

Does Federer envy Woods for being able to stay closer to home for longer periods during the year? "That's his advantage, but not really," Federer says. "I don't mind travelling the world. Sure, at times it's hard, but we're both a little a bit in control of our own schedules. We can play as much as we want.

"Of course there are some rules and regulations and if you want to be the best player in the world you have certain commitments and there are other things you want to do on your own behalf because you love the sport too much. And sitting at home on the couch isn't that fulfilling.

"I always said I love travelling the world and going to all those great cities. I consider myself very fortunate. I'm not sure that I would want the tour just to be in Europe. Sure that would make it easier for the family, but that's not the way it is. You can't change it."

Federer has always had strong family bonds but agrees his focus had shifted since the birth of his twins. "Before, I guess, mum and dad were everything, but now, in my case, I had two new girls and all of a sudden they're completely dependent on you and there's a third generation. It's a funny shift all of a sudden. You have the babies, you have yourself and then you have your parents. Unfortunately I don't have grandparents any more.

"All of a sudden it makes you realise even more what your own parents did for you and how much you owe them, although at the same time I always knew that. I think that's the nice part of becoming a parent."

:Article Source:independent.co.uk

Swiss visas for Libyans down to a trickle


Switzerland has drastically reduced the number of visas granted to Libyan citizens, with only 83 issued so far this year compared to 5,902 in the same period last year.
In response to a motion submitted by the Foreign Affairs Commission of the House of Representatives, the government on Thursday revealed the extent of the restrictions imposed since the detention of two Swiss businessmen by the regime in Tripoli.

The men were first detained in Tripoli in July 2008, days after the arrest of the Libyan leader's son Hannibal Gaddafi and his wife Aline in Geneva on charges of mistreating their servants.

Swiss representatives abroad no longer have the right to issue visas to Libyans and all applications are currently being referred to the Foreign Ministry and Federal Migration Office.

Earlier this month, Libya complained about a European policy of restricting Schengen visas to Libyan citizens. Switzerland is part of the Schengen area, and under the agreement has a veto over the allocation of the visas which allow border-free travel throughout the 25 member countries in mainland Europe.

Claiming that the majority of Libyan applications were being denied, deputy foreign minister Khaled Kaïm denounced a "systematic and programmed solidarity with Switzerland".

:Article Source:swissinfo.ch

10 local high school juniors to expand education with free trip abroad

By: Glenda H. Caudle Special Features Editor

Posted: Wednesday, November 25, 2009 5:50 pm

By GLENDA H. CAUDLE
Special Features Editor
From St. Paul’s to St. Peter’s.
Those are the parameters for a second all-expense-paid European journey for a group of students from Obion County.
Youth looking for a relaxing vacation at the beach would probably not be attracted to this summer adventure, but more than 30 members of the Class of 2011 from Union City, Obion County Central and South Fulton high schools were intrigued by the idea of a non-stop trip abroad that would offer opportunities to explore, experience and expand.
The overwhelming majority of those who attended one of two information sessions about the trip with their parents a few weeks ago went on to complete the application process, which included appearing before a group of Rotary Club members experienced in conducting interviews with young people seeking the organization’s support for their educational futures through the well-known scholarship program.
This time, however, the interview team was seeking the students most likely to benefit from the free European tour. They also took into account whether the students’ families could support such an adventure themselves (those who could make that commitment were not considered for the free trip, at the specific request of the donors in the club who wanted to provide an opportunity some students could not otherwise enjoy). The interview team also took into account whether the teens had indicated by past performance that they could be relied upon for good standards of behavior, punctuality, respect for authority and an ability to contribute to the welfare of the traveling group. And, of course, the students had to convince the Rotary Club members they really, really, really wanted to go on the trip.
Ten students — eight from Union City and one each from South Fulton and Obion County Central — made the final cut and were notified of their selection Monday morning as some members of the trip committee and the trip’s 2010 chaperone, UCHS English teacher Joanna Wisener, visited their schools and delivered the good news.
From OCCHS, Alton Alexander got the nod. At SFHS, the lucky student is Jacob Cleaver. UCHS junior class travelers include Chase Bowling, Jasmine Davis, Antonio Cox, Kassadie Mullins, Trey Maddox, Cameryn Fishel, Lakevius Turner and Megan Hickman.
Also joining the group as a chaperone will be Mrs. Wisener’s husband, Clark.
The group will leave Union City June 15 and fly to London, where they will spend two nights and take in as many of the sights in the city as they can cram into the hours allotted. High on the list of “must-see” sites is St. Paul’s Cathedral. Then it’s on to Paris, courtesy of a ferry ride across the English Channel with a tour director from Cosmos Travel. After two nights in the City of Light, it will be on to Lake Lucerne in Switzerland — an area described by those who participated in the June 2009 trip as the most beautiful they had ever seen. After two nights there, the group will board their tour bus again, joining travelers from around the world, and head southeast into Italy, where they will spend two nights in the Venice area, an evening in Pisa and two nights in Rome — where a visit to St. Peter’s is on the agenda — before returning home June 27.
All their expenses will be paid. Their trip “package” includes the cost of their passports; a pair of brightly-colored Union City Rotary Club shirts to be worn by everyone in the group on the day of departure and the day they return home; special backpacks emblazoned with the Rotary Club emblem; identical travel document holders to keep passports, tickets, identification, funds and travel info handy; travel journals for each participant to record their impressions on the trip; transportation to the Memphis airport and back home again; plane fare to Europe and back again; the cost of the Cosmos tour itself; funds for meals not covered by the packaged tour; trip insurance; gratuities for the Cosmos tour guide and bus driver; and a little “mad money” to enable the group to participate in special extras not included in the pre-paid tour itself.
Students have been advised they can also hold some group fund-raisers to sweeten that kitty for entrance to locales and events that are not part of the regular trip.
What happens now?
In between now and the time the students leave, they will be busy preparing for the trip.
A part of their commitment is to complete research assignments on the cities and countries they will visit and to meet together several times to discuss the sites they want to make sure they include on their journey and to learn the ins and outs of successful, safe and economical travel. To that end, Mrs. Wisener has already linked the group through the wonders of technology and has begun setting up learning sessions with UCHS art teacher Hilary Webb, who will be providing information on art and architecture that will be part of the trip; and with Dr. Stan Sieber and his wife, Sarah, from Martin. Sieber is a history professor at the University of Tennessee at Martin and regularly chaperones and guides groups of UTM students and others interested in travel-learning experiences in Europe. The Siebers’ expertise stood the 2009 travel group in good stead as they prepared for the first Rotary-sponsored trip last summer. Their discussions with the students focused on background information for the sites on the tour, trip safety issues, handling foreign currency, bag-packing hints and courtesy and good travel manners. Linda Aaron from Travel One in Union City, the company that works with the Rotary Club travel committee to plan the trip, will also be available to speak to the group and will be invited to attend the pre-trip family picnic a week or so before the actual adventure begins. At that session, to which the students’ families are invited, last-minute questions will be answered and schedules for travel will be finalized. Parents are also invited to attend the study sessions that will be held each month.
Students will receive their first research assignments in time to complete some of the work over the Christmas holidays, Mrs. Wisener has promised.
Students will not be allowed to take their own cell phones or laptops on the trip, but they will stay in daily contact with the folks back home through a group phone and a parental calling tree. A different student will call home each evening and report on the day’s activities and the parent who receives the call will then contact all the other parents on the list. A call will also go out to The Messenger each day so readers can share in the students’ experiences on a daily basis.
Once the group returns home, they will appear at a Rotary Club meeting to report on the trip and will also be available to speak to other civic groups, as well as students in their own schools. Members of the 2009 European trip were an important part of the sessions conducted by the Rotary Club trip committee to entice this year’s junior class at the three high schools into applying for the trip.
Eight students from UCHS, chaperoned by the school’s vice principal, Jacob Cross, and his wife, Emily, were the first group of students to be selected to enjoy the free European trip. The local Rotary Club entrusted two of its members — Dr. Leland Davis and Clay Woods — with planning that June 2009 adventure. With only a few days of “making arrangements” time available by the time the team learned the funds were being offered, the pair quickly gathered a team of club members and education-minded adults to put that first trip together. The group included Rotarians Gary Houston, who is also director of schools for Union City, and Tim Shanks, Kevin Herrell and Richard Graham. Rounding out the committee who oversaw the planning were UCHS guidance counselor Winnie Logan, classroom/curriculum coordinator Vicki Wilkinson and this reporter, who is a member of the Union City School Board. While school personnel helped plan the trip and establish the guidelines and goals, they were not part of the selection team who narrowed down the applicants and made the final choices.
In the winter of 2009, because of time constraints and the groundbreaking nature of the trip, only students from the UCHS Class of 2010 were selected. With a successful venture under their belts and some additional funding, the trip planning team expanded the scope and added two additional students this time. In keeping with the original plan to extend the privilege to students across Obion County, the team enlarged the planning committee to include Obion County Director of Schools David Huss, supervisor of instruction for Obion County School System high schools Nancy Hamilton and assistant director of schools for Obion County School System James Faulkner and brought on board OCCHS guidance counselor Kay Cooper and SFHS guidance counselor Pam Burrow to help in making contact with the students and aiding them in the application process. Five junior students each from OCCHS and SFHS submitted applications for the single spots open from each of those schools.
Trip planning committee members say they hope to continue to increase the number of juniors who can take advantage of the trip each year.
Meet the travelers
Joanna and Clark Wisener will be in charge of the students on the trip. The Wiseners are the parents of Claire, who is 9 years old and a fourth-grader at Union City Elementary School, and Leah, a 6-year-old who is a first-grader at UCES. Mrs. Wisener teaches English 12, Advanced Placement English Literature and U.S. History at UCHS and is the Junior Civitan sponsor.
Clark is a self-employed corporate pilot and flight instructor and a partner in Wisener Farms Inc.
Their parents are Pam and Greg Hendrick of Murray, Ky., and the late Ken Lee of Troy and David and Becky Wisener of Rives and Jan and Frank Luallen of Gadsden, Ala.
Both are OCCHS graduates. Mrs. Wisener received her bachelor’s degree in education in 1998 and is a member of the Tennessee Council of Teachers of English, the National Council of Teachers of English and the Union City, the Tennessee and the National education associations.
She enjoys reading and scrapbooking. Wisener claimed his degree in agricultural science from UTM in 1997 and enjoys avaition, camping, fishing and hunting.
“I am looking forward to seeing the historical landmarks we will be visiting, especially in Rome,” Wisener says. Mrs. Wisener is excited about seeing London and says she can’t wait to experience the culture and history of Europe for the first time and to share this experience with such a great group of students.
“We are very grateful to be chosen as chaperones for this trip and appreciate the Rotary Club for making this trip possible,” the Wiseners say.
UCHS Class of 2011 students making the trip in June 2010 will include:
• Megan Hickman, who is the daughter of George and Betty Hickman of Union City. Raised in foster care in Florida, she has several adopted brothers and sisters but is “closest” to Jerry Elmore, who lives in Florida.
“I want to prove you don’t have to have a perfect past to succeed and I want to show the world that there is hope for our generataion,” she says. Rather than buildings or geological formations, the “must see” item for Miss Hickman is a four-legged creature she would probably never encounter at home. “I’m looking forward to catching sight of a Burmese Mountain dog when we are in the Swiss Alps. I’ve heard they are used there instead of draft horses for many jobs.”
• Lakevius Turner, who is the son of Genika Turner of Fulton and the grandson of Jeffery and Genice Parchman. “I wanted to attend because I am extremely interested in European culture. I enjoy the architecture, foods and customs of other countries and I am looking forward to seeing the Louvre, the Colosseum and the Arc de Triomphe.”
• Cameryn Fishel, who is the daughter of Eric and Camielle Fishel of Union City. “This trip is a wonderful opportunity. It will increase my knowledge of so many things. I am looking forward to Paris the most because it looks like an absolutely beautiful city and I can’t wait to learn as much as I can about it.”
• Trey Maddox, who is the son of Shirley Carter of Union City and Eric Maddox of South Fulton. He is also the brother of Kelli Maddox and Matthew Maddox. “I’m looking forward to Paris, too. This is the opportunity of a lifetime,” he says.
• Kassadie Mullins, who is the daughter of Regina Mullins and the granddaughter of Doris Dodd, both of Union City. She says, “For me, the thing I look forward to most is seeing the Eiffel Tower and Big Ben. This trip will broaden my knowledge of other countries’ history and way of life.”
• Antonio Cox, who is the grandson of David and Mary Cox of Union City. He wants to gain as much knowledge as possible about Europe. “It is a once-in-a-lifetime chance for some people, such as myself, and it will give me a better chance to learn more about other places in the world in a more personal way,” he sums it up.
• Jasmine Davis, who is the daughter of Lataya Davis of Union City and Eric Johnson of Roswell, Ga. Her grandparents are Tony and Pam Davis and Linda Robinson and she is the sister of Laprahsa Fair, Shacowa McElrath and Quantavius Pettigrew. “I’m looking forward to France the most. I figured this would be a once-in-a-lifetime trip and a great learning experience that I wanted to take part in,” she says in response to a question about her reason for applying for the trip.
• Chase Bowling, who is the son of Darren and Dawn Bowling of Union City. His siblings include Meri-Morgan Bowling, Taylor Bowling and Tyler Bowling. “I’m looking forward to all the amazing sites and learning the history behind these places. It is an experience that could change my life and it has always been a dream of mine to go to Europe.”
SFHS will be represented by:
• Jacob Cleaver, the son of Bernadette and Brad Wecker of South Fulton and Carmen Cleaver of Baltimore, Md. He is the brother of Zachary Cleaver, Mackenzie Cleaver and Joshua Wecker and the cousin of Kimberley Hummel. He says he is most looking forward to learning about the different cultures. “I applied for the trip because it is such a great opportunity,” he says.
Obion County Central High School’s student traveler will be:
• Alton Alexander, the son of Travis and Laurie Alexander of Hornbeak and the grandson of Joan Alexander of Union City and Mary Tucker of Tiptonville. He is the brother of Adam Alexander and Grace Alexander. “Since I was a very young child, I have always wanted to visit Europe and once I heard about this Rotary-sponsored trip, I knew I could not turn down this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” he says. “Although all parts of this trip will be remarkable, I am most looking forward to experiencing Paris and seeing the Eiffel Tower.”
Published in The Messenger 11.25.09


:Article Source:nwtntoday.com

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Swiss Twittr


Switzerland (German: die Schweiz French: la Suisse, Italian: Svizzera, Romansh: Svizra), officially the Swiss Confederation (Confoederatio Helvetica in Latin, hence its ISO country codes CH and CHE), is a federal republic consisting of 26 states named cantons, with Bern as the seat of the federal authorities. The country is situated in Western Europe where it is bordered by Germany to the north, France to the west, Italy to the south and Austria and Liechtenstein to the east.

Switzerland is a landlocked country whose territory is geographically divided between the Jura, the Central Plateau and the Alps; adding together an area of 41,285 km². The approximately 7.8 million people concentrate mostly on the Plateau, where the largest cities are to be found. Among them the two global cities and economic centres of Zürich and Geneva. Switzerland is one of the richest countries in the world by per capita gross domestic product, with a nominal per capita GDP of $67,384. Zürich and Geneva have respectively been ranked as having the second and third highest quality of life in the world.

The Swiss Confederation has a long history of neutrality—it has not been at war internationally since 1815—and was one of the last countries to join the United Nations. Switzerland is home to many international organisations, including the WEF, the Red Cross, the World Trade Organization and the second largest UN office. On the European level it was a founder of the European Free Trade Association and is part of the Schengen Agreement.

Switzerland comprises three main linguistic and cultural regions: German, French, Italian, to which are added the Romansh-speaking valleys. The Swiss therefore do not form a nation in the sense of a common ethnic or linguistic identity. The strong sense of belonging to the country is founded on the common historical background, shared values (federalism, direct democracy, neutrality) and Alpine symbolism. The establishment of the Swiss Confederation is traditionally dated to 1 August 1291; Swiss National Day is celebrated on the anniversary.