четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

ACORN launches 'aggressive' investigation

WASHINGTON - The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now is determined to clear its name. Through the launch of a self-investigation, the anti-poverty group hopes to overturn accusations of illegal methods used to benefit its clients. However, ACORDN CEO Bertha Lewis is prepared for any possible outcome.

YouTube videos made by conservatives opposed to ACORN show right-wing activists James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles dressed as a pimp and prostitute receiving tips from ACORN workers on how to hide money and falsify taxes for a prostitution operation.

The investigation will examine all ACORN procedures the video calls into question.

"The public needs to know …

Swedish police question 30 suspects after child pornography raids

Swedish police say they have brought about 30 people in for questioning after a national crackdown on suspected child pornography.

Police say the most of the suspects are being questioned on suspicion of possessing and sharing pornographic material featuring children, but some are also suspected of child …

On-the-go boyfriend leaving anxious girlfriend behind

DEAR ELLIE: I'm 28, my boyfriend is 31, and we've been dating twoyears. He's a corporate climber with opportunities beyond his wildestdreams, working late weekdays and weekends. He's away for two weeks,back two days between, lasting over the next five years. Days passwhen he doesn't call or write while away. He says he's too busyworking, yet had time to hang out with friends and colleagues fordrinks. He says he loves me. I don't believe it but I still want tokeep our relationship alive. We've broken up 10 times and he keepscoming back. We fight like cats and dogs. He says I'm not nice tohim, well, that's because he's not nice to me. He said he tries tomake me happy but instead I …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Creating Military Institutions In Iraq and Afghanistan

Central to our nation-building efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq is the requirement to create new national military institutions that are based on principles compatible with the liberal democracies they will ultimately serve. The key to this effort will be to create institutions that will foster the inculcation of the concept of service within their nascent officer corps. Rather than expecting to be served by society because of their position, officers in the Afghan national army (ANA) and the new Iraqi army must understand and embrace the concept that they are servants of society. This concept of national service contrasts sharply with the history of private armies loyal to specific ethnic …

Gold down

NEW YORK (AP) — Gold for current delivery closed at $1,615.00 per troy ounce …

Loans dominate slow-starting final day of window

The final day of European football's winter transfer window progressed quietly Monday, with none of the big-money moves that have dominated recent seasons.

The window closed in England with the Premier League's infamously profligate clubs mostly announcing loan transfers, with Fulham the most active after picking up AS Roma striker Stefano Okaka and Aston Villa fullback Nicky Shorey until the end of the season.

Fulham also signed teenage midfielder Christopher Buchtmann from Liverpool and let Senegal forward Diomansy Kamara leave on loan for Scottish Premier League side Celtic, which took on Bayern Munich defender Edson Braafheid for the rest of the …

Fenway unfriendly to Rocket

Jose Offerman tripled to lead off the ninth inning and scored thewinning run to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 6-5 victory over NewYork. His heroics spoiled Roger Clemens' return to Fenway Park in aYankees uniform.

In his first appearance in Boston with the rival Yankees, Clemensfailed to record a single 1-2-3 inning while allowing four runs andfive hits in five-plus innings. He struck out three and left with a5-3 lead. Boston came back to win the game against the Yankees'bullpen.

Clemens was booed from his introduction until he left with one onand nobody out in the sixth.

Offerman, who reached base all five times up in his first gameback from a four-game …

'Artist,' 'Take Shelter' lead in Spirit Awards

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The silent movie "The Artist" and the doomsday drama "Take Shelter" led the Spirit Awards honoring independent film on Tuesday with five nominations each, including best picture.

Also in the running for best picture were the cancer tale "50/50"; the action thriller "Drive"; and the family dramas "Beginners" and "The Descendants."

A black-and-white throwback to early Hollywood, "The Artist" also earned a lead-actor nomination for Jean Dujardin as a silent film star whose career crumbles as the sound era takes over in the late 1920s. The film grabbed directing and screenplay nominations for Michel Hazanavicius, along with a cinematography slot for Guillaume …

New Amazon monkey species discovered in Colombia

A new Amazon monkey species has been discovered in Colombia, and researchers said Thursday they believe the small, isolated population is at risk due to the cutting of forests that are its home.

The find was announced by Conservation International, a group that helped finance the research in remote rain forests that until recently were considered too dangerous for scientific work due to the presence of leftist rebels.

A team of researchers from the National University of Colombia observed 13 groups of the new species _ dubbed the Caqueta titi monkey because it was found in the southern state of Caqueta, near Peru.

The researchers, who published their …

NOWCAST: NEWS AND NOTES

TAKING THE TEMPERATURE IN CALIFORNIA

A recent poll found that Californians are concerned about the weather, but if actions speak louder than words, many residents are sending a mixed message, '!he poll of 2,500 residents of California found that 80% believe global warming could be a significant threat to their quality of life and the state's economy; 65% want the state to take the initiative to mitigate warming regardless of the U.S. government's plans; and 85% say they would consider environmental positions when choosing the state's next governor.

"There is a growing awareness and concern, including the fact that global warming isn't just melting the glaciers," says Mark …

Winter storms hit many parts of US and strand air, road and rail travelers alike

Winter storms at both ends of the country dumped snow and snarled air and land travel, killing at least 10 people, blocking major highways and even stranding 400 train passengers in the mountains of the Pacific Northwest.

Nearly 7.5 inches (19 centimeters) of snow was reported at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport before the front moved out of the area Friday. About 500 flights were canceled at O'Hare, which canceled 600 flights Thursday and housed hundreds of stranded travelers who spent the night awaiting planes from other cities also affected by the storm.

At least 12 inches (30 centimeters) of snow was reported in Springfield by Friday morning, said …

Phil Jackson: Kobe had knee drained "a while ago"

Although coach Phil Jackson said Kobe Bryant had fluid drained from his right knee "a while ago," the Lakers aren't additionally concerned about their banged-up superstar's health.

Before the opener of the Western Conference finals on Monday night, Jackson claimed the procedure wasn't unusual for the Lakers' leading scorer and former league MVP. Bryant strained his knee during the season, and had it drained previously when it swelled.

"It's not unusual, but I can't remember how many times I've ever heard of it being drained before," Jackson said. "Maybe once or twice. It happened a while ago. ... It's a concern, but we're dealing …

Sensitive Joint-vetch

Sensitive Joint-vetch

Aeschynomene virginica

Status Threatened
Listed May 20, 1992
Family Leguminosae (Fabaceae)
Description Annual legume growing 3-6 ft (1-2 m) in height with single stems, irregular legume-type yellow flowers streaked with red.
Habitat Freshwater tidal marshes.
Threats Habitat destruction due to impoundments, road construction, commercial and residential development.
Range Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Virginia

Description

Sensitive joint-vetch, is an annual legume of the pea family that attains a height of 3-6 ft (1-2 m) in a single growing season. The stems are single, sometimes branching near the top. Leaves are even-pinnate, 0.8-4.8 in (2-12.2 cm) long, with entire, gland-dotted leaflets. The irregular, legume-type flowers are about 0.4 in (1 cm) across, yellow, streaked with red, and grow in racemes (elongated inflorescences with stalked flowers). The fruit is a loment with six to 10 segments, turning brown when ripe.

Flowering begins in late July and continues through September. Fruits are produced from July to the first frost. Some observations indicate that seedlings may germinate only in "flotsam" (plant material) that has been deposited on the riverbank.

Sensitive joint-vetch requires the unique growing conditions occurring along segments of the river system that are close enough to the coast to be influenced by tidal action, yet far enough upstream to consist of fresh or slightly brackish water.

The present distribution of sensitive joint-vetch includes New Jersey (two occurrences), Maryland (one occurrence), Virginia (six occurrences), and North Carolina (three marginal occurrences).

Habitat

A rare and specialized ecological community type occurs a short distance upstream of where certain rivers in the coastal plain of the eastern United States meet the sea. Referred to as freshwater tidal marshes, these communities are close enough to the coast to be influenced by tidal fluctuations, yet far enough upstream to consist of fresh or only slightly brackish water. Plants that grow in this environment are subjected to a cycle of twice-daily flooding that most plants cannot tolerate. Sensitive joint-vetch is a plant of such freshwater tidal communities.

Distribution

The number of sensitive joint-vetch populations has declined significantly throughout the species' range, and this plant has been extirpated entirely from Pennsylvania and Delaware. At present there are two known populations in New Jersey, one in Maryland, six in Virginia, and three in North Carolina.

Whether due to causes mentioned above, or to other as yet unidentified threats, the range of sensitive joint-vetch along river systems in Virginia is contracting. On both the Rappahannock and the James Rivers, sensitive joint-vetch was collected historically some 10 mi (16.1 km) farther upstream and downstream than it is currently known to exist. It remains on only one section of the Chickahominy River, where it once had a much broader distribution.

The currently known distribution of sensitive joint-vetch is as follows. New Jersey: one small occurrence (approximately 50 individuals) on the Wading River in Burlington County and one large occurrence (approximately 2,000 individuals) on the Manumuskin River in Cumberland County. Maryland: one occurrence of several hundred individuals on Manokin Creek, in Somerset County. North Carolina: sensitive joint-vetch was known to occur in two ditches in Hyde County and one ditch in Beaufort County. Virginia: it is believed that the total number of plants in the state is about 5,000.

Observations in North Carolina have indicated severe predation of seeds by tobacco budworms and corn earworms. However, it is unlikely that these predators will prove to be a problem in other populations throughout the species' range, as they do not occur in typical wetland habitats.

It has been speculated that the existence of sensitive joint-vetch may be threatened over the long-term by sea level rise. This phenomenon could result in merely "pushing" the species' habitat upstream from its present position. However, the location of major cities and other developed area upstream from the fresh/brackish water interface in many locations may block the migration of natural freshwater marsh communities and their component species, including sensitive joint-vetch.

Threats

The extirpation of sensitive joint-vetch from Delaware and Pennsylvania and its elimination from many sites in other states can be directly attributed to habitat destruction. Many of the marshes where it occurred historically have been dredged and/or filled and the riverbanks bulk-headed or stabilized with riprap. This is most evident in historic locations around Philadelphia. Other sources of potential or actual habitat destruction include impoundments and water withdrawal projects, road construction, commercial and residential development, and resultant pollution and sedimentation.

The remaining stronghold of sensitive joint-vetch is in Virginia, along the relatively narrow band of freshwater tidal sections of several river systems on the coastal plain. These river sections are quite pristine, despite their proximity to the major metropolitan areas of Washington, D. C., and Richmond, Virginia. As the suburbs associated with these cities expand, the impacts to these river sections from residential and commercial development, shoreline stabilization activities, point and non-point source discharges, recreational use, water development projects, and sedimentation from building and road construction are all expected to increase greatly.

Certain of these factors are known to be harmful to sensitive joint-vetch; others require further study to determine their effects. Shoreline stabilization, as in placement of riprap, can destroy the species' habitat directly. Increased motorboat traffic is known to be detrimental to freshwater tidal systems. In addition to direct toxic effects from fuel leaks, the wave action from boat wakes can rapidly erode the mud-flats and banks where sensitive joint-vetch grows.

Sedimentation could effect sensitive joint-vetch by inhibiting germination, smothering seedlings, and/or promoting the invasion of weedy species. Establishment of phragmites or other invasive species could be especially detrimental to sensitive joint-vetch, which has evolved to thrive in an environment with little competition from other plants.

Two specific projects could threaten New Jersey's large population of sensitive joint-vetch. One is the extension of a major highway, which is proposed to cross the Manumuskin River in the vicinity of the population. The plants and their habitat could be destroyed directly, during the construction process, or indirectly, through input of sediments, road salt or petrochemicals. The other project is a coal-fired electric generating facility, proposed to be upstream from the population. There is concern that the disposal of by-products from this facility could degrade the species' habitat.

Maryland's one known sensitive joint-vetch population is in an area heavily affected by humans, adjacent to a major highway, a sewage treatment plant, and a residential development. The population is also flanked by invasive weeds, including Phragmites australis and multiflora rose. Fortunately, a larger segment of this population was discovered nearby in 1991, in a less heavily impacted setting.

Conservation and Recovery

Because sensitive joint-vetch occurs in wetland habitats, many projects potentially affecting it would be within the permitting authority of the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Contacts

U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Regional Office, Division of Endangered Species
300 Westgate Center Dr.
Hadley, Massachusetts 01035-9589
Telephone: (413) 253-8200
Fax: (413) 253-8308
http://northeast.fws.gov/

Ecological Services Field Office
Bldg D, 927 North Main St.
Pleasantville, New Jersey 08232
Telephone: (609) 646-0620
Fax: (609) 646-0352

Ecological Services Field Office
1825-B Virginia Street
Annapolis, Maryland 21401
Telephone: (410) 269-5448
Fax: (410) 269-0832

Ecological Services Field Office
Mid-County Center, U. S. Route 17
P. O. Box 480
White Marsh, Virginia 23183
Telephone: (804) 693-6694
Fax: (804) 693-9032

Reference

U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 20 May 1992. "Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Determination of Threatened Status for the Sensitive Joint-vetch (Aeschynomene virginica )." Federal Register 57 (98): 21569-21574.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Metro News In Brief

Now dad is charged in girl's death First her mother was charged,now the father of a 5-year-old girl beaten to death has been chargedin the killing. Carlos Beltran, 31, of Maine Township, has beencharged with first-degree murder in the March 14 death of hisdaughter, Melanie. The girl's mother, Mila Petrov, 29, initially wascharged in the slaying -- the culmination of months of abuse,prosecutors allege. Petrov allegedly struck the girl, whose headwent through a wall. She then called her husband and the two cleanedup before authorities were alerted, officials said.

Alternate jurors are selected Lawyers finished picking alternatejurors Monday for the trial of Juan Luna, charged with killing sevenpeople during a 1993 robbery of Brown's Chicken in Palatine. Openingstatements are scheduled for Friday.

14,000 pairs of fake Nikes seized Nearly 14,000 pairs ofcounterfeit Nike shoes were seized during a weekend raid on a SouthSide storefront that landed the man suspected of distributing theshoes in jail. Harrison District tactical officers working on theWest Side got a tip about the fake shoes and obtained a searchwarrant for a store in the 9000 block of South Commercial. OnSaturday, officers found 13,725 pairs of fake Nikes there.Chukwuemeka Ebelchukwu, 27, who was born in Nigeria and lives inChicago, was charged with one count of violating trademark laws. Hehad been selling the shoes to retail businesses for $40 to $70 apair, police said.

School chief aims to raise $2 billion University of IllinoisPresident Joseph White will start a campaign to raise $2 billion inJune, months after the school scrapped its controversial AmericanIndian mascot and the arrests of several athletes.

Body of German Recovered in Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghan officials recovered the body of a German aid worker kidnapped in southern Afghanistan earlier this week, a provincial police chief said Sunday.

The body of the German was found in southern Wardak province, where two Germans and five Afghan colleagues were kidnapped on Wednesday, said provincial police chief Mohammad Hewas Mazlum.

The Taliban on Saturday said militants shot and killed the two Germans, but Afghan and German officials said intelligence indicated that one died of a heart attack and the other was still alive.

Mazlum said he did not immediately know how the German whose body was recovered was killed.

Meanwhile, a delegation of South Korean officials arrived in Kabul on Sunday, only hours before an evening deadline set by Taliban militants threatening to kill 23 Korean hostages.

A senior South Korean official said the team would negotiate with the Taliban through intermediaries. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, who claims to speak for the Taliban, has said the hardline militia would release the hostages in exchange for the freedom of 23 Afghan prisoners. The militants kidnapped the Koreans on Thursday while they were riding on a bus from Kabul to the southern city of Kandahar.

The Afghan government hasn't commented on the trade offer.

The eight-man Korean delegation plans to meet with President Hamid Karzai and Afghanistan's foreign and interior ministers, said Sidney Serena, a political affairs officer at the Korean embassy here.

Serena said the 23 Koreans, including 18 women, work at an aid organization called the Korea Foundation in Kandahar.

Though the 23 have been reported to be Christians, Serena said the embassy "strongly denies" that they were carrying out any sort of religious activities.

A top South Korean Defense Ministry official, Kim Sung-gon, said Sunday in Seoul that the country's 210 troops in Afghanistan have started preparations to pull out of the country by the end of the year as planned.

The Defense Ministry stressed that the process had begun well before the Taliban demanded the withdrawal of South Korean troops from the war-ravaged country.

---

Associated Press reporter Kwang-tae Kim contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea.

Conductor Mitch Miller dies at age 99

Mitch Miller, the goateed orchestra leader who asked Americans to "Sing Along With Mitch" on television and records, has died at age 99.

His daughter, Margaret Miller Reuther, said Monday that Miller died Saturday in Lenox Hill Hospital after a short illness.

Miller was a key record executive at Columbia Records in the pre-rock 'n' roll era, making hits with singers Rosemary Clooney, Patti Page, Johnny Mathis and Tony Bennett.

"Sing Along With Mitch" started as a series of records, then became a popular NBC show starting in early 1961. Miller's stiff-armed conducting style and signature goatee became famous.

As a producer and arranger, Miller had misses along with his hits, famously striking out on projects with Frank Sinatra and a young Aretha Franklin.

The TV show ranked in the top 20 for the 1961-62 season, and soon children everywhere were parodying Miller's stiff-armed conducting. An all-male chorus sang old standards, joined by a few female singers, most prominently Leslie Uggams. Viewers were invited to join in with lyrics superimposed on the screen and followed with a bouncing ball.

"He is an odd-looking man," New York Times critic Brooks Atkinson wrote in 1962. "His sharp beard, twinkling eyes, wrinkled forehead and mechanical beat make him look like a little puppet as he peers hopefully into the camera. By now most of us are more familiar with his tonsils than with those of our families."

Atkinson went on to say that as a musician, Miller was "first rate," praising "the clean tone of the singing, the clarity of the lyrics, the aptness of the tempos, the variety and the occasional delicacy of the instrumental accompaniment."

An accomplished oboist, Miller played in a number of orchestras early in his career, including one put together in 1934 by George Gershwin. "Gershwin was an unassuming guy," Miller told The New York Times in 1989. "I never heard him raise his voice."

Miller began in the recording business with Mercury Records in the late '40s, first on the classical side, later with popular music. He then went over to Columbia Records as head of its popular records division.

Among the stars whose hits he worked on were Clooney, Page, Bennett, Frankie Laine and Jo Stafford. His decision to have Mathis switch from jazz to lushly romantic ballads launched the singer as a superstar.

He had a less rewarding collaboration with Sinatra, whose recording of the novelty song "Mama Will Bark," featuring a barking dog, was considered the nadir of the singer's career. Still, Miller became known for his distinctive arrangements, such as the use of a harpsichord on Clooney's megahit version of "Come On-a My House." He used dubbing of vocal tracks back when that was considered exotic.

"To me, the art of singing a pop song has always been to sing it very quietly," Miller said in the book "Off the Record: An Oral History of Popular Music."

"The microphone and the amplifier made the popular song what it is _ an intimate one-on-one experience through electronics. It's not like opera or classical singing. The whole idea is to take a very small thing and make it big."

Miller and a chorus had a No. 1 hit in 1955 with "The Yellow Rose of Texas," and that led to his sing-along records a few years later.

The years of Miller's biggest successes were also the early years of rock 'n' roll, and many fans saw his old-fashioned arrangements of standards and folk favorites as an antidote to the noisy stuff the teens adored. As an executive at Columbia, Miller was widely ridiculed for trying to turn a young Aretha Franklin into a showbiz diva in the tradition of Sophie Tucker.

But Miller was not entirely unsympathetic to rock 'n' roll.

In a 1955 essay in The New York Times magazine, he said the popularity of rhythm and blues, as he called it, with white teens was part of young people's "natural desire not to conform, a need to be rebellious."

He added: "There is a steady _ and healthy _ breaking down of color barriers in the United States; perhaps the rhythm-and-blues rage _ I am only theorizing _ is another expression of it."

"Miller has often been maligned as a maestro of 1950s schlock ... Yet Miller injected elements of rhythm and blues and country music, however diluted, into mainstream pop," Ken Emerson wrote in his book "Always Magic in the Air."

In the Martin Scorsese documentary on Bob Dylan, "No Direction Home," Miller acknowledged that he was dubious when famed producer John Hammond brought the nearly unknown Dylan to the staid Columbia label in the early '60s. "He was singing in, you know, this rough-edged voice," Miller said. "I will admit I didn't see the greatness of it." But he said he respected Hammond's track record in finding talent.

In recent years, Miller returned to his classical roots, appearing frequently as a guest conductor with symphony orchestras.

In 2000, he won a special Grammy Award for lifetime achievement.

Reuther said her father died of "just old age."

"He was absolutely himself up until the minute he got sick," she said. "He was truly blessed with a long and wonderful life."

Miller was born in 1911, in Rochester, New York, son of a Russian Jewish immigrant wrought-iron worker and a seamstress. He graduated from the Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester.

Reuther said there will be a memorial service for her father in the fall.

___

Associated Press Writer David Bauder contributed to this report. Biographical material in this story was written by former AP staffer Polly Anderson.

Navy breezes past Mount St. Mary's (Md.) 81-68

EMMITSBURG, Md. (AP) — Mark Veazey scored 17 points to lead five Navy players in double figures in an 81-68 win over Mount St. Mary's (Md.) on Monday night.

The Midshipmen snapped the Mountaineers' 11-game home winning streak while winning by the largest margin in the series in seven years.

Navy (3-6), coming off an 89-81 overtime loss to Maryland-Eastern Shore, took the lead 4:34 into the game and led 45-32 at halftime — thanks to 8-of-16 shooting from 3-point range.

Mount St. Mary's (2-4) closed to within 10 on three occasions in the second half, the last time with 5:30 left. The Midshipmen sealed the win with 9 of 12 foul shots in the last 5 minutes.

O.J. Avworo added 15 points for Navy, including 11 of 13 from the free-throw line. Isaiah Roberts had 11 points and Brennan Wyatt and J.J. Avila scored 10 apiece.

Shawn Atupem and Raven Barber led the Mountaineers with 13 each.

Rise of food blogs creates pasta paparazzi

Grant Achatz is happy that food bloggers are so excited about dining at his renowned Alinea restaurant in Chicago that they want to shoot photos and even video of their experience. And he embraces the Web as the new medium for disseminating dining information.

But he does wish they'd just sit and enjoy their food while it's hot.

"It's a double-edged sword for everybody," he says. "The guest makes the choice whether or not to prioritize documentation of the food, of the experience, and perhaps subject themselves to a lesser experience, or a less complete absorption of the vision of the restaurant or the chef."

Take the diner who recently ordered a signature dish, Hot Potato-Cold Potato, in which a marble-sized sphere of piping hot Yukon Gold is dropped into a bowl of 40-degree potato soup at the pull of a pin. Eating it at the proper temperature is key to the experience.

Yet by the time the food had been moved around to get the right lighting for photos _ taken with a tripod-mounted camera _ what the blogger probably ended up with was Warm Potato-Warm Potato, says Achatz.

Still, he says, "I'm never that grumpy guy that's like, 'Put that camera away!'"

"At times we have guests that are a little bit rude or presumptuous about it and that kind of offends me a little bit," he says. "Even then we let them do their thing."

The tradition of documenting dinner stretches back centuries. Eighteenth-century English parson James Woodforde, dutifully recorded his meals along with other details of his life and times in his still-popular diaries.

But Woodforde didn't have a tripod. Or a blog to feed.

Today's bloggers may be armed with anything from a small camera phone to professional equipment complete with strobe lighting.

Scott Ashkenaz, a Palo Alto, Calif., photographer, believes it is possible to both record and enjoy the moment. "It's pretty easy to pick up the camera, take a shot and then continue on," he says.

He's found that restaurant staff have been accommodating to him and his wife, also a photographer, once even bringing over a candle to boost the lighting and warning them when they need to eat a dish fairly quickly to get it at its best. The couple has posted shots of memorable meals on their website, ashkeling.com, including a dinner at the famous Spanish restaurant El Bulli and The Fat Duck in England.

Chuck Arendt of San Francisco, who writes about food at chuckeats.com and is co-founder of MainPursuit, a travel app publisher, says he understands "no flash" rules, and agrees that people who take photos to an extreme _ 20 shots of one dish _ can be annoying.

He aims for two to four pictures, taken quickly. But he hesitates before going to a restaurant with a camera ban.

"It is my food and I should be able to do what I like with it," he said in an e-mail. "I can understand `creating a mood,' but that's generally not a place I want to visit.

Achatz recently expressed his frustration with overzealous bloggers in an Internet post that Arendt read and thought reasonable.

"People should be allowed to take photos; restaurants should not only see it as a compliment, but also a potential word-of-mouth recommendation to 20-30 people on average, and I think it's in restaurants' best interests to accommodate them just a bit more, better lighting for example," Arendt said.

New York City chef Marc Murphy, owner of the restaurants Landmarc and Ditch Plains, welcomes bloggers. He recently ran a "Surfer Sunday" special at the Ditch Plains restaurant and within a day and a half a review and pictures were up on the Web.

"It just gets the word out quicker," he says. Murphy sees blogs as introducing an egalitarian note to restaurant criticism. "The world's changing, everybody's got an opinion," he said.

Chef David Chang doesn't allow cameras at his wildly popular Momofuku Ko restaurant in New York. But he says that's only because the intimate, 12-seater restaurant simply isn't big enough. "It was intrusive on other guests."

At his other restaurants, including Ma Peche, there's more space and he doesn't object to cameras.

He can understand why people want to photograph memorable meals, but he occasionally wonders, "What happened to eating your food and having conversation?"

A side issue with cameras in restaurants _ unless you know what you're doing, most of the pictures aren't going to turn out that well. It takes skill to make a dish look tasty.

"Every once in a while I see something nice on a blog, but not tons of things," says Delores Custer, a longtime industry veteran and author of a recently published book on food photography called "Food Styling."

Among her how-tos, consider food at eye-level and overhead, not just at a 45-degree angle, and get a tight focus on the plate.

Overall, "you have to respect the place that you're in _ the people who are there, the chef who has worked very hard to produce a lovely ambiance," Custer says.

Sometimes that's missing, and the post by Achatz didn't result in fewer camera-toting diners; interest has only increased in Alinea, named the No. 1 U.S. restaurant recently by Restaurant Magazine.

"I'm excited that people are excited about what we're doing," he says.

But he wonders whether the documentarians are missing out.

"The priority becomes capturing that memory," he says. "When in fact there is no memory because you didn't actually live in that moment."

Immigration Bill Faces Senate Showdown

WASHINGTON - The Senate's revived legislation to legalize millions of unlawful immigrants faces a critical test Thursday after surviving potentially fatal challenges.

Attempts from the right and left to alter key elements of the delicate bipartisan compromise failed Wednesday, including a Republican proposal to deny illegal immigrants a path to citizenship and Democratic bids to reunite legal immigrants with family members.

The Senate killed, by a 56-41 vote, an amendment by Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., to provide more green cards for parents of U.S. citizens. By a 55-40 margin, it tabled a proposal by Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., to give family members of citizens and legal permanent residents more credit toward green cards in a new merit-based points system.

A make-or-break procedural vote was set for Thursday, however, as the Senate plowed through amendments that supporters hoped would address waverers' concerns.

Facing determined opposition from conservatives who call the bill amnesty, leaders need 60 votes to keep the measure alive and complete it as early as Friday.

The Senate on Wednesday killed several proposals designed to answer conservatives' concerns that the bill, championed by President Bush, is overly lenient toward illegal immigrants. Among the amendments was one by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, to require all adult illegal immigrants to return home temporarily to qualify for permanent lawful status. The current bill requires only heads of household seeking permanent legal residency to return home to apply for green cards.

"I don't see how I could support this bill in any form," Hutchison said after the vote. She had characterized her proposal as a way of removing "the amnesty tag" from the legislation.

An amendment by Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., also defeated, would have restricted legal status applications to those who have been in the United States for four years. The bill would allow anyone in the U.S. as of Jan. 1, 2007, to be eligible.

A bid by Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., to deny green cards to unlawful immigrants also failed.

The bill, which also would toughen border security and institute a new system for weeding out illegal immigrants from workplaces, is facing more challenges.

Particularly worrisome to backers of the bill is an amendment by Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, Barack Obama, D-Ill., and Max Baucus, D-Mont., to overhaul the employee verification system.

Grasping for more GOP support, Republican framers of the bill were proposing their own, less burdensome return-home requirement for illegal immigrants. It would apply only to heads of household and would give them three years.

Votes on key amendments were continuing Wednesday under a complex and carefully orchestrated procedure designed to overcome stalling tactics by conservative foes. It allowed votes only on a limited list of amendments before Thursday's critical test vote.

Tensions ran high on the usually courtly Senate floor, where Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., was keeping a tight rein on the debate to prevent critics from derailing the bill.

Conservatives, irate at a process that has essentially stymied their ability to filibuster, said Senate leaders were trying to rush through a bad bill.

"The American people have said loud and clear that this is an incredibly important issue to them. For the Senate to move ahead anyway using this process, railroading me and other critics of the bill and blocking our rights as senators to represent our constituents, is disgraceful," said Sen. David Vitter, R-La.

---

The bill is S 1639

WORLD BRIEFS

No Risk Seen in N. Korea Maneuvers For the second straight day, North Korea moved armed troops into thebuffer zone with South Korea. U.S. and UN officials said there wasno evidence of a threat. South Korea said 260 soldiers entered thedemilitarized zone Saturday and left three hours later. In bothcases, the soldiers entered the zone at Panmunjom, the village wherean armistice was signed 43 years ago. U.S. officials called theviolation serious but, noting similar North Korean incursions in thepast, said it appeared to pose no risk.8 Killed in Avalanche at Ecuador Volcano At least eight people werekilled and 20 believed buried Saturday when part of the snow peak ofan Ecuadoran volcano fell, causing a large avalanche, officials said.The Cotopaxi Volcano, south of Quito, is one of Ecuador's maintourist attractions. Most of the victims were visitors trying toreach the peak.Neo-Nazi March Backs Auschwitz Mall Carrying banners decrying NATO,the European Union and Jews, about 100 ultranationalists marchedoutside the Auschwitz death camp to support the construction of amini-mall nearby. The two-hour march from Auschwitz to an adjacentcamp compound at Birkenau proceeded without incident. Survivors ofthe camp, Jewish organizations and Polish officials have objected toa plan to build a shopping center across from the camp site.

Immigration Bill Faces Senate Showdown

WASHINGTON - The Senate's revived legislation to legalize millions of unlawful immigrants faces a critical test Thursday after surviving potentially fatal challenges.

Attempts from the right and left to alter key elements of the delicate bipartisan compromise failed Wednesday, including a Republican proposal to deny illegal immigrants a path to citizenship and Democratic bids to reunite legal immigrants with family members.

The Senate killed, by a 56-41 vote, an amendment by Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., to provide more green cards for parents of U.S. citizens. By a 55-40 margin, it tabled a proposal by Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., to give family members of citizens and legal permanent residents more credit toward green cards in a new merit-based points system.

A make-or-break procedural vote was set for Thursday, however, as the Senate plowed through amendments that supporters hoped would address waverers' concerns.

Facing determined opposition from conservatives who call the bill amnesty, leaders need 60 votes to keep the measure alive and complete it as early as Friday.

The Senate on Wednesday killed several proposals designed to answer conservatives' concerns that the bill, championed by President Bush, is overly lenient toward illegal immigrants. Among the amendments was one by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, to require all adult illegal immigrants to return home temporarily to qualify for permanent lawful status. The current bill requires only heads of household seeking permanent legal residency to return home to apply for green cards.

"I don't see how I could support this bill in any form," Hutchison said after the vote. She had characterized her proposal as a way of removing "the amnesty tag" from the legislation.

An amendment by Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., also defeated, would have restricted legal status applications to those who have been in the United States for four years. The bill would allow anyone in the U.S. as of Jan. 1, 2007, to be eligible.

A bid by Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., to deny green cards to unlawful immigrants also failed.

The bill, which also would toughen border security and institute a new system for weeding out illegal immigrants from workplaces, is facing more challenges.

Particularly worrisome to backers of the bill is an amendment by Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, Barack Obama, D-Ill., and Max Baucus, D-Mont., to overhaul the employee verification system.

Grasping for more GOP support, Republican framers of the bill were proposing their own, less burdensome return-home requirement for illegal immigrants. It would apply only to heads of household and would give them three years.

Votes on key amendments were continuing Wednesday under a complex and carefully orchestrated procedure designed to overcome stalling tactics by conservative foes. It allowed votes only on a limited list of amendments before Thursday's critical test vote.

Tensions ran high on the usually courtly Senate floor, where Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., was keeping a tight rein on the debate to prevent critics from derailing the bill.

Conservatives, irate at a process that has essentially stymied their ability to filibuster, said Senate leaders were trying to rush through a bad bill.

"The American people have said loud and clear that this is an incredibly important issue to them. For the Senate to move ahead anyway using this process, railroading me and other critics of the bill and blocking our rights as senators to represent our constituents, is disgraceful," said Sen. David Vitter, R-La.

---

The bill is S 1639

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Colts Extend Lead on Giants to 23-14

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. - Dominic Rhodes scored from 1 yard out early in the fourth quarter on Sunday night as the Indianapolis Colts extended their lead to 23-14 over the New York Giants.

Billed as Manning vs. Manning, Peyton had a slight edge over younger brother Eli through three quarters.

Peyton had completed 22-of-36 passes for 255 yards, one touchdown, and one interception.

Eli was 15-of-24 for 189 yards and two scores.

Trailing 16-7 at the half, Eli followed his brother's lead and took his team on a long scoring drive to open the second half. Eli found Jeremy Shockey for a 15-yard score to cut the Colts' lead to 16-14.

Peyton had opened the game by taking the Colts on a 17-play drive that took nearly nine minutes and ended with a field goal.

Not to be outdone, Eli Manning drove the Giants 69 yards on 11 plays to open the second half.

In the second quarter, Peyton Manning capped a 70-yard drive by hitting tight end Dallas Clark from 2 yards out to extend the lead to 13-0.

Late in the second quarter, Eli Manning found Plaxico Burress for a 34-yard score to pull the Giants within 13-7. On the play, Burress tipped the ball to himself.

The Colts' Adam Vinatieri ended the half with a 49-yard field goal, his third of the game on three attempts. He also hit from 26 and 32 yards.

After weeks of hype leading up to the game, there were no pregame fireworks. About two hours before the game, both Mannings spoke briefly on the field as players loosened up. An hour later, when the teams returned to the field in full uniform, Peyton Manning was booed by the sparse crowd that had begun to filter into Giants Stadium when he was the first Colts player to emerge from the tunnel.

Kate Mara, granddaughter of late Giants owner Wellington Mara, who died last year, sang the national anthem. When she finished, three Black Hawk helicopters flew over the stadium as part of a tribute marking the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.

With Flaherty, Mt. Carmel hopes to put hoops on top

When you think of Mount Carmel, the sport that pops into your mindis usually football. The Caravan has won 10 state championships andproduced such NFL players as Philadelphia Eagles quarterback DonovanMcNabb and Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive end Simeon Rice. Theprogram is one of the legendary football ones in the state.

But if you ask Mount Carmel football coach and athletic directorFrank Lenti what the school is known for athletically, he'll be thefirst to tell you that Mount Carmel isn't all football.

"It's a matter of one sport enhancing the others," Lenti said."Outside people see this or that, but I want us to be a strongathletic program."

The Caravan also have had success in hockey, wrestling andbaseball.

The Caravan's baseball team was a state runner-up last year andalso went to the Elite Eight in 2003. The wrestling program won threeconsecutive Class AA team titles from 1992-94, and were runners-up in1998 and 2002.

And now the South Side school is gearing up for success inbasketball after hiring Mike Flaherty, an Illinois Basketball CoachesAssociation Hall of Famer and a coach who has won 592 games, lastweek.

Flaherty comes from Thornridge, where he compiled a 414-191 recordfrom 1984-2006, and recently announced his retirement as the school'sassistant athletic director and head boys basketball coach. He ledThornridge to the Elite Eight in 1989.

Flaherty replaces coach Mike Angelidis, who resigned after fourseasons to move to Seattle with his family.

Before his stint at Thornridge, Flaherty coached at defunct MendelCatholic, and was an assistant at St. Rita in the 1970s. Mendel was astate runner-up in 1982 under Flaherty.

Flaherty the man for the job

For Lenti, Flaherty was the only one on his wish list.

"I've known Mike since he was at Mendel, and I was leavingDistrict 205 [the Thornton, Thornridge and Thornwood school district]when he was going in," said Lenti, who coached football and baseballfor five years at Thornton.

"There was no selection process," Lenti said. "Mike was the onlyperson involved."

Mount Carmel has had success in basketball. The Caravan was thefirst non-public school to win a Class AA state championship in 1985.And in the mid-1990s McNabb, who played football and basketball atSyracuse, and current Miami Heat forward Antoine Walker molded theCaravan into a Catholic League power.

The pull of the past is not lost on the current Caravan basketballplayers, most of whom were sophomores this season. They are usingFlaherty's hire as motivation to do better than Walker and McNabbdid.

"Walker and McNabb are two special people who became successful atwhat they play," said Caravan sophomore power forward Steven Filer,who also plays football. "Even though Donovan plays football now, hewas a very good basketball player. I would like to be like them andbe good at both."

Sophomore guard Chris Heaney has heard the stories of Flaherty'scoaching success at Thornridge and knows it will rub off on the youngsquad.

"Our goal is always to win state, so those goals will stay thesame," Heaney said. "Bringing him in here with 500 wins, that alonewill help us greatly."

The past Mount Carmel greats of Walker and McNabb aren't lost onHeaney, either.

"We talk about how McNabb and Antoine Walker were the best playersto come out of our school," Heaney said.

Flaherty isn't one to come into Mount Carmel and start talkingabout changing the perception of Mount Carmel being a football schooland morphing into a basketball one. He wants the two programs to feedoff one another to have the basketball players look at the footballplayers and say, "I'd like our team to be just like theirs successfuland winning."

Stability the key to success

"There are schools that have both [football and basketball]backgrounds and we'll be able to do that," Flaherty said. "Successbreeds success. When you start losing, you expect to lose and thatmentality permeates a program. Sometimes when you have success, youexpect to win."

Flaherty thinks consistency is going to be the Caravan's key tosuccess. Turnover every few years doesn't help a program grow. Hewants to stay at Mount Carmel and build something they'll be proudof.

"You want to see kids be the best players and citizens," Flahertysaid. "I don't know the league that well anymore, but I'd like to seethe kids playing hard and unselfish. Winning will take care ofitself."

The players know, too, that Mount Carmel is known generally forproducing football championships. They want to change that as soon aspossible, and having Flaherty at the helm is only going to help.

"I want to have people come here for basketball, too," saidsophomore small forward Desmond Young. "I think he is really going tohelp us because we're young and we want to get to know him."

Yankees Storm Back, Beat Red Sox 8-7

BOSTON - In a game that mirrored the season, the New York Yankees bounced back. Alex Rodriguez capped a six-run eighth inning with a tiebreaking single off Jonathan Papelbon, and the Yankees overcame a five-run deficit to beat the Boston Red Sox 8-7 Friday night.

Jason Giambi and Robinson Cano started the comeback with home runs off Hideki Okajima, Derek Jeter hit an RBI single against Papelbon and Bobby Abreu tied it with a two-run double.

"Every win now is a big win," Jeter said.

By winning a 4-hour, 43-minute marathon - two minutes shy of the record for a nine-inning game set by the Yankees and Red Sox on Aug. 18 last year - New York closed within 4 1/2 games of AL East-leading Boston. The Yankees remained 3 1/2 games ahead of Detroit in the wild-card race.

Boston has led the division for the last 150 days. By winning the opener of a three-game series, the Yankees kept alive their slim chances for overtaking their longtime rival.

Johnny Damon went 4-for-6 against his former team, Brian Bruney (3-1) pitched 1 1-3 innings in relief of Andy Pettitte for the win, and Mariano Rivera pitched a one-hit ninth for his 27th save in 30 chances. Papelbon (1-3) blew a save for the third time in 38 opportunities.

Thousands of Congolese stone UN convoy near camp

Thousands of people displaced by fighting in eastern Congo have stoned United Nations vehicles at a refugee camp in anger at the organization's failure to protect them.

Soldiers who had stopped the U.N. peacekeepers' convoy at an impromptu roadblock at the Kibati camp Sunday then dragged a group of men off the trucks, accusing them of being rebels.

Peacekeepers' spokesman Lt. Col. Jean-Paul Dietrich said 10 surrendered rebels were among these men, and that they were to have been turned over to the military Monday, "but because of this incident, it was agreed on the spot to hand them over."

He said the others were 10 police and three civilians but he did not know why they also had been taken.

The refugees at Kibati, four miles (six kilometers ) north of the regional capital of Goma, are among 250,000 people driven from their homes by the latest round of a long-simmering rebellion that erupted in August in eastern Congo.

Some refugees blame the U.N. for their plight, in failing to protect them from atrocities they say were committed by both rebels and government troops.

Congolese at Kibati camp hurled stones at the convoy on Sundan and at journalists accompanying it, as they have done several times before in the past few weeks.

"We are very unhappy about what (the U.N.) is doing here," said Boyazo Ruzuba, 29, a resident of Kibati. "Before (the peacekeepers) came, we had peace. Now, we don't have peace. They are helping rebels."

The 17,000 Congo peacekeepers whose primary mandate is to protect the local people are badly overstretched, the United Nations says, and it has approved deployment of 3,100 reinforcements.

Rebel leader Laurent Nkunda says he is protecting Congo's minorities, especially ethnic Tutsis he says are threatened by Hutu militias from Rwanda, many of whom fled to Congo's forests after participating in Rwanda's 1994 genocide. Critics accuse Nkunda of exploiting the instability to gain power, and say his attacks have increased resentment against Tutsis. .

The government, whose ill-disciplined and badly trained forces have frequently fled the fighting, is refusing to negotiate with the rebels.

Displaced Congolese are threatened as well by diseases that breed rapidly in the crowded and unsanitary camps. On Sunday, an aid group sent the first post-fighting batch of medical supplies to a ravaged eastern Congo town.

Louise Orton, a spokeswoman for London-based medical aid group Merlin, said the medication went to 20 clinics around the towns of Kanyabayonga and Kirumba, more than 60 miles (100 kilometers) northeast of Goma, for the first time since the towns were captured during a rebel advance. Up to 40,000 people depend on the supplies.

Also on Sunday, officials in Goma clamped down on the illegal sale of food aid in the city's bustling markets.

Goma mayor Roger Rashiy said local police spotted sacks of maize flour bearing the World Food Program logo in the local market, which led to the seizure of some 40 tons of food aid and the arrest of several vendors. Authorities said the food will be returned to aid agencies to be distributed.

But the U.N. agency's spokeswoman Caroline Hurford said the food on sale comprises about one percent of the 3,500 metric tons of food aid they have given to the hundreds of thousands of refugees living in and around camps in Congo's North Kivu province.

"We are aware that a small portion of our food may be sold in the market," she said. "This happens in all emergencies, and it's largely because the beneficiaries like to diversify their diet. They're tired of eating the same thing, which is understandable."

Canadian space psychology: The future may be almost here

It has been just over 41 years since Senior Lieutenant Yuri Gagarin of the Soviet Air Force became the first human to fly into space; 44 years since NASA was established by an act of the U.S. Congress; and 13 years since the creation of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). Using Soviet/Russian and American space vehicles, more than 270 astronauts(1) from around the world - including eight Canadians - have flown in space. "The final frontier" has fascinated billions of people who only touched it through their reading or television watching. One of the most frequently asked questions on the websites of both NASA and CSA is, "How do I become an astronaut?"

Aside from the requirements of training, education, physical health and fitness, and a record of outstanding accomplishments in a variety of activities, one common answer to that question is: Pass the psychological assessments. The Soviet space program pioneered these, as it pioneered human space flight itself. Gagarin, for example, "was subjected to extremely rigorous training: physical, mental, and psychological. He underwent long periods in a sensory deprivation chamber, experiments with weightlessness, endurance in heat chambers and test flights under stress with every reaction monitored. One test was to solve difficult mathematical equations while a loudspeaker blasted out answers" (Russian Archives Online, 2002). Similar ordeals were faced by NASA's astronaut candidates (Santy, 1994). The process has also added a phrase to our everyday vocabulary, "the right stuff," (Wolfe, 1978), which is that happy confluence of practical intelligence, emotional imperturbability, coolness under stress, physical toughness, rapid decision-making ability, courage, and indomitability that the selectors were trying to find.

The history of human beings in space is now in a gradual, but crucial, transition. It is evolving from Cold War competition to worldwide collaboration; from up-and-down missions, lasting a few hours or days, to weeks in the Space Shuttle and months on a space station, and soon to years spent completing an expedition to Mars; from male astronauts with a background as military test and combat pilots to crews comprised of both sexes and a wide variety of occupations, nationalities, cultures, languages, and ages.

The issues to be faced have shifted accordingly. With a few - although important - exceptions, we have answered most of the questions about how to keep people alive and physically healthy in space, even for long periods. What we are less certain about is their psychological and social reactions to the changed conditions of space flight, and the relevant agencies are beginning to realize that this issue ranks with the physical and medical dangers of space as a difficulty that must be overcome prior to the extended human exploration of space. Changes in perceptual, motor, and cognitive functioning occur in microgravity; sleep is disrupted in almost all participants, leading to changes in mood and performance; prolonged, repetitive, and fatiguing physical exercise is needed to counteract muscle deconditioning and loss of bone density, but at the same time exerts a price in mental and physical energy; and so on.

There is considerable anecdotal evidence that problems have arisen as a result of the prolonged confinement and other space capsule features involved in some missions and as a consequence of factors having to do with crew diversity. The former include lapses of attention, failures or refusals to carry out scheduled work, irritability toward crewmates and/or mission control staff, and a variety of individual mood and adjustment problems; the latter have been manifested in derogatory comments and discriminatory behaviour on the basis of other crewmates' sex, national origin, or professional specialty, and misunderstandings or negative feelings because of linguistic inadequacy or cultural differences. The interaction of the two factors may exacerbate their joint impact. For example, an astronaut in a crew whose other members are longtime friends from another country, performing the mission's important tasks without including the relative stranger, is likely to experience increasing feelings of isolation, loneliness, and lack of worthwhile work as the mission stretches on (Kanas et al., 2001; Palinkas, 2000; Space Studies Board, 1998; Suedfeld & Steel, 2000; Thagard, 1997).

All space programs have paid some attention to psychosocial issues. The Soviet/Russian program has been especially attentive to these from the beginning. Its emphasis has primarily been on cosmonaut selection, crew composition, and countermeasures to the symptoms of stress. NASA in the past decade or so has increased its involvement after a prolonged period of neglect (Helmreich, 1984), the change being due to a number of factors: the first participation of American astronauts in long-duration flight, as in the now completed Shuttle-Mir program, the current International Space Station project, and the approaching expedition to Mars.

Other national and international programs, dependent on the Americans and Russians for actual transportation into space, have concentrated on selecting astronauts and running ground-based simulation and analogue studies of functioning and group adaptation. Long-duration simulations in specially designed mockups of spacecraft and space stations have involved participants from the European Space Agency (ESA) and the National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA), as well as NASA, CSA, and Rosaviakosmos, the Russian Space Agency (RSA).

The Canadian Space Agency has an ongoing interest in astronaut selection, but its only engagement in psychological research was as part of a seven-day simulation experiment. Known as the Canadian Astronaut Program Space Unit Life Simulation (CAPSULS), the project used a hyperbaric chamber. Four Canadian astronauts were isolated and kept busy "with workload and living conditions similar to a space mission" (Sullivan, Casgrain, Terrillon, Thirsk, & Williams, 1998, p. 3 - the last two authors being part of the experimental crew). The workload included operational duties, plus a set of physical science, physiological, and psychological experiments designed by a variety of research groups from around the world (Sullivan, Casgrain, & Hirsch, 1998). The major goal of the exercise was to train the participants in how to live and work in a capsule; the research was part of the training, since much of what astronauts do in space is to conduct research designed by other people. Thus, the experimental results were a peripheral rather than central aspect of the project.

The study was considered a success, in that the training objectives were met, the assigned experiments were for the most part completed as intended, and information relevant to future Canadian space operations was collected. However, it was limited along both of the dimensions discussed above: the duration was short, and although one of the participating astronauts was female, all were Canadians.

A new initiative was created in 2000. With the backing of Alan Mortimer, Director of Space Life Sciences, the CSA began to recognize that psychosocial research is not only important to the success of future space missions, but also that Canadian social scientists have relevant expertise. At a small conference that summer, serious consideration was given for the first time to the areas of psychological research in which Canadian expertise might be brought to bear - although the topic was addressed as part of the category of "Neurosciences" (Canadian Space Agency, 2000). The decision to proceed with such research was buttressed by the documented high quality of the research of Canadian psychologists (e.g., GSC-12 Allocation Report, 1984, 1988).

Two central areas were identified. One was the impact of isolated, confined, extreme environments (so-called ICEs). Experimental studies of the effects of restricted environmental stimulation on human beings were first pursued in Donald O. Hebb's laboratory at McGill University in the 1950s. Although many researchers then entered the field, the leader in sophisticated and rigorous research in the 1960s and 1970s was John P. Zubek's laboratory at the University of Manitoba (Zubek, 1969). My own laboratory at the University of British Columbia carried on after Zubek's tragic death, from the 1970s until now (Suedfeld, 1980; Suedfeld & Borrie, 1999; Suedfeld et al., 1994). Extrapolating from the laboratory to the "real" world of isolation and confinement (Suedfeld & Weiss, 2000), Canadian researchers have also studied human behaviour in the Arctic and Antarctic (e.g., Steel, Suedfeld, Peri, & Palinkas, 1997). Canadian psychology is thus well positioned to study this issue in relation to space flight (Suedfeld & Steel, 2000).

The other topic on which Canadian researchers have considerable knowledge is that of multicultural relations and interactions. The presence of two official founding nations, and dozens of aboriginal tribes, followed in the past century by the tremendous expansion of immigration from around the world, has resulted in great numbers of studies concerning intergroup attitudes and relations, communication across linguistic and cultural barriers, perceptions and misperceptions among different groups, and so on (e.g., Bell, Esses, & Maio, 1996; Chartrand & Julien, 1994; Dion, Dion, & Pak, 1992; Kalin & Berry, 1996; Prugger & Rogers, 1993; Punnett, 1991; Taylor, Moghaddam, & Bellerose, 1989; Young & Gardner, 1990). In the context of space-related situations, the sister and brother team of Raye and James Kass (Concordia University) has addressed the problems faced in long-duration confinement by members of multinational groups, and has suggested premission training and during-mission resources that might minimize and alleviate those problems (Kass & Kass, 2001).

The interaction between long-term isolation and confinement on the one hand, and multicultural misunderstanding on the other (and the need for training and preparation to avoid problems), was vividly illustrated by another Canadian, Judith Lapierre, who reported sexual harassment by a Russian teammate in a 240-day simulator isolation study. One Russian response was that Lapierre misinterpreted an affectionate New Year's greeting. The implication was that she had overreacted to a perhaps more intense Russian counterpart of an "Auld Lang Syne" buss. Vadim Gushin, a leading Russian expert on space psychology, attributed the episode to cross-cultural misunderstanding exacerbated by the long period of isolation, confinement, and lack of privacy endured by the crew (Gushin, 2001; Gushin & Pustynnikova, 2001). Dr. Lapierre, incidentally, has recently been named to command a Mars analogue station in Utah, operated by the private Mars Society.

Concern about these sets of issues is not unique. All space agencies have recognized the importance of crew performance and morale, and the need to understand the potential impact of isolation and demographic diversity on those factors. A few years ago, the Space Studies Board of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences - National Research Council identified a list of critical topics to be studied by space science during the near future. The six-person Panel on Human Behavior (with, incidentally, two Canadian members) listed some questions specific to space voyagers and others that also have broader relevance (Space Studies Board, 1998).

Unique to space flight are the psychological and behavioural effects of microgravity, severe pollution of the space vehicle environment, and physiological hazards such as radiation and the degradation of muscle and bone quality. Progress is being made in explaining and preventing some of these problems, and their psychological concomitants will presumably diminish accordingly.

The other issues discussed were the effects of isolation and confinement; circadian rhythms and sleep; stress and emotion; individual psychological and psychiatric problems; crew tension, conflict, cohesion, and leadership; and relations within and between space and ground crews. Accordingly, both NASA itself and a consortium of universities assembled under the label of the National Space Biomedical Research Institute have recently funded and pursued research in the areas suggested by the Space Studies Board. These studies, building upon relevant research in a variety of isolated and confined environments as well as space vehicles themselves, have made useful contributions toward understanding and optimizing the environment and performance of long-duration space travelers (e.g., Kanas et al., 2001; Palinkas, 2000; Sandal, 2001).

Many of the behavioural issues emphasized by the Space Studies Board report involve one or both of the two major focal topics selected by the CSA: the effects of isolation/confinement, and multicultural interactions. Having narrowed the chosen categories to these two, the CSA acted promptly on the decision by offering support for researchers.

A 2001 invitation for researchers to submit proposals had disappointing results. This may have been caused by insufficient publicity, scepticism about the probable cost-benefit ratio (i.e., the amount of effort needed to prepare a credible proposal vs. the perceived likelihood of its being funded), and the novelty of the idea that a government agency would actually be serious about the matter. Most Canadian psychologists were only peripherally (if at all) aware that there is a Canadian Space Agency, which has a real Astronaut Program; if they encountered the call for proposals, they may not have considered it a significant opportunity. It should be noted that previous Canadian participation in space exploration has concentrated on equipment (e.g., the famous Canadarm). Scientific projects supported by the CSA have been in areas other than the social and behavioural disciplines; life sciences support has focused on biology.

To raise the profile of the new enterprise, and to start the generation of new ideas, the CSA convened a workshop at Banff in January, 2002. Two groups of researchers were invited, one whose work was in the general area of multicultural interactions (five participants, coordinated by Lawrence A. Palinkas, a Canadian social anthropologist working at the Medical School of the University of California, San Diego) and one with an interest in stress and coping, including stress resulting from living in extreme and unusual environments (six participants, coordinated by Peter Suedfeld, University of British Columbia). In addition, Alan Mortimer and other science administrators of the CSA attended.

The meeting, which lasted two days, saw lively discussion of the potential for involving Canadian social scientists in space research. In the end, there was consensus that the opportunity was worth exploring further. Some additional strengths for such an involvement were noted.

Perhaps most importantly, a number of specific research topics within the two general categories were identified as particularly appropriate, given the areas of expertise of our disciplines in Canada and the role of Canada in space missions. The Appendix presents a summary of these points.(2)

We may consider a few of these in somewhat more detail. Among the points raised in the context of multicultural crews is the issue of miscommunication. The spacecraft environment can be quite noisy, particularly before entering and after leaving orbit. Voice communication is degraded by loud background noise, which can exacerbate the problem of imperfect understanding of a foreign language, and especially of technical terms and jargon in a foreign language. The ways and degrees of failure to understand each other or distorted radio communications from mission control need to be predictable to avoid serious, and in emergencies potentially lethal, error in issuing and receiving instructions.

On the other hand, the presence of crew members from other cultures may reduce the monotony of long-duration missions. Exploring different ways of thinking, diverse educational and occupational backgrounds, varying tastes in food and music, and at the same time perhaps finding similarities in interests, family life, and values, may enhance esprit de corps within the crew and diminish the negative emotional and cognitive effects of boredom.

Both of these, and other effects of diversity, are related to crew selection and training. In the series of Shuttle-Mir missions, it was customary for American astronauts to receive prolonged training in Russia, learning the language and getting acquainted with their future crewmates in both work and recreational settings. Similar, although less prolonged and intense, efforts were made involving ground support personnel assigned to the joint missions. Although such familiarization programs worked to some extent, dissatisfaction has been expressed by both flight and ground specialists about the amount and effectiveness of their preparation. More mutual training could have eliminated problems such as a predominance of Russian-language news and work-related communications on Mir (Russian "home ground") and conflicting expectations about the relationship between the mission commander and the other two crew members.

Canadian astronauts will almost certainly be a national minority in any future space capsule or ground control crews, and Canada is not likely to build its own manned spacecraft in the foreseeable future. Therefore, our personnel will always be "guests" rather than "hosts." Research to deal with the problems identified during the Shuttle-Mir series would clearly be of specific interest to CSA as well as of more general importance for all multicultural missions.

In the general context of living in an ICE, stress arising from monotony, lack of privacy, and crowding is of obvious concern (Suedfeld & Steel, 2000). There are well-known individual and cultural differences in how aversive people find these conditions, but systematic studies of the implications of these particular differences under conditions of long-duration capsule living are scarce. There is also anecdotal evidence that confinement of a small group frequently leads to openness about a variety of personal matters, and that in some cases such self-disclosure later leads to discomfort and regret. These reactions may in turn reduce group morale and cooperation.

One other topic is the relief of monotony. Countermeasures, such as a choice of recreational materials, "surprise" packages, and above all, communication with family and friends on Earth and looking at Earth through windows, all have some ameliorative effect. Many of these will become more problematic, and perhaps futile, on an interplanetary voyage. For example, looking at the Earth from an orbiting capsule is fascinating; looking at it from a spaceship approaching Mars may merely exacerbate the feeling of isolation. The same is true of space-ground contact when the time-lag prevents a flow of conversation. What countermeasures could compensate for the increased sense of remoteness? How could undesirable responses to reduce boredom, such as undertaking risky or ill-considered behaviour (previously reported from both polar and space environments), be prevented?

Another topic discussed in Banff was the scarcity of research and intervention after the astronauts return from space. Many challenging experiences have long-term psychological effects on the participant. People who spend long periods in ICEs frequently engage in intense introspection, which sometimes leads to changes in values, life goals, and social relationships after they return (Suedfeld, 1998). This may make it difficult to reintegrate into "normal" family and work life, and may be exacerbated by the unique features of space flight: "Being an astronaut is a tough act to follow" (Collins, 1974, p. 454). Space agencies do provide support to families while the astronaut is away, but have not adequately considered their postmission responsibilities.

Soon after the Banff meeting, the CSA played host to an International Workshop on Group Interactions in May, 2002. Scientists from a number of space-faring nations presented the results of research projects carried out in actual space missions, as well as in capsule simulators and analogue environments such as Antarctica (see Suedfeld, 2001).

The CSA then issued a second invitation for grant proposals (Canadian Space Agency, 2002). Support was available for up to four years, at a maximum of $50,000 per year, comparing quite favourably with both SSHRC and NSERC grants. The Agency was open to studies using laboratory, simulator, or analogue (but not in-flight) experiments, as well as other data collection approaches such as interviews, questionnaires, archival analyses, etc. "Isolation or multicultural psychology" was one of the nine areas identified as appropriate for submission. Proposals undergo peer review, just as with other funding agencies.

It is to be hoped that the Canadian psychological, and more broadly, social scientific, community will take increasing interest in such funding, and that the CSA will be encouraged by the response to offer the opportunity again. If so, it will be announced each June, with a September submission deadline. Past and future announcements can be found at: <http://www.space.gc.ca/science/space_science/announce_opp/current/ default.asp>

Space flight is both a great adventure and a gateway to yet-unforeseen scientific prospects. Space crews are composed of dedicated and gifted professionals, working under conditions that test the limits of some of our theories and existing knowledge. It would be a pity if we missed the chance to participate in studying such interesting people and making their tasks more feasible and less difficult, while at the same time collecting information of relevance for our own disciplines.

The cooperation of the Canadian Space Agency in providing information for this article is appreciated; so are suggestions and information from various colleagues. However, the opinions and conclusions are solely those of the author. Correspondence concerning the article may be sent to the author at the Department of Psychology, The University of British Columbia, 2136 West Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4 (Phone: (604) 822-5713; Fax: (604) 822-6923; E-mail: psuedfeld@psych.ubc.ca).

References

Bell, D. W., Esses, V. M. I., & Maio, G. R. (1996). The utility of open-ended measures to assess intergroup ambivalence. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 28, 12-18.

Canadian Space Agency (2000). Space life sciences planning workshop final report. St-Hubert, QC: Canadian Space Agency.

Canadian Space Agency (2001). Operational space medicine report. Accessed August 18, 2002, through: <http://www.space.gc.ca/csa_sectors/human_presence/astronauts/osm/status%20re port/default.asp>

Canadian Space Agency (2002). Announcement of opportunity. Accessible through: <http://www.space.gc.ca/science/space_science/announce_opp/current/ground/def ault.asp>

Chartrand, E., & Julien, D. (1994). Systeme d'Observation des Dimensions d'Interaction (SODI): Validation canadienne francaise de l'Interactional Dimensions Coding System (IDCS). Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 26, 319-337.

Collins, M. (1974). Carrying the fire: An astronaut's journeys. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Dion, K. L., Dion, K. K., & Pak, A. W.-P. (1992). Personality-based hardiness as a buffer for discrimination-related stress in members of Toronto's Chinese community. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 24, 517-536.

GSC-12 Allocation Report (1984, 1988). Ottawa, ON: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.

Gushin, V. (2001). Interview with INTERFAX News Agency, accessed August 18, 2002, through: <http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Launchpad/1033/judith.htm>

Gushin, V., & Pustynnikova, J. (2001). Interrelations in the small isolated group with heterogeneous composition in SFINCSS-99 space simulation study. Presented at the Joint IAF/IAA Symposium on Life Sciences. Accessed August 18, 2002, through: <www.iafastro.com/archives/pap2001/iaf_abstract/IAFG/SympIAFG.htm>

Helmreich, R. (1984). Applying psychology in outer space: Unfilled promises revisited. American Psychologist, 38, 445-450.

Kalin, R., & Berry, J. W. (1996). Interethnic attitudes in Canada: Ethnocentrism, consensual hierarchy and reciprocity. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 28, 253-261.

Kanas, N., Salnitskiy, V., Grund, E. M., Weiss, D. S., Gushin, V., Bostrom, A., Kozerenko, O., Sled, A., & Marmar, C. R. (2001). Psychosocial issues in space: Results from Shuttle/Mir. Gravitational and Space Biology Bulletin, 14, 35-45.

Kass, R., & Kass, J. (2001). Team-work during long-term isolation: SFINCSS Experiment GP-006. In Simulation of extended isolation: Advances and problems (pp. 124-147). Moscow: Institute of Biomedical Problems.

Palinkas, L. A. (2000). Summary of research issues in behavior and performance in isolated and confined extreme (ICE) environments. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, 71 (9, Suppl.) A48-50.

Prugger, V. J., & Rogers, T. B. (1993). Development of a scale to measure cross-cultural sensitivity in the Canadian context. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 25, 615-621.

Punnett, B. J. (1991). Language, cultural values and preferred leadership style: A comparison of Anglophones and Francophones in Ottawa. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 23, 241-244.

Russian Archives Online, accessed August 4, 2002, through: http://www.russianarchives.com/rao/gallery/gagarin/

Sandal, G. (2001). Psychosocial issues in space: Future challenges. Gravitational and Space Biology Bulletin, 14, 47-54.

Santy, P. A. (1994). Choosing the right stuff: The psychological selection of astronauts and cosmonauts. Westport, CT: Praeger.

Space Studies Board, National Research Council (1998). A strategy for research in space biology and medicine in the new century. Washington, DC: National Research Council.

Steel, G. D., Suedfeld, P., Peri, A., & Palinkas, L. A. (1997). People in high latitudes: The "Big Five" personality characteristics of the circumpolar sojourner. Environment and Behavior, 29, 324-347.

Suedfeld, P. (1980). Restricted environmental stimulation: Research and clinical applications. New York: Wiley.

Suedfeld, P. (1998). Homo invictus: The indomitable species. Canadian Psychology, 38, 164-173.

Suedfeld, P. (2001). Groups in special environments. In N. J. Smelser & P. B. Baltes (Eds.), International encyclopedia of the social and behavioral sciences, Vol 9 (pp. 6430-6434). Oxford, UK: Elsevier.

Suedfeld, P., & Borrie, R. A. (1999). Health and therapeutic applications of chamber and flotation Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST). Psychology and Health, 14, 545-566.

Suedfeld, P., & Steel, G. D. (2000). The environmental psychology of capsule habitats. Annual Review of Psychology, 51, 227-253.

Suedfeld, P., Steel, G. D., Wallbaum, A. B. C., Bluck, S., Livesley, N., & Capozzi, L. (1994). Explaining the effects of stimulus restriction: Testing the dynamic hemispheric asymmetry hypothesis. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 14, 87-100.

Suedfeld, P., & Weiss, K. (2000). Antarctica: Natural laboratory and space analogue for psychological research. Environment and Behavior, 32, 7-17.

Sullivan, P. J., Casgrain, C., & Hirsch, N. (Eds.). (1998). CAPSULS: A 7-day space mission simulation. St-Hubert, QC: Canadian Space Agency.

Sullivan, P. J., Casgrain, C., Terrillon, F., Thirsk, R., & Williams, D. (1998). CAPSULS, a short duration space mission simulation. In P. J. Sullivan, C. Casgrain, & N. Hirsch (Eds.), CAPSULS: A 7-day space mission simulation (pp. 3-8). St-Hubert, QC: Canadian Space Agency.

Taylor, D. M., Moghaddam, F. M., & Bellerose, J. (1989). Social comparison in an intergroup context. Journal of Social Psychology, 129, 499-515.

Thagard, N. (1997, May 2). Presentation to the Panel on Human Behavior, Committee on Space Biology and Medicine, Washington, DC.

Wolfe, T. (1978). The right stuff. New York: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux.

Young, M. Y., & Gardner, R. C. (1990). Models of acculturation and second language proficiency. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 22, 59-71.

Zubek, J. P. (Ed.). (1969). Sensory deprivation: Fifteen years of research. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.

APPENDIX

Summary of the Conclusions of the CSA Space Psychology Workshop, January, 2002.

Multicultural Crew Composition Working Group Report

Multicultural crews will be an inherent feature of future long-duration missions. Previous evidence suggests that along with other types of diversity, cultural background can affect performance. These effects have not been systematically investigated.

Key Questions:

1) What effect will multicultural crew composition have on behaviour and performance?

- What forms of miscommunication will occur with multicultural crews?

- How will miscommunication affect behaviour and performance?

- How are leadership styles related to culture/background?

- How are cohesion/tension affected by multicultural crews?

- What will be the benefits of multicultural crews in isolation? (e.g., decreasing monotony, fostering learning, increasing chance of needed skill set existing in crew)

- How does tokenism (related to culture and gender) affect behaviour and performance?

- How do differing culturally determined gender roles affect behaviour and performance?

- Do standards (values and expectations) of performance in space vary by culture and what impact does it have on individuals and group behaviour and performance?

2) How do we minimize the potential negative impact of multicultural crews and maximize the potential positive impact of multicultural crews?

- What personal and group characteristics predict for performance in multicultural crews?

- Would crew selection lead to better performance (in a multicultural context) than individual selection?

- What are the most important criteria in leadership selection for multicultural crew composition?

- Would crew training lead to better performance (in a multicultural context) than individual training?

- What are the critical elements for a cross-cultural training program for multicultural crews?

- How do we test and validate those critical elements?

- What types of in-flight support are needed to minimize the negative impact and maximize the positive impact of multicultural crews?

3) How do we assess the effects of multicultural crew composition in a multicultural context?

- How do we measure performance (ability, stability, and compatibility) given potential cross-cultural differences?

- Are the measures used by various agencies for selection and performance assessment valid across cultures?

- What methods are most appropriate for studies of small, culturally diverse groups (qualitative, quantitative, and qualitative/quantitative)?

Canadian Strengths and Capabilities:

- Canada has a long-standing reputation for working with culturally diverse populations as well as with cross-cultural psychology and multicultural studies.

- Canada's role in the international space community makes in uniquely poised to address these issues.

- Canada has several facilities, which could be used as a training and research centre for multicultural crews.

Isolation Working Group Report

General comments:

1. The capsule environment, involving isolation, confinement, limited internal space, etc., is a given in all space research (as well as simulations and many analogues). It is, therefore, unnecessary to specify in each research issue that the characteristics and psychological effects of the capsule are considered. Researchers should justify their choice of environment.

2. Most aspects of capsule environments have potentially positive and negative aspects and effects (e.g., cognitive processes, mood, group interactions, etc.). Researchers should use instruments that can measure both types of impacts rather than focusing on either to the exclusion of the other.

3. The research methodology (e.g., qualitative vs. quantitative) should be appropriate to the research questions being asked. Researchers should be aware that in order to establish reliability and generalizability, qualitative data may be subjected to quantitative analyses (e.g., content analysis).

Key Issues:

*Except when noted, all issues may be addressed in ground environments (both analogue and simulation) and/or the flight environment.

- Minority Status

- In numbers

- In task assignment

- In control over mission

- Privacy/Territoriality

- Design issues - habitat space management

- Sharing of resources and information

- Self-disclosure

- Anxiety

- Trust

- Openness

- Team-building

- Adapting vs. adopting existing models leading to effective models that maximize team effectiveness and task accomplishment

- Test in multicultural groups

- Person By Situation Interactions

- Link between situational and person factors as they impact behaviour, performance and adjustment.

- Coping styles

- Re-entry

- Risk-taking

- Anxiety

- Stress

- Mission phase

- Pre- and Postmission effects on astronauts

- Stressors

- Decision patterns

- Goals and motives

- Psychological adjustments

- Family

- Ground & archival studies

- Family Interactions

- During all phases of the mission

- Short- and long-term studies

- Stressors

- Decision patterns

- Goals and motives

- Psychological adjustments

- Ground & archival studies

Canadian Strengths:

1. International assessment of scientific strengths rated psychology as the top Canadian science and is well regarded and respected internationally.

2. In the late 1950s, Canadians pioneered habitat/space and design psychology.

3. Study of isolation and confinement was begun in Canada, in the 1950s, and has been studied by Canadian psychologists continuously ever since. Both laboratory and field research (especially in the Arctic) are conducted.

4. Suitable facilities already exist (e.g., Arctic analogue facilities in weather stations, research facilities, and logistic support system).

5. Many of the suggested areas would involve very cost-effective research (i.e., there are limited requirements for experimental hardware).

(1) The term "astronaut" will be used throughout this paper to refer to all space voyagers, to avoid the awkward repetition of the various other terms used by various national space agencies.

(2) The summary conclusions of the CSA Space Psychology Workshop are reproduced by permission of the Canadian Space Agency.