, TRAVEL.------------------------------

0

A SPA THAT SLITHERS. FORGET MUD FROM THE DEAD SEA. ISRAEL'S LATEST TRANQUILITY TREATMENT HAS SNAKES ON TE BRAIN
-------------------------------------------------------------------

BY TIM MCGIRK/TALMEI ELAZAR

Most spa's have names that conjure up an atmosphere of bliss and tranquility. So I am a little taken a back by the sign outside the spa in the orange groves of northern Israel. It reads, ADA BARAK'S CARNIVOROUS PLANT FARM. Barak makes most of her income by showing off her plants, which eat everything from insects and reptiles to small mammals and schnitzel. She started grabbing one of the little snakes slithering in and out of the hungry plants' jaws and passing it around to visitors at the end of her act. And that was how she hit on the snakes' therapeutic value. "Some people said that holding the snakes made them feel better,relaxed,"she says. "One old lady said it was soothing, like a cold compress."

Traditionally, snakes have

PeRiScOpE......

0

THE AUCTION HOUSE
----------------------------------------------------
BETTING
BIG ON HIRST

As the bidding started at Damien Hirst's historic auction in London on Sept.15 (Sotheby's first ever of a single living artist), the specter of failing financial markets hardly discouraged collectors; Hirst's formaldehyde-preserved animals and diamond-encrusted butterflies netted a staggering $200.7 million, breaking the house's record for a single-artist auction (set in 1993 when a Piccaso sale raised $32 million), and making Hirst seem like a better bet than the FTSE.


The event broke with artistic convention, as Hirst and his manager by passed their usual dealers, the Gagosian Gallery and New York and the White Cube in London (a gallery's cut for a major artist can run up to 50 percent). The gamble paid off, which is likely to have masive implications for the way art is bought and sold. While some gallery owners say they'll always have their place in the market, others fear that giants like Jeff Koons and Takashi Murakami could follow Hirst's lead.


But is Hirst's work really recessionproof-especially given the susceptibility of his pieces to
decomposition? "This sale has proved that Hirst's a safe return", says art-market expert Godfrey Barker. "The superrich need somewhere to put their money, and they're pouring it into art. We are enterin a world where art is trusted above real estate and General Motors." Along those lines, Hirst plans to invest his new millions in modern masters like Francis Bacon-though it might not hurt to hang on to a few of his own commodity-encrusted creations,too.






SOPHIE GROVE ----------------------------

INSTITUTIONS

0

A NEW KIND OF GLOBALIZATION
A broader array of nations needs to unite around finance, energy and the environment.


BY ROBERT B. ZOELLICK


The past year was a precarious one. Not only is growth in many developed countries stagnating, but many developing countries are also now in an economic danger zone. As always, the poor are the most defenseless. Voices around the world are blaming free markets. Others are asking about the failures of governmental institutions. Storm clouds hang over multilateralism and world markets.

We cannot turn back the clock on globalization. Even as the United States and the world dig out of the present financial hole, we need to look further ahead. There is an opportunity now for President Obama to steer the world toward modernizing multilateralism and markets for a new global economy. I n doing so, the goal must be to buiuld a more inclusive and sustainable globalization.

The work must involve new economic powers that are on the rise-for example, India and China. Their engagement with the global economy has made them stakeholders in the system, and they want to be heard. Private financial markets and businesses will continue to be the strongest drivers of worldwide growth and development. But the developed world's financial systems have revealed glaring weaknesses. The architecture designed to deal with global markets is creaking.

To deal with all this, we need a new multilateralism, one that suits the times. It should be a flexible network, not a fixed system-a network that maximizes the strengths of interconnecting actors, public and private. It should reach beyond the traditional focus on finance and trade. Today, energy, climate change and stabilizing fragile and post conflict states are economic as well as political issues. They are already part of the international security and environmental dialogue. They must be included in the larger economic conversations as well.

To guide multilateral problem-solving in this world of complex interdependence, we need a steering group that recognizes the interconnections, identifies challenges at the intersection of topics and connects new and existing machinery among government to solve problems. For a start, we need a core group of finance ministers who would assume responsibility for anticipating issues, sharing information,solving problems and managing differences. The G7 already does some of this, but it is not sufficient. We need a better group for a different time-a new steering group that includes rising economic powers as well as established ones. This steering group should not just replace or expand the G7 with a new fixed number; it should evolve to fit changing circumstances. The World Bank and the IMF, perhaps with the WTO, could help support this steering group and draw on our broader membership to propose new coalitions to address issues.

This new network must assure a sound economic recovery and tackle the reform of financial systems. It must continue to push forward a global trade agenda. It needs to interconnect energy and climate change. World energy markets are a mess. The steering group could help forge a "global bargain" among major energy producers and consumers. At a minimum, such a bargain should involve sharing plans for expanding supplies, including options other than oil and gas; improving efficiency and lessening demand; assisting with energy for the poor; and considering how these policies relate to carbon production and climate change. A climate-change accord would benefit from new tools such as green technologies and mechanisms to support forestation and avoid deforestination. Financial support should be given to poorer countries to help adapt. The steering group might also assist the U.N. negotiations on the implementation of a global climate-change treaty.

Multilateralism, at its best, is a means for solving problems among countries, with the group at the table willing and able to take constructive action together. Fate presents the new president with an opportunity wrapped in a necessity; to modernize both multilateralism and global markets.



ZOELLICK is president of the World Bank

THE GOOD LIFE......

0

, SHOPPING.......

A. BROWSING MARKETS INSTEAD OF THE MALL

Lucky for reluctant shoppers, outdoor outcroppings of stalls spring up each year at this time, proferring handcrafted tchotchkes,
unique
apparel, housewares, beauty products,
toys and exotic delicacies.
Featuring 300 vendors adjacent to a skating rink,
the Strasbourg market is the largest in France
and has
been around for almost half a millennium.



Situated in the shadow of the Strasbourg Cathedral, it includes a series of charming timbered buildings housing shops and a gingerbread bakery (through Dec.31;strasbourg.com).
Cologne, Germany, boasts six Christmas markets, including the Floating Christmas Market, held on a boat moored on the Rhine alongside the Old Quarter (through Dec.23; germany-christmas-market.org.uk).
Town Hall Square in Tallinn, Estonia, is home to one of the youngest Christmas markets in Europe, established in 2001.

Unlike others in the region, it doesn't close until New Year's Day, giving visitors extra time to peruse the selection of felt hats and slippers, wreaths and handmade candles, as well as toy animals handcrafted from sea grass (tallinn-life.com).
Craftworks are plentiful at the expansive Liseberg market in Goteborg, Sweden, which is located on the grounds of a giant amusement park strung with 5 million lights.
At the Liseberg Ice Gallery and Bar, the walls, furnishings and even drinking glasses are all made of blue ice (through late December; liseberg.se).
If you still can't find the perfect gift, there's always Santa.

- E.M -




B. ACCESSORIES OF THE SEASON



A christmas tree should be just as well dressed as
the guest sitting down to dinner.




To that end, Faberge makes its bejelwed eggs into ornaments in
deliciously

bright colours ; CZAREVITCH (blue), ANASTASIA (red), SWAN (purple), CLOVER (amber)
($200 each; neimanmarcus.com).



Jay Strongwater's Hinged Crown ornament, set with Swarovski crystals,
plays Tchaikovsky's "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies" when opened ($395; jaystrongwater.com).



Ne'Qwa Art hand-paints its glass ornaments on the inside,
and can customize its design to match any holiday whimsy,
from snowmen to Santa (prices vary;
neqwa.com).

Some decorations can double as dessert.


Exclusively for Selfridge's department store in the Britain,
Artisan du Chocolat has produced colorful spherical baubles,
made of its finest houseblend chocholate ($89 for 1kg;
artisanduchocolat.com).



Biskuiteers brings cheer with its
Christmas Luxe Baubles tin,
chock-full of
edible decorations
with sparkly icing and gold ribbon
to hang on the tree ($63;
biskuiteers.com).




But for the ultimate in festive decorating,
hosts can adorn the table with Fortnum and
Mason's Cardinal Chorus crackers,
which resemble oversize
wrapped candy and explode when pulled at both ends, revealing goodies like cuff links and jewelry ($1,480 for six; fortnumandmason.com).



Then the halls will be truly decked.


- JOANNA HEATH -



, LIFE

0

GOING GREEN












O Christmas Tree. If you want
to be as eco- savvy as possible this holiday season, get a real tree-then replant it.

BY BRYAN WALSH

EVERY DECEMBER......
Throughout my childhood, my father would rise from the couch an a Sunday afternoon and tell us that it was time to chop down the Christmas tree.
But the Walsh men are not outdoorsmen; firmly suburban, we're at most screened-in-porch men.
So by cutting down the yule tree, my dad meant climbing into the attic and bringing down the tinsel-covered bits of plastic and tubing, then assembling them into something resembling Tannenbaum form.
Yes, though it shames me to say it now, we were a faux-fir family.
But is an artificial tree so bad? A new study by the well-regarded sustainability firm PE Americas found that owning an artificial tree-as do an estimated 50 million house hold in the U.S.-caused lower carbon emissions over a decade than did buying real trees 10 years in a row, chiefly because of the gasoline used to get a cut tree from farm to living room.
The big caveats, however, are that the study focused on carbon and was sponsored by the American Christmas Tree Association, which works with artificial tree makers.
Ask environmentalists the which-is-greener question, and most will side with the National Christmas Tree Association (NCTA), which represents live-tree growers.
"Even if you use a fake tree for 10 years, when you throw it away, it's not biodegradable," says the NCTA's communications director, Rick Dungey.
"It's always better to use a natural product over an artificial one".
Though more than 30 million live Christmas trees are sold in the U.S. every year, almost all Christmas trees are raised on commercial farms-which makes them a renewable resource more a kind to a stalk of corn than to a wild Douglas fir in the forest.
When a yule tree is chopped down and sold, farms will plant another one in its place, making that part of the process carbon-neutral.
The fossil fuel burned to transport the trees from farm to hearth is another matter.
But given that most artificial trees are manufactured and shipped from China, fakes have their fuel costs too.
Then there's the stuff that artificial trees are made of.
One ingredient in most fake first is polyvinyl chloride (PVC) a plastic that is difficult to recycle.
And while new artificial trees pose little threat to children's health, Mike Schade, the pvc-campaign coordinator for the activist group Center for Healt, Environment and Justice, notes that older plastic trees tend to have higher levels of lead, a potent neurotoxin.
But just buying a live tree doesn't guarantee a green Christmas.
Instead of simply tossing your tree in the trash on Dec.26, recycle it.
Thousands of municipalities across the U.S. offer Christmas-tree-recycling programs; Americans can look them up on earth911.com.
The U.S. Army Corps of Enineers will even collect discarded trees and use them to create underwater forest in man-made lakes, sprucing up the habitats of fish and other aquatic critters.
Extreme greens opt to get a real tree with root-ball intact, keep it alive through the stressful holiday season-then find a place to replant it.
That might be easy if you have a green thumb and a backyard big enough to absorb a Douglas fir; lug the potted tree inside for the holidays, then outside once your New Year's hangover has cleared.
If you keep the tree in a planter, you can reuse it every year and save on gas.
Alas, those who can't garden to save their lives are out of luck-unless they happen to live in or near Portland,Ore.
There the Original Living Christmas Tree Co. delivers potted trees for a holiday rental.
A little after New Year's, workers pick them up and deliver them to parks, schools and other institutions that pay $10 to have a tree planted on their property.
"We're set to do over 400 trees this year," says founder John Fogel.
"I want people to feel good about (live) trees".
Perhaps that's the real benefit of having a fresh tree in your home.
"Kids today are so out of touch with nature," says Bob Schildgen, the Sierra Club's environmental-advice columnist.
"Just having a living thing in the house can enhance environmental values in a way you can't measure in dollars and cents".
So may your days be merry and bright, but may all your Christmases (and any other holidays) be green.




REAL ESTATE,,,,,,,

0


MOSCOW ON HUDSON......

A plummeting ruble and a frozen stock market (trading in Moscow was once again suspended last week) mean that rich Rusians are desperate to move their remaining money abroad.
At least some of them are pouring it into New York real estate.
Luxury pads in places like London and Manhattan were popular among elite Muscovites even before the property crash, but demand is increasing now that many top properties are selling at a 15 to 20 percent discount from their highs.
Edward Mermelstein and Associates, a New York real-estate firm that specializes in helping overseas clients buy property in the United States , has closed six deals in recent weeks on behalf of Russian clients at 15 Central Park West, the glitzy Robert Stern-designed condo building on 61st Street.
Prices per square foot are down significantly from highs of about $7,000 per square foot, paid just a couple of years ago by the now beleguared bankers and hedge-fund managers who are selling them.
"My Russian buyers see these apartments as a very good investment", says firm head Edward Mermelstein.
"They are worried about economic and political persecution in their own countries, and they still believe that the Anerican market is strong and safe."
Good thing somebody does.


-RANA FOROOHAR-

A TOUCH OF HEAT IN THE COLD

0

TOURISTS SOAK THEIR SORROWS AWAY IN JAPAN'S THERMAL BATHS.

WHERE THINGS GET STEAMY ; WINTER BATHERS ENJOY THE OPEN SPA AT A HOTEL IN AKITA, NORTHERN JAPAN

BY CHRISTIAN CARYL

, JAPAN BOASTS SOME OF THE BEST SKIING IN ASIA. YAMAGATA PREFECTURE, ON THE COUNTRY'S CHILLY WEST COAST, IS HOME TO THE ZAO MONTAIN SKI RESORT , FEATURING A NEAR-LIMITLESS SUPPLY OF DEEP POWDER. BUT THE BEST PART OF A JAPANESE WINTER IS WHAT HAPPENS APR`ES SKI; AN OUTDOOR BATH IN A STEAMING HOT SPRING, KNOWN AS AN ONSEN, WITH SNOWFLAKES DRIFTING ALL AROUND IN THE DUSK. THOUH ANY ONSEN WILL DO, THE MEIGETSUSO INN (meigetsuso.co.jp) OFFERS A PARTICULARLY ATTRACTIVE VERSION. NINE OF ITS 20 ROOMS OPEN ON TO SMALL, PRIVATE BATHS (called rotenburo) WHERE GUESTS CAN RELAX IN QUIET SPLENDOR WITH A VIEW OF THE SNOW-COVERED GARDEN AND THE MONTAIN BEHIND. LANTERNS HAND-CARVED FROM THE SNOW LEND A TOUCH OF WARM LIGHT, AND BATHERS CAN ENJOY A SAMPLING OF THE PREMIUM SAKES STORED IN THE INN'S CELLAR.

, THERE ARE SOME 28,000 NATURAL HOT SPRINGS IN JAPAN; OF THOSE, ABOUT 15,000 COME WITH HOTELS OR INNS ATTACHED. IN 2006, VISITORS SPENT 137 MILLION NIGHTS IN ONSEN HOTELS--- NO SMALL NUMBER, CONSIDERING THAT JAPAN'S POPULATION TOTALS 127 MILLION. THOSE VISITORS, OF COURSE, INCREASINGLY INCLUDE FOREIGNERS AS WELL, WHO HAVE GRADUALLY DISCOVERED THE PECULIAR ECSTASY TO BE ARNERED FROM LOLLING AROUND IN MINERAL-RICH, VOLCANICALLY HEATED WATER. YET EVEN SO, IT PROBABLY WOULDN'T OCCUR TO MOST OUTSIDERS THAT WINTER IS ONE OF THE BEST TIMES TO VISIT AN ONSEN.

, AT TADAYA, ANOTHER SMALL INN ON THE WINDSWEPT NOTO PENINSULA (tadaya.net), GUESTS CAN LUXURIATE IN A HOT BATH WHILE GAZING OUT OVER NANAO BAY. KENTARO TADA, THE SIXTH-GENERATION OWNER OF THE 123-YEAR-OLD FAMILY HOTEL, SAYS THAT WINTER REDUCES THE LANDSCAPE TO THE BLACK-AND-WHITE PURITY OF AN INK-WASH PAINTING. "VISITORS FROM FOREIGN COUNTRIES ENJOY THE BEAUTY OF THE COUNTRYSIDE, ENTIRELY DIFFERENT FROM EXPERIENCES IN URBAN HOTELS," HE SAYS. "THEY COME HERE IN SEARCH OF UNCIVILIZED PLACES." TO BE SURE, "UNCIVILIZED" IS ENTIRELY IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER. TADAYA PRIZES ITSELF ON ITS SCRUPULOUSLY SEASONAL CUISINE-CRABS ARE BIG IN WINTER-PAIRED WITH FINE LOCAL SAKE SERVED IN A JAR.

, TADAYA IS PART OF WAKURA ONSEN, A COMPLEX OF HOT SPRINGS THAT HAS DRAWN VISITORS SINCE THE EIGHT CENTURY. THAT STAYING POWER COULD BE TESTED IN THE NEXT FEW YEARS. THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS HAS HAD THE PARADOXICAL EFFECT OF SPURRING A SHARP RISE IN THE VALUE OF THE YEN-PARTICULARLY AGAINST THE CURRENCY OF AUSTRALIA, A COUNTRY THAT HAS BOOSTED JAPAN'S WINTER TOURISM OVER THE PAST DECADE BY SENDING THOUSANDS OF SKIING ENTHUSIASTS TO ITS SLOPES. SO DRAWING FOREIGNERS COULD BE AN INCREASINGLY TOUGH SELL. ONSEN HOTELS ARE PUSHING EMPLOYEES TO IMPROVE THEIR ENGLISH AND USING WEB SITES TO TARGET NEW CUSTOMERS. PERHAPS THEY SHOULD USE THE ECONOMIC CRISIS TO THEIR ADVANTAGE; AFTER ALL, IN STRESSFUL TIMES, NOTHING SOUNDS MORE APPEALING THAN A NICE, HOT BATH.



,WITH AKIKO KASHIWAGI



, PeAcE OuT???

0


, AmErIcAnS aRe SeRiOuSlY tIrEd Of ThE wAr In IrAq. BuT aRe ThEy ReAdY tO gEt SeRiOuS aBoUt PeAcE iN tHe MidDlE EAsT? JAkArTa - BaSeD TrIsh AnDeRtOn ExPlOrEs ThIs QuEsTiOn WhIle ViSiTiNg ThE U.S. fOr ThE fIrSt TiMe In YeAr AnD hAlF.
, NoTiCe It RiGhT aWaY, aS a FrIeNd Is DrIvInG mE tO hEr ApArTmEnT fRoM BoStOn's LoGan AiRpOrT ; tHe YeLlOw " SuPpOrT oUr TrOoPs " MaGnEts ThAt OnCe FeStOoNeD sO mAnY oF mY fElLoW AmErIcAns' BuMpErs HaVe DwInDlEd To AlMoSt NoNe. OnLy A fEw FaDeD eXaMpLes StIlL cLiNg To ThE rEaR eNdS oF rEcAlCiTrAnT pIcKuP tRuCkS aNd SUVs.

, ThIs SeEmS tO cOnFiRm WhAt MoSt pEoPlE aLwAyS aSsUmEd; ThOsE mAgNeTs WeRe AbOuT sUpPoRtInG tHe WaR, nOt ThE tRoOpS.

, AnD nOw, AmErIcAns WaNt OuT. As We PiCk OuR wAy ThRoUgH tHe MaZe Of DeToUrS sUrRoUnDiNg ThE aIrPoRt, I bEgIn WoNdErInG; PeOpLe ArE rEjEcTiNg ThE wAr, BuT aRe ThEy LoOkInG fOr BrOaDeR sOlUtIoNs In ThE MidDlE EaSt? ArE tHeY PoNdErInG tHe CoNdItIoNs tHaT hElPeD lEaD tO wAr? FoR eXaMpLe, ArE tHeY lOoKiNg FoR a PrEsIdEnT wHo CaN rEvIvE tHe IsRaElI - PaLeStInIaN pEaCe PrOcEsS?

, I dEcIdE tO fInD oUt. LuCkIlY, jUsT a FeW dAyS lAtEr, I'm HeAdEd To a KeY bAtTlEgRoUnD iN tHe EaRlY sTaGeS oF tHe U.S. pReSiDeNtIaL rAcE; NeW HaMpShIrE, wHeRe ThE fIrSt PrEsIdEnTiAl pRiMaRy VoTe WiLl HapPeN eArLy NeXt YeAr.

, " ThE wAr iS oVeRsHaDoWiNg EvErYtHiNg," SaYs WaYnE McDoNaLd, ViCe-ChAiR oF tHe StAtE RePuBlIcAn CoMmItTeE, bAlAnCiNg a PlAtE oF bArBeCuE oN hIs KnEeAt a RePuBlIcAn PiCnIc iN tHe ToWn oF EtNa. "WhAt (VoTeRs) WaNt MoRe ThAn AnYtHiNg ElSe Is FoR Us To Be OuT Of ThErE.

, BuT ThAt DoEsN't MeAn ThErE's MoRe InTeReSt In ThE PeAcE PrOcEsS, He AdDs; " I tHiNk It's LaRgElY bEiNg CrOwDeD oUt."

, ThE pOlL nUmBeRs AgReE. In a MiD-jUnE sUrVeY oF tHe StAtE's RePuBlIcAn VoTeRs By ThE uNiVeRsItY oF NeW HaMpsHiRe SuRvEy CeNtEr, 59 PeRcEnT sAiD IrAq WaS aMoNg ThEiR tOp CoNcErNs. FoReIgN PoLiCy--tHe EnTiRe ArEnA oF fOrEiGn PoLiCy--LiMpEd In At 9 PeRcEnT. AsKeD tHe SaMe QuEsTiOn a MoNtH LaTeR, 20 PeRcEnT oF DeMoCrAtS CiTeD FoReIgN PoLiCy aS a ToP iSsUe.

, On ThEiR cAmPaIgN wEbSiTeS, mOsT cAnDiDaTes EmPhAsIzE tHeIr SuPpOrT fOr IsRaEl, WiThOuT a CoRrEsPoNdInG vOw To PuRsUe PeAcE oR pRoTeCt ThE rIgHtS oF PaLeStInIaNs. OnLy DeMoCrAt DeNnIs KuCiNiCh DeVoTeS siGnIfIcAnT sPaCe To ThE ImPoRtAnCe Of an EvEn-HaNdEd PeAcE PrOcEsS.

, KuCiNiCh IsN't LiKeLy To AdVaNcE tHe CaUsE mUcH, hOwEvEr, SiNcE hE's PoLlInG aT 3 PeRcEnT nAtIoNaLlY.

, ThE nExT dAy,DeMoCrAtIc CaNdIdAtE BiLl RiChArDsOn AdDrEsSeS a CrOwDeD iN tHe StAtE cApItAl, CoNcOrD. LoOkInG a BiT rUmPlEd AnD cHuBbY fOr An AmErIcA tHaT LiKeS iTs CaNdIdAtE tRiM, tHe NeW MeXiCo GoVeRnOr FiElDs a QuEsTiOn On MiDdLe EaSt PeAcE. He QuIcKlY sUmMaRiZeS HiS sUpPoRt FoR tHe 1967 IsRaELi BoRdErS, fOr IsRaEl's RiGhT tO eXiSt AnD fOr ThE PaLeStInIaNs' RiGhT tO a StAtE. In SuM, hE sAyS, " I BeLiEvE wE nEeD a CoMpReHeNsIvE sEtTlEmEnT tHaT iNvOlVeS tAlKiNg To AlL tHe PlAyErS iN tHe ReGiOn."

, BuT tHe QuEsTiOnEr, InTeRpReTeR FaTiMa DeEk, DoEsN't LoOk HaPpY. DeEk GrEw Up aS a PaLeStInIaN rEfUgEe In JoRdAn. ShE's BeEn In ThE U.S. fOr 16 YeArS. ShE's LoOkInG fOr a CaNdIdAtE tO tAcKlE tHe IsRaElI-PaLeStInIaN cOnFlIcT, aNd ShE HaSn't FoUnD OnE YeT.
" AlL oF tHeM sAy Oh, YoU kNoW, wE hAvE tO tHiNk AbOuT sOmEtHiNg, We HaVe To Do SoMeThInG," sHe TelLs Me AfTeR tHe SpEeCh. " BuT I ThInK iT's AlL cRaP. I dIdN't LiKe BiLl RiChArDsOn's AnSwEr. I nEeD mOrE."
DeEk BlAmEs PaLeStInIaN mIsErY oN a CoMbInAtIoN oF AmErIcAn ImPeRiAlIsM aNd WeAk ArAb LeAdErShIp. ShE's FrUsTaTed ThAt ThE pLiGhT oF hEr FeLlOw ReFuGeEs HaSn't InSpIrEd MoRe PasSiOn.
" I wAnT a CaNdIdAtE wHo WiLl SaY tHiS iS uNfAiR, tHiS iS uNjUsT, " sHe SaYs. " I aM gLaD pEoPlE aRe TaLkInG aBoUt DaRfUr. BuT wHaT aBoUt ThE fOrGoTtEn ReFuGgEs?"


, AcTuAlLy tHe mIdDlE eAsT cOnFliCt iS nEvEr ReAllY fOrGoTtEn In tHe U.S. It's aN eNdLeSs SoUrCe Of HeAdLiNeS aNd EdItOrIaL. As ThE dEcAdEs PaSs, HoWeVeR, AmErIcAnS aPpEaR tO bE lOsInG hOpE iN eVeR fInDiNg a SoLuTiOn. LaSt YeAr, a U.S. pOlL fOuNd 64 PeRcEn oF rEsPoNdEnTs ThOuGhT IsRaEl AnD tHe ArAb NaTiOnS wOuLd NeVeR bE aT pEaCe.
I e-MaIl StEvEn SImOn, SeNiOr FeLloW fOr MiDdLe EaStErN StUdIeS aT tHe CoUnCiL oF FoReIgN ReLaTiOnS, tO aSk wHy PeOpLe ArEn't TaKiNg a BrOaDeR vIeW oN mIdDlE EaSt IsSuEs.
"YoU eXpEcT tOo MuCh oF vOtErS", hE cHiDeS gEnTlY iN hIs rEpLy. He CiTeS tHe DiFfIcUlTy AmErIcAnS fAcE iN wItHdRaWiNg FrOm IrAq "UnDeR cOnDiTiOnS tHaT rEsEmBlE dEfEaT". He CiTeS tHe CoUnTrY's LoNgTiMe EmOtIoNaL aNd StRaTeGiC iDeNtIfIcAtIoN wItH IsRaEl. He PoInTs OuT tHe CoMpLeXiTy ThAt WoUlD bE iNvOlVeD iN aNy PeAcE dEaL.
"It Is NoT sUrPrIsInG tHaT cAnDiDaTeS wIlL sHy AwAy FrOm ThEsE sOrTs Of QuEsTiOnS," hE cOnClUdEs, ThOuGhT hE aDdS tHe IsSuE wIlL aRiSe MoRe In ThE lAtEr StAgEs Of ThE cAmPaIgN.

, CoNnIE WhItLaCh Is My LaSt HoPe. ShE's ThE dIrEcToR oF ChUrChEs FoR MiDdLe EaSt PeAcE (CMEP), wHiCh SeNt a LeTtEr To AlL tHe CaNdIdAtEs In AuGuSt UrGiNg ThEm To MaKe "StRoNgEr AmErIcAn DiPlOmAtIc LeAdErShIp" In ThE pEaCe ProCeSs a ToP pRiOrItY. I CaLl WhItLaCh, AnD sHe pOLiTeLy BuRsT mY bUbBlE.
"I ReAlLy Do NoT tHInK iT's a GoOd TiMe FoR cAnDiDaTeS tO tAlK aBoUt ThE iSsUe," ShE sAyS, BeCaUsE "tHeY dOn'T uSsUaLlY dO a VeRy ReSpOnSiBlE jOb Of It."

, In ThE hEaT oF a CaMpAiGn, ShE sAy'S, pOLiTiCiAnS eNd Up TaKiNg ExTrEmE pOsTiOnS. RaThEr ThAn FoRcE tHe IsSuE iNtO tHe LiMeLiGhT, CMEP hOpEs To GeT tHe CaNdIdAtEs To CoMmIt To WoRk FoR pEaCe. ThEn ThE oRgAnIzAtIoN cAn FoLlOw Up On ThAt CoMmItMeNt In a MoRe SoBeR aTmOsPhErE aFtEr tHe nExT U.S. PrEsIdEnT tAkEs OfFiCe.

, ThE sItUaTiOn In ThE MiDdLe EaSt LoOkS rAtHeR bLeAk At ThE mOmEnT, sHe aDmItS, bUt tHe NeEd FoR a PeAcE pRoCeSs Is sO StRoNg aS tO MaKe It "aLmOsT uNsToPpAbLe."
"I'd LiKe To tHiNk ThaT (sEnSe oF) iNeViTaBiLiTy Is cOrReCt AnD iT wIlL cOmE tO pAsS," ShE sAyS.
iT's NoT eXaCtLy a ClAmOr FoR pEaCe. BuT fOr ThE mOmEnT, iT lOoKs LiKe It WiLl HaVe To SuFfIcE.



tHe JaKaRtA pOsT, SePtEmBeR 2007







Fishy Personality

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Who says fish are boring?

Some fish are active, some not.
Some are risk-takers ; others, scaredy-fish.
University of Guelph scientists noticed this as they sat by the Credit River, west of Toronto, watching trout feed.
So they scooped up the young fish, brought them to the lab aquarium and ran them through six days of personality tests.
The "personality" theory is starting to catch on with respect to our views of much of the animal kingdom, says Rob McLaughlin and student Alex Wilson found the trouts' personalities stayed distinct even after the fish left their natural homes.
For instance, when researchers put the fish in a dark tube in the aquarium, the more active ones emerged into the main body of the tank first.
Presumably, they were more ready to take risks and less afraid of an unfamiliar environment.
"We were getting this sense that they perceive the environment differently," says McLaughlin,"and the kinds of things we measured are part of what people are starting to call personality traits in animals."


RDPETS , JULY 2008


STUNG BY BEES

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A mysterious ailment of honeybees threatens a trillion - dollar industry and an essential source of nutrition.

For 3,000 YEARS, FARMERS IN CHINA'S SICHUAN PROVINCE POLLINATED their fruit trees the old - fashioned way ; they let the bees do it. Flower produce nectar that attracts bees, which inadvertently transfer sticky grains of pollen from one flower to another, fertilizing them so they bear fruit. When China rapidly expanded its pear orchards in the 1980s, it stepped up its use of pesticides, and this age - old system of pollination began to unravel. Today, during the spring, the snow - white pear blossoms blanket the hills, but there are no bees to carry the pollen. Instead, thousands of villagers climb through the trees, hand - pollinating them by dipping " pollination sticks " - brushes made of chicken feathers and cigarette filters - into plastic bottles of pollen and then touching them to each of the billions of blossoms.


China's use of human bees is only one of many troubling signs of an agricultural crisis in the making. Bees the world over have been dying from a mysterious syndrome termed colony - collapse disorder, or CCD. U.S. beekeepers lost 35 percent of their hives this winter, after losing 30 percent the previous year. Similar but less well - publicized losses have occurred in countries as far - flung as Canada, Brazil, India and China, as well as throughout Europe. A recent survey of wild - bee populations in Belgium and France found that 25 percent of species have declined in the past 30 years. Several species of bumblebees common in the United States as recently as 1990 have disappeared. In Britain, the British Beekeepers Association has warned that honeybees could disappear entirely from the island by 2018, along with 165 million worth of apples, pears, canola and other crops they pollinate.
The treat is vast. Most crops - 87 of the world's 115 most important ones - require pollination to develop fruits, nuts and seeds, says agroecologist Alexandra - Maria Klein at Germany's University of Gottingen. Those crops account for about $1 trillion of the approximately $3 trillion in annual sales of agricultural produce worldwide. They also provide 35 percent of the calories consumed by humans each year, and most of the vitamins, minerals and antioxidants. Every blueberry, cherry, apple, grapefruit, avocado, squash, cucumber, macadamia nut and almond depends on the ministrations of bee for its existence. Even crops such as lettuce and broccoli need insect pollination to produce seed for the following year's supply.
Colony - collapse disorder is characterized by the sudden collapse of a full - strength hive in a matter of weeks, with adults leaving the hive and not returning, until the hive is deserted. " I found colonies that had just stopped living, " says Borje Svensson, a Swedish beekeeper. " They had given up live without any sign of struggle. " No one knows what causes it, but theories abound. U.S. researchers believe a previously little - known disease called Israeli acute paralysis virus is involved, while Spanish researchers suspect a fungus called Nosema. When France lost a third of its bees in the 1990s, beekeepers blamed Imidacloprid, a new pesticide that had been used on sunflowers in 1999 and expanded the ban to other crops in 2004, yet its bees have not recovered. Despite this ambiguous evidence, many beekeepers around the world continue to blame Imidacloprid - the best - selling pesticide in the world, with annual sales of nearly $860 million. Others have pointed fingers at malefactors ranging from cell phones to genetically modified crops, with little evidence. The leading theory is that colony collapse is caused by a combination of viruses, pesticides, the parasitic varroa mite, drought and stress triggered by commercial colonies' overwork and poor nutrition.
The meta-culprit is the shift to large-scale agriculture. When most farms were small family affairs, pollinators came from nearby wildlands. But the growth of massive industrial farm has put most crops out of the reach of wild insects. So farmers need to supply artificially large numbers of bees to pollinate their fields in the spring, The European honeybee is the only pollinator.

KING BEE: Farmers around the world rely too much on the European honeybee to pollimate their crops.

By. Rowan Jacobsen

LG at CommunicAsia 2008.... SPECIAL REPORT

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The CommunicAsia 2008, held from June 17 to 20 at the Singapore Expo, featured various products with the latest technologies. CommunicAsia is Asia's most comprehensive IT and communications exhibitions, where he business of technology comes to life. LG Electronics (LG) was present at this year's CommunicAsia with its strongest lineup ever. This time, its focus was to demonstrate its smart technologies and how the technologies enhance user experience in more convenient ways in line with its theme "Smartly Touchable, More Usable".
LG Secret, the long awaited third model in LG's Black Label Series, made its official debut in the Asia - Pasific region during the exhibition. The launch was attended by Indonesian media. According to John Halim, LGIndonesia Mobile Communication Product Marketing Manager, the new fashionable handset will be available in Indonesia soon.

Other newcomers include LG - KT610, the newest smartphone featuring the QWERTY keypad as well as the world's first "Digital Video Broadcasting Terrestrial" (DVB - T) mobile TV phone,
the LG - HB620T.
During the exhibition, LG also held an art performance demonstrating how LG Secret has incorporate stylish design and smart technologies. There were also a B - boys and 'Catch the Slow Motion' event with the LG Viewty.
President and CEO of Communications Company LG Electronics Mobile, Dr. Skott Ahn who also attended the launch said, "We are very excited to introduce LG Secret and our latest full product lineup to Asia, one of our strategic markets, during CommunicAsia 2008." Along with Dr. Skott Ahn were Vice President / Regional Business Leader Asia Pacific Region Mobile Communication Company LG Electronics Bo H. Choi.



MOBILE INFO


LG Mobile launched a new member of LG Black Label Series at the CommunicAsia 2008 in Singapore recently.
LG Secret (LG - KF750), the third label of the series, was developed to satisfy the tastes of trendsetters who desire a sophisticated design with enduring elegance . The premium style of the phone is reflected through the unique pattern and texture of the innovative carbon fiber material combined with sleek tempered glass.
After debuting in London in April this year, the LG Secret was then launched in Latin America.
Within two weeks of the launch, 200,000 handsets had hit the market. Now, LG Secret is ready to expand to Asia Pacific markets.
At just 11.8 mm thick, the LG Secret is the slimmest 5.0 megapixel camera phone on the market. The main display becomes touch sensitive when users activate the Touch Media, five multimedia features. 120 fps video recording and DivX certified playback make memories last forever. LG Secret also has Voice Clarity technologiy and a remarkably convenient Bluetooth auto - sync feature.

SPECIFICATIONS


Radio Bands
EDGE, HSDPA 3.6 Mbps, 900/1800/1900/2100

Display
240 x 320, 2.4", 262K, TFT - LCD

Camera
5.0 Megapixel, AF, CMOS, Face Tracking


Dimensions
102,8 x 50,8 x 11,8 mm.

Connectivity
Bluetooth 20, USB 20

Internal Memory
100 MB

External Memory Slot
MicroSD up to 4 GB

LG Secret will be available in Indonesia at the end of July.
Visit LG Secret Global Site at http//secret.lgmobile.com for more details.

Business retreats off the beaten track.....

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Business meetings held amid lush, tropical greenery beside one of the world's most beautiful pools. Presentations delivered against a soothing seaside backdrop. When it comes to meetings, conferences and corporate retreats, "anytime, anyplace, anywhere" is the adage of ALILA HOTELS AND RESORTS IN BALI. Its two luxurious locations - Alila Ubud and Alila Manggis - offer unique environments and equally unique experiences, catering for everything from corporate - style indoor meetings and outdoor presentation venues to teambuildin adventures like biking, rice field trekking, rafting and snorkeling. Not to mention rewarding incentives such as tai chi, yoga and being pampered naturally from the heart at SPA ALILA. Alila Ubud is tranquil hillside retreat that offers two indoor meeting rooms that can accommodate up to 50 people. This boutique hotel features contemporary design in an inspirational setting along Bali's magnificent Ayung River. It promises no typical retreat. Instead, expect something surprisingly different. Cuisine and locations available are fun and varied to suit your programme. For instance, it might include bird watching and trekking along the river followed by a riverside picnic lunch prepared by the hotel's Plantation Dining restaurant. Or an elegant and formal long table events alongside its spectacular emerald green swimming pool under the stars. Of course, 24 - hour room service is available and you can have your choice of cappuccino, herbal tea or jump - start health juice with your morning wake up - call. Likewise, Alila Manggis provides flexible and interesting outdoor meeting venues for up to 100 guests on its large expanse of manicured lawns, as well as poolside, garden and seaside sites all within the property. This secluded, stylish seaside resort in East Bali features modern design in a tropical seaside Balinese setting, away from the madding crowd. The hotel overlooks the Badung Strait and enjoys cool sea breezes with sunny skies much of the year, the perfect weather to enjoy meeting and dining outdoors. Its very own Cooking School and great Seasalt Restaurant have made seaside dining an art, from casual lounging at the Seafood BBQ to formal dining by the candlelit pool or the elegance of its lotus pond restaurant. Taking care of business are Alila's dedicated meetings coordinator and leisure concierge, who ensure your event, accommodation and fun activities are planned with technical proficiency, artistic creativity and personal attention. Add to this mix fabulous dining, which both hotels are well known for, combining the finest ingredients with the best of Balinese service. This includes an extensive Balinese and Western menu as well as an experienced banqueting team whose skill and creativity can transform any event into a memorable experience. Alila also offers a range of exciting outdoor venues off the properties for meetings, performances and dining, all of which they have experience at arranging for groups of 10 to 150 people. All great reasons to meet at Alila Hotels and Resorts in Bali for your next business retreat.


For information and tailored proposals, please contact :
ALILA UBUD Ph 0361 975963 Fax 0361 975968 ubud@alilahotels.com
ALILA MANGGIS Ph 0363 41011 Fax 0363 41015 manggis@alilahotels.com




www.alilahotels.com

special report_ the environment

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AMERICANS DON'T LIKE TO LOSE WARS
which makes sense, since they have so little practice with it. Of course, a lot depends on how you define just what a war is. There are shooting wars - the kind that test mettle and patriotism and resourcefulness and courage - and those are the kind at which the U.S. excels. But other struggles test those qualities too. What else was the Great Depression or the space race or the construction of the railroads or the eradication of polio but a massive, often frightening challenge that the U.S. decided as a country it ought to rise up and face ? If Americans indulge in a bit of chest - thumping and flag - waving when the job is done, well , they earned it.
Now there is a similarly momentous challenge ; global warning. The steady deterioration of the very climate of this very planet is becoming a war of the first order, and by any measure, the U.S. is losing. Indeed, if America is fighting at all - and by most accounts, it's not - it's fighting on the wrong side. The U.S. produces nearly a quarter of the world's greenhouse gases each year and has stubbornly made it clear that it doesn't intend to do a whole lot about it. Although 174 nations ratified the admittedly flawed Kyoto accords to reduce carbon levels, the U.S. walked away from them. While even developing China has boosted its efficiency standards to 15 km/L, the U.S. remains the land of the Hummer. Oh, there are vague promises of manufacturing fuel from switchgrass or powering cars with hydrogen - someday. But for a country that rightly cites patriotism as one of its core values, the U.S. is taking a pass on what might be the most patriotic struggle of all. Its hard to imagine a bigger fight than one for the survival of a country's coasts and farms, the health of its people and the stability of its economy - and for those of the world at large as well.
The rub is, if the vast majority of people increasingly agree that climate change is a global emergency, there's far less consensus on how to fix it. Industry offers its plans, which too often would fix little. Environmentalists offer theirs, which too often amount to naive wish lists that could cripple America's growth. But let's assume that those interested parties and others will always be at the table and will always - sensibly - demand that their voices be heard and that their needs be addressed. What would an aggressive, ambitious, effective plan look like - one that would leave the U.S. both environmentally safe and economically sound?
Forget precedents like the Manhattan Project which develop the atom bomb, or the Apollo program that put men on the moon - single focus programs both, however hard they were to pull off. Think instead of the overnight conversion of the World War II - era industrial sector into a vast machine capable of churning out 60,000 tanks and 300,000 planes, an effort that not only didn't bankrupt the U.S. but instead made it rich and powerful beyond its imagining and - oh, yes - won the war in the process.
Halting climate change will be far harder than even that. One of the more conservative plans for addressing the problem, by Robert Socolow and Stephen Pacala of Princeton University, calls for a reduction of 25 billion tons of carbon emissions over the next 50 years - the equivalent of erasing nearly four years of global emissions at today's rates. And yet by devising a coherent strategy that mixes short-term solutions with farsighted goals, combines government activism with private-sector enterprise and blends pragmatism with ambition, the U.S. can, without major damage to the economy, help halt the worst effects of climate change and ensure the survival of its way of life for future generations. Money will do some of the work, but what's needed most is will. "I'm not saying the challenge isn't almost overwhelming,"says Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund and co-author of the new book Earth: The Sequel, "But this is America, and America has risen to these challengers before."
No one yet has a comprehensive plan for how the U.S. could do so again, but everyone agrees on what the biggest parts of the plan would be. Here's our blueprint for how America can flight - and win - the war on global warming.