Habermehls Celebrate Three Milestones With One Project

The Reverend Dik Habermehl will have his 80th birthday May 17. His wife Marta had hers October 23. And this October they are celebrating their 55th anniversary.

There’s a lot of celebration in the cards, so the couple decided to have one big party on Saturday. And to make it a celebration for everyone, they are asking that, in lieu of gifts, well-wishers make donations to Northumberland Services For Women for the monument to be erected in Victoria Park in memory of women who lost their lives to domestic violence.

“We both agree about that,” the Reverend Habermehl said.

The Anti-Poverty Project (TAPP) has secured a site in Victoria Park, which he considered a major victory. Fundraising for the monument was taken over by the Northumberland Services For Women, and is now being done by the chapter of the White Ribbon Campaign the Reverend Habermehl set up locally.

“They have experience, and people know them, so they have credibility,” he said.

The cost is estimated to be at least $50,000, but he says fundraising is going pretty well.

“There seems to be a rule that, if you have a quarter of your budget, you can put out a call for artists - and we have that,” he said.

The actual call probably won’t go out until fall, giving the committee time to consider guidelines and criteria. All that is known for sure right now is that they want a Northumberland artist.

The Habermehls came to Cobourg from Winnipeg in 1985, when the Reverend Habermehl got a call to co-ordinate chaplaincy in the Region of Peterborough. They could live anywhere in the region, which stretched from Ajax to Kingston and north as far as Haliburton.

He had been a minister in Oshawa for 13 years previously, but his wife was all for settling down someplace new.

“It’s like starting all over again, a whole new chapter in your life,” she said.

Mrs. Habermehl had been an activation co-ordinator in a seniors’ home in Winnipeg, and she took similar positions at Legion Village and D’Arcy Place before being hired as activation director at Sidbrook Private Hospital. By the time that facility that closed in 2000, her husband had retired.

Mrs. Habermehl’s years with the Cobourg Garden Club have stood her in good stead in landscaping the rolling terrain of their home. And the Reverend Habermehl took on his own project in 2001 - the Northumberland Interfaith Coalition, whose members represent every faith from Aboriginal and Muslim to Baha’i and what are termed Free Spirits (a group that includes atheists).

It’s a thriving group that has begun such activities as interfaith explorations - taking a topic and looking it from the different faith perspectives.

“The means are different, the terms are different, but it’s basically the same spirituality,” the minister said. “Religion meets our basic needs, our emotional needs, our spiritual needs. We complement each other.”

The Habermehls’ daughter in Victoria, B.C., will not be able to make the party on Saturday, but their daughters in Cold Springs and Peterborough will be there, with some of their seven grown grandchildren.

It’s an open-house celebration, so everyone is welcome to drop in between 2 and 4 p.m. at Trinity United Church, 15 Chapel Street, Cobourg.

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Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Upscale ecotours bring new revenues to state parks

SANDY LAKE — Following a brisk cross-country ski tour and picnic lunch of quiche, chili, fruits, cheese and vegetables, we visited an amber field of renewable Pennsylvania bio-fuel, skidded across a frozen lake for an ice-fishing demonstration and toured a winery before swinging back to the condo to clean up in time for a traditional Amish dinner.

And that was just Day 1 of a fun and educational two-day winter recreation adventure. Our host for the upscale eco-tour wasn’t a trendy ski lodge or resort activities coordinator. It was the Pennsylvania state park system.

Specifically, we were hosted by Wil Taylor and his staff from Jennings Environmental Education Center, near Slippery Rock. The center’s Wilhelm Winter Adventure — a sampler of winter activities held at McKeever Environmental Learning Center and M.K. Goddard State Park near the town of Sandy Lake — was among the first events of an emerging brand of upscale programming designed to attract visitors with disposable income to Pennsylvania state parks.

It’s a new concept for the commonwealth. Pennsylvania’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources has resisted a national trend of charging state park admission fees, insisting on free access to its 117 sites; along with free picnicking, hiking, swimming and educational programming, and low-cost camping sites. But with financial resources stretched thin and Pennsylvanians mirroring a national trend of waning outdoors participation, paying the bills has become increasingly difficult.

State park bureau director John Norbeck said the new, upscale programming is intended to appeal to outdoors user groups that may have been underserved by Pennsylvania state parks.

“There are a number of different audiences we haven’t fully tapped into,” he said. “There are people who don’t get outdoors much or feel comfortable with that … and there’s a demographic group with disposable income that’s looking for quality outdoor recreational activity. We can provide eco-tours with more amenities and services and fulfill our mandate of teaching stewardship and providing outdoor recreation.”

The original idea was to program multi-park tours.

“But it was a little cumbersome doing it with people from different parks coming together, and there were liability issues,” said Barbara Wallace, an environmental education specialist at Ohiopyle State Park, one of DCNR’s eco-tour pioneers. “It fell to the wayside.”

A few parks and other DCNR facilities, however, have pursued the idea independently.

“We thought with all the resources around Ohiopyle, we could put together great eco-tours,” said Wallace. “If [the park system] wasn’t going to do it, we could do it on our own.”

Generally, most money generated at state parks through equipment rentals, concession leases, mooring fees, etc., is reinvested back into the park system. But in a creative attempt to keep some revenue in the park where it is earned, supporters of individual parks launch independent nonprofit friends-of-the-park organizations.

“Those groups accept donations and pay the costs associated with special programming,” said Taylor. “We can use that money however we want. It gives us a little more freedom.”

Norbeck said 23 nonprofit “friends” groups support individual parks across the state.

“They do fantastic work for us,” he said, “providing services that the state government couldn’t otherwise provide.”

Creatively financed with the help of friends groups, the eco-tours raise money that is reinvested into the parks that program them, helping to pay for the many free educational events.

“We still offer [at peak times] 14 hours of free public programming every weekend,” said Wallace. “But there’s been a demand for getting more in depth into a topic. With these tours we can do that.”

The Wilhelm Winter Adventure started at Jennings with an introduction and brief overview of the center’s highlights, and our 10-member group ranging in age from mid-20s to seventysomething was chauffeured north to McKeever.

After a tour of the learning center and a brief ride to nearby Goddard State Park, Jeff Smith, outdoor recreation instructor at Slippery Rock University, led our troop of mostly beginners on a cross-country ski tour over several miles of snow-covered bicycle trail along frozen Lake Wilhelm. Taylor and his staff were posted at road crossings to rescue anyone who might require extraction (we all made it). An elaborate hot-and-cold lunch was waiting for us under a picnic pavilion.

Goddard’s new manager Bill Wasser showed off an experimental field of natural grasses that absorbs agricultural runoff and stores so much energy it’s being considered for development as a renewable bio-fuel. Next came a Lake Wilhelm ice-fishing lesson with fishing guide Ron Donlan (with an EMS rescue truck parked nearby, just in case) and a stop at nearby Wilhelm Winery, followed by a delicious homemade dinner of fried chicken, roast beef, potatoes, vegetables and scrumtious desserts at the home of an Amish family that caters group meals.

We slept in private rooms at one of McKeever’s comfortable and environmentally correct condos. Following a robust breakfast, McKeever staffer Becky Lubold led us on a sensory “earth walk,” and Jennings’ Eric Best guided a winter tree identification snowshoe hike. At a steep grade, Taylor and his staff jogged ahead and positioned themselves at strategic junctures to help with the descent. After lunch, we were shuttled back to Jennings to complete the eco-tour.

Two days of activities, four good meals, seven guides and instructors, comfortable private rooms, transportation and outstanding service and hospitality. The cost: $100 per person.

“It’s a better deal than you’d get at any ski lodge,” said Molly Bradley, an attorney from Mars who sampled the Wilhelm Winter Adventure with several friends. “Just the lodging alone would have cost more, and look at all that we did. I’d definitely do this again.”

Alice Ross, a Butler retiree who completed the trip with her daughters, said the physical exertion was easier to take than the financial pinch.

“For someone on a fixed income, it’s pricey,” she said. “We enjoyed it and the food was good and everyone was nice, but this isn’t for everybody.”

It is, however, a creative new way for state parks to raise money to finance programs that might appeal to other users. Eco-tour possibilities are endless.

“The sky really is the limit for us,” said Wallace.

Taylor said he’s considering another Jennings eco-tour in the fall.

In 2007, Ohiopyle hosted an overnight hiking-biking-paddling eco-tour that was so successful, said Wallace, they’re doing it again this year. Keels, Heels and Wheels, June 13-15, will include moonlight canoeing on Cranberry Glade Lake, a 9-mile bike trip on the Youghiogheny River Trail, a hike to Ohiopyle waterfalls, whitewater rafting, a winery tour and hay ride. The price, including food, equipment rental and overnight accommodations will be $150 to $185, depending on choice of sleeping accommodations.

“If you tried to do this with an outfitter, you’d pay twice or three times as much and would not necessarily get this much expertise,” said Wallace. “We’re trying to fill a middle area between what you’d traditionally get at a state park and a private guide service.”

Ohiopyle’s next eco-tour is a May 9-11 birdwatching adventure. A Feather Quest includes an evening peek at the woodcock mating ritual, pre-breakfast birding hikes, a visit to the Powdermill Nature Preserve bird banding operation, lunch at a Laughlintown pie shop, warbler watching at Laurel Summit, a search for owls and whip-poor-wills and instruction from an ornithologist from the National Aviary.

John Hayes can be reached at jhayes@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1991.

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Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Young Southlander sets national record wins gold

The 15-year-olds time of 25.96sec beat the old mark of 26sec set by Aucklands William Benson in 2003.
McDonald also won silver in the 100m freestyle in a Southland age-group record of 54.54sec, breaking the record set by Richard Tapper in 1984.
A great week was completed on the final night of the championships when McDonald won bronze in the 50m freestyle after a setting a Southland age-group record during the heats.
He then went on to win the 100m butterfly in a Southland age-group and open record time of 57.69sec.
Also in good form was 15-year-old Rebecca Smith, who qualified for four finals, with her best results coming with a bronze in the 200m breaststroke and a fourth in the 800m freestyle. Smiths time in the freestyle of 9.20.52 beat the Southland age-group record set by Joyce Wiegersma by nearly 7sec.
Sixteen-year-old Penny Hayes made seven finals in the highly competitive 16-year age group, winning three medals, including gold, in the 200m individual medley.
Hayes won bronze medals in the 400m individual medley and the 100m freestyle where she almost broke the 60sec barrier with a time of 1.00.9.

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Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Sensex may hit 29000 by June 2009

Like

Mumbaikars caught unawares by the recent spell of cold wave, investors have been

struggling to adapt to the recurring bouts of volatility on the bourses over the

last one month. But the weathermen of Dalal Street are expecting sunny skies by

the end of this calendar year. Five of the six participants at the ET Round

Table see the bellwether BSE Sensex between 20-22,000 then.

The panelists included Narayan

Ramachandran, MD %26amp; Country Head, Morgan Stanley; Pankaj Vaish, MD %26amp; Head

equities and fixed income, Lehman Brothers; Ved Prakash Chaturvedi, MD %26amp;

CEO, Tata Asset Management; Gaurang Shah, MD, Kotak Life; Rashesh Shah, CEO,

Edelweiss Capital; and Motilal Oswal, Chairman, Motilal Oswal Securities. The

session was moderated by Ramesh Damani, director, Ramesh S Damani Finance.

Also

Read

à

It’s a

learning curve, we’re getting there…

à

Einstein too

has a place here

Only

one participant, Ved Prakash Chaturvedi felt that the market was likely to be

around 18,000 levels on December 31, 2008. “But that does not mean that

mutual fund investors will not make money,” he

added.

Mr Ramachandran expects

a modest performance by the Sensex in the current calendar, but expects the

benchmark to touch 29,000 by June next year. Slowing corporate earnings is one

factor that most market watchers feel could hold back the market. However, the

ET panelists are not too worried about

it.

According to Mr

Ramachandran and Mr Vaish, interest rates are showing signs of slackening and

that could provide a support to corporate earnings over the next couple of

years. “These (recent outflow of FII money) are not big things…they are

just minor….India has attracted a lot of money and most of it came because of

the fact that India is an attractive destination for money,” said Mr

Ramachandran. “The real thing that will decide is where fundamentals are

going. I feel that they (fundamentals) are solid,” he

added.

Mr Shah felt that issue

was not about whether earnings will grow 18% or 12%, but about the rate at

which the Indian GDP would grow. ”If you expect corporate earnings growth

of 11-12%, it means we are looking at a GDP growth of 4.5 to 5 to 6%. But if you

expect GDP growth rate to be around 8%, give or take 200 basis points, then a

17-18% corporate earnings growth is not difficult. And I haven’t seen

anybody—Indian or global—question India’s 8% GDP growth

rate,” Mr Shah

said.

While foreign funds have

pulling out over the last few months, domestic liquidity has been a strong

pillar of support and this trend is expected to continue, feels Mr Chaturvedi.

“The kind of money we have seen that has flown in from the domestic

investors in the last one year is certainly heartening,” said Mr

Chaturvedi. “My guess is that if you combine insurance and mutual funds

and other (domestic) sources of inflows into the market, close to $2 billion of

fresh money is coming into the market every month,” he

added.

Mr Gaurang Shah sees

more investors tapping the stock market through Unit Linked Insurance Plans

(ULIPs), mainly because of the handsome returns these products have delivered in

the last four years of the Bull

Run.

He excepts inflows of

roughly $5 billion through various insurance schemes during the current quarter,

a significant portion of which will be accounted for by ULIPs.

“I think relative

disadvantage of insurance as a instrument vis-à-vis other fixed interest

products has come down, which is also because real interest rates have reduced

across the world over the last 10 years. So I see money continuing to come

in,” he said.

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Monday, March 10th, 2008

Local Calendar for March 4

TODAYS BEST BETS

1. SONGWRITERS SHOWCASE, 6:30 p. m.

Featured singer/songwriter Lindsay Tomasic. The Clubhouse at This Old House, 740 W. Foothill Blvd, San Luis Obispo. Free. 548-8500.

2. FILM SCREENING, 7:30 p. m.

%26#8220;Top Gun.%26#8221; Preshow movie trivia session with prizes. Sponsored by PCF Aviation LLC. Fremont Theater, 1025 Monterey St., San Luis Obispo. $7.50. 543-0583.

MORE TODAY

Divine Healing Session. 1 to 3 p. m. Coalesce Bookstore, 845 Main St., Morro Bay. Donations. 528-7064.

Cayucos Art Association Monthly Meeting. 7 p. m. Roseanne Seitz demonstration, %26#8220;Taking Art Outside the Home.%26#8221; Cayucos Community Art Gallery, 10 Cayucos Drive, Cayucos. 995-2049.

TODAYS FARMERS MARKETS

Paso Robles %26#8212; 3 to 6 p. m. at the City Park. 239-6535.

WEDNESDAY

Opera Lovers Meet. 10 a. m. Jill Anderson, general director of the Pacific Repertory Opera company, speaks about the upcoming opera %26#8220;Carmen.%26#8221; Odd Fellows Hall, 520 Dana St., San Luis Obispo. 543-5187 or www.calpoly.edu/~jedmiste.

Book Discussion Group. 10 a. m. to noon. %26#8220;Brandons Trial,%26#8221; by Marvin Sosna. Author present. Morro Bay Library Program Room, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay. 772-9268.

Barrage. 8 p. m. An eclectic mix of music, song and dance. Cohan Center, Cal Poly. $22 to $34. 756-2787.

Hearing Aid Clinic. Hearing tests for children and adults, hearing aid checks and advice on hearing aids. Space is limited, appointment needed. Los Robles Mobile Home Park, 3165 Theater Drive, Paso Robles. Free. 466-9362.

THURSDAY

Dr. Seuss Birthday Party. 3 to 5 p. m. Children enjoy free crafts, activities, readings of Dr. Seuss stories and prize drawings. Paso Robles Library, 1000 Spring St., Paso Robles. 237-3870.

Book Sale. 6 to 9 p. m. Thursday; 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Friday; 9 a. m. to 2 p. m. Saturday. Presented by San Luis Obispo Friends of the Library. Veterans Memorial Building, 801 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo. $10 Thursday; free Friday and Saturday. 544-3033.

FRIDAY

Word-of-Mouth Workshop. 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Instructor Ann Miller teaches how to get people talking about libraries in positive terms. Advanced registration requested. San Luis Obispo City/County Library, 995 Palm St., San Luis Obispo. 781-5990.

Book Discussion. Noon to 1 p. m. Friday and March 14. %26#8220;Three Cups of Tea,%26#8221; by Greg Mortenson. St. Benedicts Episcopal Church, 2220 Snowy Egret Lane, Los Osos. 528-0654.

Lenten Fish Fry. 4 to 7 p. m. Menu includes fish, french fries, coleslaw, coffee, tea and punch. Dessert and other drinks available. Presented by St. Patricks Italian Catholic Federation. Proceeds are used for scholarships and local charities. St. Patricks Church Hall, 501 Fair Oaks Ave., Arroyo Grande. $4 to $7. 474-0266.

Tapping Therapy with Emotional Freedom Techniques Workshop. 4 to 7 p. m. Pismo Beach Lions Club, Addie Street, Pismo Beach. $40. 305-1740.

Orchid Show Preview Reception Benefit. 6:30 to 9:30 p. m. Evening includes local wines, hors doeuvres, live music, silent auction and an awards presentation. Proceeds benefit the Alzheimers Association, California Central Coast Chapter. Presented by the Five Cities Orchid Society. South County Regional Center, 800 W. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $40. 929-5749 or www.fcos.org.

SATURDAY

Word-of-Mouth Workshop. 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Instructor Ann Miller teaches how to get people talking about libraries in positive terms. Advanced registration requested. Atascadero-Martin Polin Library, 6850 Morro Road, Atascadero. 461-6164.

Orchid Show and Sale. 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Saturday; 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Sunday. The American Orchid Society will judge exhibited plants, vendors offer orchids, plants and books, orchid culture, repotting demonstrations and plant doctors. Presented by the Five Cities Orchid Society. South County Regional Center, 800 W. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $5, children under 12 admitted free. 929-5749 or www.fcos.org.

Quiet Morning of Meditation and Creativity. 9:30 a. m. to 1 p. m. St. Benedicts Episcopal Church, 2220 Snowy Egret Lane, Los Osos. 528-0654.

Decorating Chameleon Style Seminar. 9:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. Event includes seminar, design packet, door prizes and brunch. Advance registration required. Chameleon Home, 415 E. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $50.481-4104.

Tapping Therapy with Emotional Freedom Techniques Workshop. 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Pismo Beach Lions Club, Addie Street, Pismo Beach. $40. 305-1740.

Saturday in the Garden. 1 to 4 p. m. Afternoon includes speaker, docent tour and plant sale. San Luis Obispo Botanical Gardens, El Chorro Regional Park, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo. $4 to $5. 541-1400.

Pasta Feed. 5 to 8 p. m. Dinner includes spaghetti and meatballs, salad, dessert and beverage. Takeout available. Proceeds benefit the Italian Catholic Federation Scholarship Fund. St. Rose Parish Hall, 820 Creston Road, Paso Robles. $5 to $12. 239-8839 or 239-9043.

SUNDAY

CrabFest. 4 p. m. Dinner includes all-you-can eat crab, salad, garlic bread, desert and soda. Beer and wine available. Fundraiser drawing and silent auction. Presented by and benefits the Paso Robles Sunrise Rotary Club Foundation. Centennial Park, 600 Niblick Drive, Paso Robles. $45. 610-3061.

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Calendar for March 3

TODAY

Adventures With Nature. 772-2694 or
www.morrobaymuseum.org
. Rain or bad weather cancels outdoor activities. %26#8226; Lunchtime Look See at the

Rookery. 12:30 p. m. Join a docent to view the progressive stages of local heron and cormorant seven-month mating season. See all the stages from singlehood and the first alpha males arrival (January), mating and courtship (February), nesting and egg laying (March/April), hatching (April /May), raising the young (June), fledgling first flights (July) and the display of juveniles into young adulthood. Bring binoculars. Scope provided. 0.75 hour.

%26#8226; Discover Treasures of Monta%26#241;a de Oro. 1 p. m. Tour the Spooner Ranch House and Holloway Garden, walk the Reservoir Flats Trail with sea views and creekside greenery. Meet in the parking lot of Ranch House. Part 1: 1 hour. Part 2: 1.5 miles, 1.5 hours.

TUESDAY

Divine Healing Session. 1 to 3 p. m. Coalesce Bookstore, 845 Main St., Morro Bay. Donations. 528-7064.

Cayucos Art Association Monthly Meeting. 7 p. m. Roseanne Seitz demonstration of %26#8220;Taking Art Outside the Home.%26#8221; Cayucos Community Art Gallery, 10 Cayucos Drive, Cayucos. 995-2049.

Film Screening. 7:30 p. m. %26#8220;Top Gun.%26#8221; Pre-show movie trivia session with prizes. Sponsored by PCF Aviation LLC. Fremont theater, 1025 Monterey St., San Luis Obispo. $7.50. 543-0583.

WEDNESDAY

Opera Lovers Meet. 10 a. m. Jill Anderson, general director of the Pacific Repertory Opera, speaks about the upcoming opera %26#8220;Carmen.%26#8221; Odd Fellows Hall, 520 Dana St., San Luis Obispo. 543-5187 or
www.calpoly.edu/~jedmiste
. Book Discussion Group. 10 a. m. to noon. Marvin Sosna will present his book %26#8220;Brandons Trial.%26#8221; Morro Bay Library Program Room, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay. 772-9268.

Barrage. 8 p. m. An eclectic mix of music, song and dance. Cohan Center, Cal Poly. $22 to $34. 756-2787.

Hearing Aid Clinic. Hearing tests for children and adults, hearing aid checks and advice on hearing aids. Space is limited; appointment needed. Los Robles Mobile Home Park, 3165 Theater Drive, Paso Robles. Free. 466-9362.

THURSDAY

Dr. Seuss Birthday Party. 3 to 5

p. m. Children enjoy free crafts, activities, readings of Dr. Seuss stories and prize drawings. Paso Robles Library, 1000 Spring St., Paso Robles. 237-3870.

Book Sale. 6 to 9 p. m. today; 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Friday; 9 a. m. to 2 p. m. Saturday. Presented by San Luis Obispo Friends of the Library. Veterans Memorial Building, 801 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo. $10 Thursday; free Friday and Saturday. 544-3033.

FRIDAY

Word-of-Mouth Workshop. 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Instructor Ann Miller teaches how to get people talking about libraries in positive terms. Registration requested. San Luis Obispo City/County Library, 995 Palm St., San Luis Obispo. 781-5990.

Book Discussion. Noon to 1 p. m. today and March 14. %26#8220;Three Cups of Tea,%26#8221; by Greg Mortenson. St. Benedicts Episcopal Church, 2220 Snowy Egret Lane, Los Osos. 528-0654.

Lenten Fish Fry. 4 to 7 p. m. Menu includes fish, french fries, coleslaw, coffee, tea and punch. Dessert and other drinks available. Presented by St. Patricks Italian Catholic Federation. Proceeds are used for scholarships and local charities. St. Patricks Church

SUBMIT YOUR EVENT

Send your event announcements two to three weeks in advance by e-mail at
calendar@thetribunenews.com
, via fax at 781-7905 or to The Tribune, P. O. Box 112, San Luis Obispo, CA 93406.

Hall, 501 Fair Oaks Ave., Arroyo Grande. $4 to $7. 474-0266.

Tapping Therapy with Emotional Freedom Techniques Workshop.

4 to 7 p. m. Pismo Beach Lions Club, Addie Street, Pismo Beach. $40. 305-1740.

Orchid Show Preview Reception

Benefit. 6:30 to 9:30 p. m. Evening includes local wines, hors doeuvres, live music, silent auction and an awards presentation. Proceeds benefit the Alzheimers Association, California Central Coast chapter. Presented by the Five Cities Orchid Society. South County Regional Center, 800 W. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $40. 929-5749 or
www.fcos.org
. SATURDAY

Word-of-Mouth Workshop. 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Instructor Ann Miller teaches how to get people talking about libraries in positive terms. Advanced registration requested. Atascadero- Martin Polin Library, 6850 Morro Road, Atascadero. 461-6164.

Orchid Show and Sale. 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Saturday; 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Sunday. The American Orchid Society will judge exhibited plants, vendors offer orchids, plants and books, orchid culture, re-potting demonstrations and plant doctors. Presented by the Five Cities Orchid Society. South County Regional Center, 800 W. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $5, children younger than 12 are free. 929-5749 or
www.fcos.org
. Quiet Morning of Meditation and

Creativity. 9:30 a. m. to 1 p. m. St. Benedicts Episcopal Church, 2220 Snowy Egret Lane, Los Osos. 528- 0654.

Decorating Chameleon Style Seminar.

9:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. Event includes seminar, design packet, door prizes and brunch. Advance registration required. Chameleon Home, 415 E. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $50. 481-4104.

Tapping Therapy with Emotional Freedom Techniques Workshop. 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Pismo Beach Lions Club, Addie Street, Pismo Beach. $40. 305-1740.

Saturday in the Garden. 1 to 4 p. m. Afternoon includes speaker, docent tour and plant sale. San Luis Obispo Botanical Gardens, El Chorro Regional Park, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo. $4 to $5. 541-1400.

Pasta Feed. 5 to 8 p. m. Dinner includes spaghetti and meatballs, salad, dessert and beverage. Take-out available. Proceeds benefit the Italian Catholic Federation Scholarship Fund. St. Rose Parish Hall, 820 Creston Road, Paso Robles. $5 to $12. 239- 8839 or 239-9043.

SUNDAY

CrabFest. 4 p. m. Dinner includes all-you- can-eat crab, salad, garlic bread, desert and soda. Beer and wine available. Fundraiser drawing and silent auction. Presented by and benefits the Paso Robles Sunrise Rotary Club Foundation. Centennial Park, 600 Niblick Drive, Paso Robles. $45. 610-3061.

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Local Calendar for March 7

TODAYS BEST BETS

1. %26#8216;OVER THE TOP FASHION SHOW AND PHYLLIS MADONNAS MUSICAL REVUE, 11 a. m. and 5 p. m.

Through Saturday. All shows include local celebrities modeling fashions from My Favorite Things Boutique, a silent auction, a raffle and wine tasting. Dinner shows include dancing and music by Oasis. Proceeds benefit the Womens Shelter Program. Alex Madonna Expo Center, 100 Madonna Road, San Luis Obispo. $60 to $120. 784-2441.

2. CAL POLY ARAB MUSIC ENSEMBLE CONCERT, 8 p. m.

Performance of traditional and contemporary music and dance from the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East. Performing Arts Center Pavilion, Cal Poly. $8 to $10. 756-2787.

MORE TODAY

Spring Boutique Fundraiser. 7:30 a. m. to 7 p. m. Sale items include quilts, prints, fine-paper cards and notebooks, jewelry, beads and gemstones, and baked treats. A raffle also will take place. Sponsored by Sierra Vista Regional Medical Center to benefit the American Cancer Society. Sierra Vista Regional Medical Center, 1010 Murray St., San Luis Obispo. 546-7601, ext. 4033.

Word-of-Mouth Workshop. 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Instructor Ann Miller teaches how to get people talking about libraries in positive terms. Registration requested. San Luis Obispo City/County Library, 995 Palm St., San Luis Obispo. 781-5990.

Adventures With Nature. 772-2694 or www.morrobaymuseum.org. Rain or bad weather cancels outdoor activities.

%26#8226; Gray Whale Parade. 10 a. m. Search for gray whales and learn about these creatures and their long migration. Meet at the northern-most parking lot along Moonstone Beach, near Highway 1 and Moonstone Beach Drive, Cambria. 0.5 mile, 2 hours.

%26#8226; Discover Magnificent Morro Rock. 2 p. m. See Morro Rock and learn about its geology and history and the animals that live on and near the rock. Meet at the restrooms in the parking lot in front of the Rock. 0.5 mile, 1 to 1.5 hours.

Brown Bag Concert. Noon. The Mudskippers, a 1920s jazz band performs a mix of Dixieland, ragtime and more. Doors open at 11:45 a. m. First Presbyterian Church, 951 Marsh St., San Luis Obispo. Free. 543-5451.

Book Discussion. Noon to 1 p. m. Also March 14. %26#8220;Three Cups of Tea,%26#8221; by Greg Mortenson. St. Benedicts Episcopal Church, 2220 Snowy Egret Lane, Los Osos. 528-0654.

Wendy Sheridan. Reception: 3 to 5 p. m. Collage and photography. The Brambles Dinner House, 4005 Burton Drive, Cambria. 927-2327.

Lenten Fish Fry. 4 to 7 p. m. Menu includes fish, french fries, coleslaw, coffee, tea and punch. Dessert and other drinks available. Presented by St. Patricks Italian Catholic Federation. Proceeds are used for scholarships and local charities. St. Patricks Church Hall, 501 Fair Oaks Ave., Arroyo Grande. $4 to $7. 474-0266.

Tapping Therapy with Emotional Freedom Techniques Workshop.

4 to 7 p. m. Pismo Beach Lions Club, Addie Street, Pismo Beach. $40. 305-1740.

SLO County Government Center Public Art Reception. 5 to 8 p. m. Works by artists. County Government Center, Santa Rosa and Monterey streets, San Luis Obispo. 544-9251.

Carol Manuputy. Reception: 6 to 9 p. m. Ceramic and terracotta sculpture. The Gallery at the Network, 778 Higuera St., Suite B, San Luis Obispo. 788-0886.

Douglas Simms Stenhouse. Reception: 6 to 9 p. m. %26#8220;Splendor of the Central Coast.%26#8221; Plein air art. Frame Works Gallery, 339 Marsh St., San Luis Obispo. 542-9000.

Jeff Bowen. Reception: 6 to 8 p. m. Landscape photography. The Photo Shop, 1027B Marsh St., San Luis Obispo. 459-9699.

%26#8220;Music for Your Eyes%26#8221; Tour. Reception: 6 to 9 p. m. Works of art created from timepieces. Presented by the Mozart Festival. Arts Space Obispo, SLO Creamery, 570 Higuera St., No. 165, San Luis Obispo. 781-3008 or www.motzartfestival.com.

Paul J. McCloskey. Reception: 6 to 8 p. m. %26#8220;Painting with Light.%26#8221; Photopaintings. David Ryan Gallery, 205 E. Clark Ave., Orcutt.

%26#8220;Portraits of Our Lands: Conservation Photography

Exhibition.%26#8221; Reception: 6 to 9 p. m. Photographs by artists. The Land Conservancy, 743 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo. 544-9096.

Sherry Lewis. Reception: 6 to 8 p. m. Abstract in oil and landscapes in charcoal. Linnaeas Cafe, 1110 Garden St., San Luis Obispo. 544-8346.

Club 270 Dance Series. 6:30 to 9 p. m. Featuring swing music, free swing lessons offered. Paso Robles Senior Center, 270 Scott St., Paso Robles. $6 to $7. 237-3880.

Orchid Show Preview Reception Benefit. 6:30 to 9:30 p. m. Evening includes local wines, hors doeuvres, live music, silent auction and an awards presentation. Proceeds benefit the Alzheimers Association, California Central Coast chapter. Presented by the Five Cities Orchid Society. South County Regional Center, 800 W. Branch St., Arroyo Grande. $40. 929-5749 or www.fcos.org.

SLOFolks Concert: Tom Begich. 7 p. m. Singer/songwriter featuring blues music. Coalesce Bookstore, 845 Main St., Morro Bay. $15. 772-2880.

TODAYS FARMERS MARKETS

Paso Robles %26#8212; 9 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. at the Wal-Mart parking lot, at South River and Niblick roads. 237-0345.

Cambria %26#8212; 2:30 to 5:30 p. m. at the Veterans Memorial Building parking lot on Main Street. 927-4715.

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Bush decries loss of eavesdropping law

WASHINGTON President Bush said Saturday that lawmakers’ failure to renew an eavesdropping law will make it more difficult to track terrorists, and “we may lose a vital lead that could prevent an attack on America.”

Democrats faulted the president, who taped his weekly radio address before he left on a trip to Africa, for “whipping up false fears and creating artificial confrontation.”

“Their true concern here is not national security,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement. “Rather they want to protect the financial interests of telecommunications companies and avoid judicial scrutiny of their warrantless wiretapping program.”

At issue is a law that made it easier for the government to spy on foreign phone calls and e-mails that pass through the United States. The law expired at midnight Saturday.

The president wanted the House to approve a Senate bill that would have renewed the law. Bush opposed a temporary extension; lawmakers left for a 12-day recess without extending the law. The Senate measure included legal protections for telecommunications companies that helped the government wiretap U.S. computer and phone lines after the Sept. 11 attacks without clearance from a secret court that oversees such activities.
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Friday, March 7th, 2008

Maple Syrup Possible the Perfect Sweet

Maple syrup is made from the sap of maple trees. It is a clear liquid with a slightly sweet taste. This amazing nectar was used during in the north during the Civil War since cane sugar was a product of the south. Maple syrup is classifed by its consistency and color.

Sap to produce maple syrup can be collected from any native species of maple, but in Ohio, sugar and black maples are the first choice when they are available. Sap can also be gathered from red maple (Acer rubrum), silver maple (Acer saccharinum), and Box Elder (Acer negundo). The optimum male tree reaches maturity for tapping in 40-60 years. This is dependent on the quality of the earth in which the tree is grown.

Production is centered around the months of in February, March, and April, depending on local weather conditions, and generally in the Northeastern United States and Southeastern Canada. The sap can be collected for syrup production until just before tree buds begin to expand and should be process as soon as possible to produce the highest quality syrup. Grade A This is the quality used in flavor infused gourmet maple syrups. Grade B maple syrup, since it has the most pronounced taste, is usually reserved for cooking and use in processed foods.

Grade A Light Amber, is very light and has a mild, more delicate maple flavor. It is usually made earlier in the season when the weather is colder. This is the best grade for making maple candy and maple cream.

Grade A Medium Amber, is a bit darker, and has a bit more maple flavor. It is the most popular grade of table syrup, and is usually made after the sugaring season begins to warm, about mid-season.

Grade A Dark Amber, is darker yet, with a stronger maple flavor. It is usually made later in the season as the days get longer and warmer.

Grade B, sometimes called Cooking Syrup, is made late in the season, and is very dark, with a very strong maple flavor, as well as some caramel flavor. Although many people use this for table syrup; because of its strong flavor, it’s often used for cooking, baking, and flavoring in special foods.

Vermont syrup meets or exceeds the standards of quality, purity and density of all maple producing states and provinces. Vermont’s maple syrup is 100% natural with nothing added and the climate and soil conditions are perfect for producing the best maple syrup.

Maple syrup is an exceptiona sweetener alternative for the health conscious. And may help to support reproductive health and provides special benefits for men. Maple syrup is not a commonly allergenic food and is not known to contain measurable amounts of goitrogens, oxalates, or purines and is an excellent source of the trace mineral manganese.

Maple syrup and sugar are among the oldest agricultural commodities produced in the United States. Maple sap and syrup . Maple syrup flavor must be guarded from sap to store shelf since they pick up off-flavors easily. This can work in the favor of a manufacturer who uses this as away to enhance and infuse certain flavors into their syrup. One such producer, BLiS, Llc.,ages maple sysrup in Jack Daniel casks which produces the most incredible combination of bourbon and maple syrup flavors. Vanilla beans are a great source for flavoring also.

Maple syrup is considered by many to be the ultimate natural product. Stored properly, maple syrup will usually maintain quality for three to six months. It is a delicious sweetener for many cooking recipes, especially when infused with the rich flavors of bourbon and vanilla and uses by top chefs around the world. It can be a great sweet just for the health of it as it is a great source for manganese and zinc. The next time you look pick up a bottle of 100% pure maple syrup remember the history, the incredible flavor and uses and the health benefits. Enjoy!

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Friday, March 7th, 2008

Housing market spirals no end in sight

NEW YORK (AP) — Nervous homeowners and economic analysts have been wondering how much worse the housing market could get. On Thursday they got an answer: Plenty. Foreclosures are at a record high. Home equity is at a record low. The housing market is spiraling down with no end in sight - and taking people’s sense of economic security with it. For the first time since the Federal Reserve started tracking the data in 1945, the amount of debt tied up in American homes now exceeds the equity homeowners have built. The Fed reported Thursday that homeowner equity actually slipped below 50 percent in the second quarter of last year, and fell to just below 48 percent in the fourth quarter. And that was just one example in a day of dismal housing reports. The Mortgage Bankers Association said foreclosures hit an all-time high in the final quarter of last year. And pending U.S. home sales - those in the gap between when a buyer signs a contract and when the deal closes - came in below analyst expectations for January and remained at the second-lowest reading on record. “There is no sign that we’re near the bottom in the housing market,” said Douglas Elmendorf, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and former Fed economist. “Housing prices will probably fall for a year, two or three to come.” The trifecta of reports illustrates a housing market caught up in a “very negative, reinforcing downward spiral,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com. Home equity, the percentage of a home’s market value minus mortgage-related debt, has steadily decreased even as home prices and homeownership rates jumped earlier this decade. That was due to a surge in cash-out refinancings, home equity loans and lines of credit and an increase in no-down-payment mortgages. Now declining home prices are eating into equity, and economists expect the figure to drop even more. Economy.com estimates 8.8 million homeowners, or about 10 percent of homes, will have zero or negative equity by the end of the month. Even more disturbing, about 13.8 million households will be “upside down” if prices fall 20 percent from their peak. The latest Standard %26 Poor’s/Case-Shiller index showed U.S. home prices plunging 8.9 percent in the final quarter of 2007 compared with a year earlier. Experts believe foreclosures will rise as more homeowners struggle with monthly payments as the interest rates on their mortgages adjust higher. Problems in the credit markets and eroding home values are making it harder for people to refinance their way out of unmanageable loans. The threat of so-called “mortgage walkers,” or homeowners who can afford their payments but decide not to pay, also increases as home values depreciate and equity diminishes. Banks and credit-rating agencies already are seeing early evidence of it. “If you’re struggling with payments and you have negative equity in your home, your struggling isn’t getting you very far,” Elmendorf said. “It’s very likely you want to stop and walk away.” Even for those who retain some equity, the effect on consumer sentiment and spending will be profound. Homeowners, who once happily tapped home equity for expenditures and home improvements, may instead save money as they watch their total net worth wither. Those who are willing to spend their home equity will find lenders reluctant to give out home equity loans or lines of credit. “People were relying on home equity to maintain consumption. They can’t keep doing that once the equity’s gone,” said Dean Baker, co-director at the Center of Economic Policy Research. “Undoubtedly, this is one reason for the falloff in consumption in last couple of months.” Economists worry that the prolonged housing downturn has put the economy on the brink of recession. The economy grew an anemic 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter. A massive loss in home equity could even mean some Americans won’t have enough money to retire. On average, housing is Americans’ single largest asset, representing 39 percent of a household’s total net worth. Melba Dumay, 44, worries that higher costs for insurance and other expenses will outpace any growth in value of the home she’s owned in Tampa, Fla., for about 10 years. She was depending on her home equity for retirement and as something she could pass on to her high-school-aged daughter. “It’s your legacy to your children and everything else, and if that’s not worth anything then you got to start all over again,” Dumay said. So far, the government has stepped in with a number of measures to contain the housing fallout. Last month, Congress passed a $168 billion economic stimulus package with provisions aimed at helping homeowners refinance into more affordable loans. The Federal Reserve has also slashed interest rates to in hopes of spurring growth. On Tuesday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested lenders reduce loan amounts to provide relief to beleaguered homeowners. But some experts think more help is needed. “At the end of the day, these efforts will be insufficient,” Zandi said. “Policymakers will need to be more aggressive and put taxpayer money on the line to stem this. Ultimately, we will find a bottom, but it would be a mistake to let the market run its course.” — Associated Press Writers Jeannine Aversa and Alan Zibel in Washington and Anthony McCartney in Tampa, Fla., contributed to this report. %26copy; 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.

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Friday, March 7th, 2008