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<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - Football: Manchester United injury worries for Aston Villa match</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-manchester-united-injury-worries-for-20081168820.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Manchester United have several injury worries ahead of their Premier League match at Aston Villa tomorrow. Dimitar Berbatov and Wes Brown are both definitely out, Rio Ferdinand is unlikely to play and Wayne Rooney is also a doubt after missing England's friendly in Germany on Wednesday.Berbatov picked up a hamstring injury on international duty with Bulgaria this week, limping off during their game with Serbia. Scans revealed he has not suffered a muscle tear, but he will miss tomorrow's match, Tuesday's Champions League fixture at Villarreal and possibly next weekend's derby with City.Brown will be out for several weeks after undergoing exploratory surgery on his ongoing ankle problem, and fellow defender Ferdinand is unlikely to feature at Villa Park because of a back injury. "Rio is very doubtful for tomorrow, I don't think he'll make it," Sir Alex Ferguson said today. "Rooney has a good chance, he trained on Wednesday and Thursday and if he comes through today he should be involved. Wes will be missing for a few weeks. There's no timescale on it, but may be about 4-5 weeks. It's disappointing, but we've got cover with Gary [Neville] and Rafael, and John O'Shea can also play there."Ferguson will have to watch tomorrow's game from the stands as part of his two-match suspension, after being found guilty of improper conduct by the FA for his post-match rant at referee Mike Dean following United's 4-3 victory over Hull. It is the second time Ferguson has been consigned to the stands in the last 12 months, having served a suspension last Christmas for his verbal attack on Mark Clattenburg.Today he admitted that he was to blame for losing his temper, but said the FA's respect campaign may be an unworthwhile venture because managers will always be angered by the human errors of referees. "It happens,"  Ferguson said. "It is my own fault. The [disciplinary panel's] job is not to consider the performance level of referees. You will always get inconsistent decisions because every referee has their own opinions of things and his own judgement about things. That is one of the great things about our game. That has not changed from the day refereeing started."Manchester UnitedAston VillaPremier Leagueguardian.co.uk © Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-manchester-united-injury-worries-for-20081168820.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-21T11:07:43Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-21T11:07:43Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2008/nov/21/manchesterunited-astonvilla</url>
</author>
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<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-manchester-united-injury-worries-for-20081168820.htm"><b>Football: Manchester United injury worries for Aston Villa match</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-manchester-united-injury-worries-for-20081168820.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
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<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - Manchester United have several injury worries ahead of their Premier League match at Aston Villa tomorrow. Dimitar Berbatov and Wes Brown are both definitely out, Rio Ferdinand is unlikely to play and Wayne Rooney is also a doubt after missing England's friendly in Germany on Wednesday.Berbatov picked up a hamstring injury on international duty with Bulgaria this week, limping off during their game with Serbia. Scans revealed he has not suffered a muscle tear, but he will miss tomorrow's match, Tuesday's Champions League fixture at Villarreal and possibly next weekend's derby with City.Brown will be out for several weeks after undergoing exploratory surgery on his ongoing ankle problem, and fellow defender Ferdinand is unlikely to feature at Villa Park because of a back injury. "Rio is very doubtful for tomorrow, I don't think he'll make it," Sir Alex Ferguson said today. "Rooney has a good chance, he trained on Wednesday and Thursday and if he comes through today he should be involved. Wes will be missing for a few weeks. There's no timescale on it, but may be about 4-5 weeks. It's disappointing, but we've got cover with Gary [Neville] and Rafael, and John O'Shea can also play there."Ferguson will have to watch tomorrow's game from the stands as part of his two-match suspension, after being found guilty of improper conduct by the FA for his post-match rant at referee Mike Dean following United's 4-3 victory over Hull. It is the second time Ferguson has been consigned to the stands in the last 12 months, having served a suspension last Christmas for his verbal attack on Mark Clattenburg.Today he admitted that he was to blame for losing his temper, but said the FA's respect campaign may be an unworthwhile venture because managers will always be angered by the human errors of referees. "It happens,"  Ferguson said. "It is my own fault. The [disciplinary panel's] job is not to consider the performance level of referees. You will always get inconsistent decisions because every referee has their own opinions of things and his own judgement about things. That is one of the great things about our game. That has not changed from the day refereeing started."Manchester UnitedAston VillaPremier Leagueguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">			Football: Manchester United injury worries for Aston Villa match |				Football |				guardian.co.uk	 {...} Dimitar Berbatov and Wes Brown are both out of, and Rio Ferdinand and Wayne Rooney are doubts for, Man Utd's match at Aston Villa {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 21, 2008, 11:07 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 21, 2008, 1:40 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;81KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/"><b>News and Media</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
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<title>{LITERATURE &gt; CYBERPUNK} - Boing Boing tv: We're a Year Old, and Yes We Can (Announce a New Programming Plan)</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/literature/genres/cyberpunk/boing-boing-tv-we-re-a-year-old-and-yes-we-can-announce-20081118129.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Today, we announce some changes over at Boing Boing tv -- the good kind. The show completed its first year of Boingsistence on October 2, 2008 (remember our very first day back in 2007?), and we've spent some time in recent weeks thinking through new things we'd like to explore, and how to stay nimble and consistently fresh during a time when many online video shows are, to be frank, having a rather hard time of things. Here's what we're doing. Each MONDAY, we'll post a brief update of goings-on around the mothership blog, hosted by me, including iChat Video or Skype interviews with folks we've blogged about recently. Kind of a fast news update, and a way for us to keep you in the loop on things that Cory, Mark, Pesco and I have posted here on Boing Boing that have taken on a life of their own. We're posting the first one of these momentarily (yeah, I know it's Tuesday, but we're kicking things off today.) UPDATE: Here's our first Boing Boing tv Weekly Update episode! TUESDAY, expect a Boing Boing Gadgets item. We're producing a bunch of short electronics/tech stuff reviews from Joel Johnson, and we hope to include BB Gadgets co-editors John Brownlee and Rob Beschizza, soon, too. WEDNESDAYS, we'll feature stuff from Brandon Boyer and crew at Boing Boing Offworld, the games blog we launched yesterday. Check out offworld.com for a hint of how this will feel: gaming seen through a wide lens that encompasses the art, culture, and human experience of gaming, not just a buying guide. THURSDAYS, we'll continue to bring the engaging original programming that we love to produce, and you, our audience, seem to love just as much. We?ll keep bringing you reports from around the world; mini-documentaries about tech and culture topics with me, the other Boingers, and other brilliant people around the world (Kyle Glanville doing coffee treks in Brazil, Joi Ito galavanting around in Tokyo, Sean Bonner hunting monsters, Monochrom herding inebriated Vikings, John Behrens and the Omega Recoil Tesla Coil builders); and all the other brain exploding material we have yet to find! FRIDAYS? The return of the Unicorn Chaser. This will surprise and delight you. It will be super awesome. You will thank us all weekend long. So, that's the plan. And on behalf of my Boing Boing partners, a very special THANKS to everyone who made the first year of Boing Boing tv possible, including, but not limited to, and in no particular order...current crew members and alumni Derek Bledsoe, Rob Bergsma, Keith Carunida, Dana Devonshire, and Wesly Varghese; our jungle-dwelling consigliere and creative consultant Jolon Bankey; our production advisor Matt West of DECA; DECA co-founders Michael Wayne and Chris Kimbell, and the entire staff and management team of DECA, George Ruiz at ICM; our attorney Rob Rader of MSK; the good folks at Creative Commons and the EFF, to Sarah Milstein, and the teams at Castfire and Episodic, our sysadmin Ken Snider ("The Man in the Jeffries Tubes"), and the management and sales superheroes at Federated Media -- John Battelle, Chas Edwards, Bernie Albers, Jason Weisberger, Mugs Buckley, Neil Chase, Jennifer Tamez, James Navin, Josh Mattison, Jackie Mogol, Alison Marino, Jason Ratner, Mac Delaney, Lester Lee, Leona Laurie, Matt Jessell, Sacha Lien, Cindy Murphy, James Gross, Ivan Kanevski, Liam Boylan, Eric Amsden, and Jonathan Schrieber. A very special thanks to the many friends who've contributed talent to the show, including John Hodgman, the MAKE (event and magazine) folks, Johannes and the team at monochrom; Matt and Hiroko, Todd Lappin; Bill Barminski; Syd Garon; Russell Porter; Eddie Codel, Jason McHugh, Charis Tobias, Adam Koford, EBOY, Mister Jalopy, and many others. Thanks to the guys at Virgin America, Apple/iTunes, and YouTube, for help with distribution. And much gratitude to Boing Boing tv's past and present sponsors, including: Intel, Dell, Samsung, Verizon, Microsoft, Crowdfire, Toshiba, BMW, IBM, T Mobile, Amazon, Adobe, SanDisk, and JCPenney. [gasps for breath]. Also, God, and our moms. Thank you and good-boing....
  
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<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/literature/genres/cyberpunk/boing-boing-tv-we-re-a-year-old-and-yes-we-can-announce-20081118129.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-18T18:18:24Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-18T18:18:24Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Boingboing.Net</name>
<url>http://www.boingboing.net/2008/11/18/boing-boing-tv-were.html</url>
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<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Boingboing.Net</span> - Today, we announce some changes over at Boing Boing tv -- the good kind. The show completed its first year of Boingsistence on October 2, 2008 (remember our very first day back in 2007?), and we've spent some time in recent weeks thinking through new things we'd like to explore, and how to stay nimble and consistently fresh during a time when many online video shows are, to be frank, having a rather hard time of things. Here's what we're doing. Each MONDAY, we'll post a brief update of goings-on around the mothership blog, hosted by me, including iChat Video or Skype interviews with folks we've blogged about recently. Kind of a fast news update, and a way for us to keep you in the loop on things that Cory, Mark, Pesco and I have posted here on Boing Boing that have taken on a life of their own. We're posting the first one of these momentarily (yeah, I know it's Tuesday, but we're kicking things off today.) UPDATE: Here's our first Boing Boing tv Weekly Update episode! TUESDAY, expect a Boing Boing Gadgets item. We're producing a bunch of short electronics/tech stuff reviews from Joel Johnson, and we hope to include BB Gadgets co-editors John Brownlee and Rob Beschizza, soon, too. WEDNESDAYS, we'll feature stuff from Brandon Boyer and crew at Boing Boing Offworld, the games blog we launched yesterday. Check out offworld.com for a hint of how this will feel: gaming seen through a wide lens that encompasses the art, culture, and human experience of gaming, not just a buying guide. THURSDAYS, we'll continue to bring the engaging original programming that we love to produce, and you, our audience, seem to love just as much. We?ll keep bringing you reports from around the world; mini-documentaries about tech and culture topics with me, the other Boingers, and other brilliant people around the world (Kyle Glanville doing coffee treks in Brazil, Joi Ito galavanting around in Tokyo, Sean Bonner hunting monsters, Monochrom herding inebriated Vikings, John Behrens and the Omega Recoil Tesla Coil builders); and all the other brain exploding material we have yet to find! FRIDAYS? The return of the Unicorn Chaser. This will surprise and delight you. It will be super awesome. You will thank us all weekend long. So, that's the plan. And on behalf of my Boing Boing partners, a very special THANKS to everyone who made the first year of Boing Boing tv possible, including, but not limited to, and in no particular order...current crew members and alumni Derek Bledsoe, Rob Bergsma, Keith Carunida, Dana Devonshire, and Wesly Varghese; our jungle-dwelling consigliere and creative consultant Jolon Bankey; our production advisor Matt West of DECA; DECA co-founders Michael Wayne and Chris Kimbell, and the entire staff and management team of DECA, George Ruiz at ICM; our attorney Rob Rader of MSK; the good folks at Creative Commons and the EFF, to Sarah Milstein, and the teams at Castfire and Episodic, our sysadmin Ken Snider ("The Man in the Jeffries Tubes"), and the management and sales superheroes at Federated Media -- John Battelle, Chas Edwards, Bernie Albers, Jason Weisberger, Mugs Buckley, Neil Chase, Jennifer Tamez, James Navin, Josh Mattison, Jackie Mogol, Alison Marino, Jason Ratner, Mac Delaney, Lester Lee, Leona Laurie, Matt Jessell, Sacha Lien, Cindy Murphy, James Gross, Ivan Kanevski, Liam Boylan, Eric Amsden, and Jonathan Schrieber. A very special thanks to the many friends who've contributed talent to the show, including John Hodgman, the MAKE (event and magazine) folks, Johannes and the team at monochrom; Matt and Hiroko, Todd Lappin; Bill Barminski; Syd Garon; Russell Porter; Eddie Codel, Jason McHugh, Charis Tobias, Adam Koford, EBOY, Mister Jalopy, and many others. Thanks to the guys at Virgin America, Apple/iTunes, and YouTube, for help with distribution. And much gratitude to Boing Boing tv's past and present sponsors, including: Intel, Dell, Samsung, Verizon, Microsoft, Crowdfire, Toshiba, BMW, IBM, T Mobile, Amazon, Adobe, SanDisk, and JCPenney. [gasps for breath]. Also, God, and our moms. Thank you and good-boing....
  
<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">Boing Boing tv: We're a Year Old, and Yes We Can (Announce a New Programming Plan) - Boing Boing {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 18, 2008, 6:18 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 19, 2008, 8:50 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;53KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/arts/">Arts</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/arts/literature/">Literature</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/arts/literature/genres/">Genres</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/arts/literature/genres/cyberpunk/"><b>Cyberpunk</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
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<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - Football: Capello risks Benítez ire over injured Gerrard</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-capello-risks-benitez-ire-over-injured-20081126013.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Fabio Capello risked straining his relationship with the Liverpool manager, Rafael Benítez, last night by insisting that Steven Gerrard link up with the England squad at their Hertfordshire hotel despite the midfielder having apparently been ruled out by his club for up to 10 days with a torn muscle in his right leg.Gerrard, who sustained the injury at Bolton, reported to the 23-man squad and will be assessed by England's own medical staff today, with the likelihood of him travelling to Germany tomorrow for Wednesday's friendly at the Olympic stadium in Berlin still slim. A statement released by Liverpool suggested a scan undertaken yesterday had revealed "a tear in the adductor magnus muscle in his right leg", a prognosis the Football Association's medical team will look into today.The Liverpool captain played the full 90 minutes in the 2-0 victory over Bolton Wanderers on Saturday, scoring the decisive goal with 17 minutes remaining, and may play in the next Premier League game against Fulham on Saturday after the club's spokesman, Ian Cotton, said the injury would keep him out "between seven to 10 days".The timing of Wednesday's friendly has prompted criticism from Premier League managers and Capello's insistence to consider Gerrard's fitness at first hand will be seen as the national coach flexing his muscles as familiar club and country tensions flare, particularly after Liverpool scheduled surgery for Gerrard on a groin problem which forced the midfielder to miss the qualifiers against Andorra and Croatia in September.Capello is well within his rights to call up the player but Benítez is unlikely to have been impressed at seeing his captain forced to travel down from Merseyside, particularly after the FA readily accepted the Manchester City goalkeeper Joe Hart's withdrawal with an ankle ligament injury sustained at Hull City yesterday. The 21-year-old caught his foot in the turf in an attempt to prevent Daniel Cousin from scoring for Hull and will be out for three to four weeks, according to his manager, Mark Hughes."He's obviously out of the England squad, which is a blow to him," Hughes said, "but most importantly it's a blow to us because we have some key games coming up." Hart was replaced last night by the Blackburn Rovers goalkeeper Paul Robinson, who won his last cap in the 2-1 European Championships qualifying defeat in Russia in October 2007.The England captain, John Terry, will also need to be assessed by medical staff today after suffering a foot injury during Chelsea's victory at West Bromwich Albion on Saturday though the centre-half, who missed last month's wins against Kazakhstan and Belarus with a back complaint, has been encouraged by the results of his own scan and expects to be fit enough to feature in Berlin.If so, Terry will be one of the few experienced players available to Capello for the prestige friendly. The national coach was already without Wayne Rooney and Rio Ferdinand, who missed Manchester United's victory over Stoke with calf and back injuries respectively, and will also be without Chelsea's Ashley and Joe Cole, who continue their recoveries from hamstring problems. Add to them the absence of Wes Brown (ankle) and Emile Heskey (calf) and it is likely that five of the side who started England's last match, the 3-1 qualifying win in Belarus last month, will be absent against Germany.Excluded out of choice are Michael Owen and David Beckham, who misses the chance to equal Sir Bobby Moore's 108 caps having not played a competitive game for three weeks following LA Galaxy's failure to reach the Major League Soccer end-of-season play-offs.Darren Bent has earned his first call-up under Capello while the Chelsea defender Michael Mancienne, on loan at Wolves, was a surprise inclusion but is not expected to play against the Germans with his involvement seen largely as an opportunity to gain valuable experience.EnglandJohn Terryguardian.co.uk © Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-capello-risks-benitez-ire-over-injured-20081126013.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-17T00:03:42Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-17T00:03:42Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2008/nov/17/englandfootballteam-john-terry</url>
</author>
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<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-capello-risks-benitez-ire-over-injured-20081126013.htm"><b>Football: Capello risks Benítez ire over injured Gerrard</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/football-capello-risks-benitez-ire-over-injured-20081126013.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
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<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - Fabio Capello risked straining his relationship with the Liverpool manager, Rafael Benítez, last night by insisting that Steven Gerrard link up with the England squad at their Hertfordshire hotel despite the midfielder having apparently been ruled out by his club for up to 10 days with a torn muscle in his right leg.Gerrard, who sustained the injury at Bolton, reported to the 23-man squad and will be assessed by England's own medical staff today, with the likelihood of him travelling to Germany tomorrow for Wednesday's friendly at the Olympic stadium in Berlin still slim. A statement released by Liverpool suggested a scan undertaken yesterday had revealed "a tear in the adductor magnus muscle in his right leg", a prognosis the Football Association's medical team will look into today.The Liverpool captain played the full 90 minutes in the 2-0 victory over Bolton Wanderers on Saturday, scoring the decisive goal with 17 minutes remaining, and may play in the next Premier League game against Fulham on Saturday after the club's spokesman, Ian Cotton, said the injury would keep him out "between seven to 10 days".The timing of Wednesday's friendly has prompted criticism from Premier League managers and Capello's insistence to consider Gerrard's fitness at first hand will be seen as the national coach flexing his muscles as familiar club and country tensions flare, particularly after Liverpool scheduled surgery for Gerrard on a groin problem which forced the midfielder to miss the qualifiers against Andorra and Croatia in September.Capello is well within his rights to call up the player but Benítez is unlikely to have been impressed at seeing his captain forced to travel down from Merseyside, particularly after the FA readily accepted the Manchester City goalkeeper Joe Hart's withdrawal with an ankle ligament injury sustained at Hull City yesterday. The 21-year-old caught his foot in the turf in an attempt to prevent Daniel Cousin from scoring for Hull and will be out for three to four weeks, according to his manager, Mark Hughes."He's obviously out of the England squad, which is a blow to him," Hughes said, "but most importantly it's a blow to us because we have some key games coming up." Hart was replaced last night by the Blackburn Rovers goalkeeper Paul Robinson, who won his last cap in the 2-1 European Championships qualifying defeat in Russia in October 2007.The England captain, John Terry, will also need to be assessed by medical staff today after suffering a foot injury during Chelsea's victory at West Bromwich Albion on Saturday though the centre-half, who missed last month's wins against Kazakhstan and Belarus with a back complaint, has been encouraged by the results of his own scan and expects to be fit enough to feature in Berlin.If so, Terry will be one of the few experienced players available to Capello for the prestige friendly. The national coach was already without Wayne Rooney and Rio Ferdinand, who missed Manchester United's victory over Stoke with calf and back injuries respectively, and will also be without Chelsea's Ashley and Joe Cole, who continue their recoveries from hamstring problems. Add to them the absence of Wes Brown (ankle) and Emile Heskey (calf) and it is likely that five of the side who started England's last match, the 3-1 qualifying win in Belarus last month, will be absent against Germany.Excluded out of choice are Michael Owen and David Beckham, who misses the chance to equal Sir Bobby Moore's 108 caps having not played a competitive game for three weeks following LA Galaxy's failure to reach the Major League Soccer end-of-season play-offs.Darren Bent has earned his first call-up under Capello while the Chelsea defender Michael Mancienne, on loan at Wolves, was a surprise inclusion but is not expected to play against the Germans with his involvement seen largely as an opportunity to gain valuable experience.EnglandJohn Terryguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">			Football: Capello risks Benítez ire over injured Gerrard |				Football |				The Guardian	 {...} Fabio Capello demanded that Steven Gerrard attend England training in spite of a torn leg muscle sustained against Bolton {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 17, 2008, 12:03 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 17, 2008, 11:39 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;73KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/"><b>News and Media</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
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<title>{NORTH AMERICA &gt; LODGING} - Why Pay More this Friday at the Beach by MT TAM+Muir Woods+BoLagoon (Lodging incl WiFi+VCR+HBO+Stinson Beach ) $55 1bd</title>
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<summary type="text/plain">Way out West in West Marin. SAVE $ at the Stinson Beach Redwood Haus Inn

$55. nightly / 1br single, Queen Bed w King Sized

Bkfst+WiFi+HBO+Phone- NYTimes Reporter Rambol No. of the Golden

Gate-MT TAMALPAIS+Muir Wood+BoLagoon+Audubon Canyon Migratory









The Stinson Beach Redwoods Haus Inn, www.stinson-beach.com, #1 Belvedere &amp; Shoreline Hwy. #1, 415

868-9828 or 868-1034. Take advantage of Our Winter Special, $55. for a

single person, Sun. -Thurs., in either the White or Redwood Rooms.

Complimentary King Sized Breakfast, Potluck BBQ's include

Condiments+Bread+Salad+Potatoes+Rice+Pasta, Queen Sized Beds+Cable

T.V./HBO/VHS/200+Video Library+WiFi/Computer/Phones/Piano Onsite.

Public Transportation by way of the Marin Stagecoach or A West Marin

Taxi, 415 868-1330, or go green, hike the redwood trails, both So. &

No. to S.B.R.H.Inn Destination. Now read on, the writers account of

Trailblazing on the Redwoods Coast Trails, Destination Redwoods Haus &

The Great Blue Heron/Egret &amp; Snowy Egret Sanctuary, the Audubon Canyon

Ranch, Way out West in West Marin..







A West Marin Taxi awaits you, A/P Marin/Sonoma/Napa/SFBAY, Oak, SJC,

SFO Airport. Receive preliminary itinerary while being driven in

comfort, to the Redwoods Coast of West Marin. Past by the Skywalker

Ranch of George Lucas, Russian outpost of Nicasio, West Marin Railroad

Central of Point Reyes, Epicenter of S.F. 1906 Earthquake, Bolinas

Lagoon, Audubon Canyon Ranch, Pacific Ocean, destination Redwoods Haus

Inn n Stinson Beach. A WEST MARIN TAXI, operating from office at #9

Belvedere next to the Redwoods Haus Inn, located on the corner of

Belvedere &amp; Hwy. #1 in Stinson Beach. For unbeatable rate, Call 415

868-1330 cell 415 497-6656, For AWMT EMAIL REQUEST, email

awestmarintaxi@gmail.com..





The New York Times

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Travel Section Explorer/Marin county, Calif.

A Wild Ramble, Near the Golden Gate

By Gregory Dicum

Edited/Abridged/Added to by the SBCCommerce, www.stinson-beach.org,

Minister of Info.



MARIN COUNTY, just north of San Francisco, cradles wealthy bedroom

communities in picturesque bays. But nearly half of the county's 520

square miles is protected open space Ã¯Â¿Â½ bucolic and wild, its tiny

towns separated by forested mountains.







The Rambling Trails of Marin County, California



It is the kind of landscape, with miles of well-maintained trails,

that people travel across the globe to traverse Ã¯Â¿Â½ to Wales, say, or

the Cinque Terre. But Marin, particularly its western reaches, offers

something for anyone spry enough to walk a mile or two, on any budget.

One Friday afternoon last fall, my wife, Nina, and I rode the Golden

Gate Transit{www.goldengatetransit.org}to the San Rafael Bus Transit

Hub, across the Golden Gate Bridge out of San Francisco with the

hordes of commuters. We planned to spend the next three days hiking

back to the city. While our route may have been ambitious Ã¯Â¿Â½ covering

as many as 20 miles a day Ã¯Â¿Â½ it's easy to choose shorter routes, or

make connections by car or bus if you want to do it in less time.

We got off in Olema[by way of the West Marin Stagecoach, www.

marin-stagecoach.org, which we transferred to in San Rafael], a

crossroads in a long valley formed by the San Andreas fault. We

already felt a world away in the eucalyptus-scented darkness before

the understated wooden form of the Point Reyes Seashore Lodge, where

we had booked a room.

In the morning, we headed out into a dazzling fog, climbing east

toward the Bolinas Ridge. Ghostly white deer Ã¯Â¿Â½ descendants of fallow

deer imported in the last century Ã¯Â¿Â½ looked down on us through dripping

stalks of fennel. The air smelled like a cool herbal balm, and our

boots grew dark with dew.

At the ridge, fog was pouring in from a neighboring valley like heavy

cream. Tomales Bay, where the fault reaches the sea, shone in the

distance. All about us was mad morning chirping and grass bejeweled in

the sun.

Heading south along the ridge, we met our first human beings at noon.

Bolinas Artist, Peter Lee

Brownlee{wayne.browningstreet.net/bio/peterbrownlee" &amp; BoBo Troubador

Stu Art Chapman, www.flickr.com/photos/bbraasch/251709196/, were on a

northward walk markedly better organized than our own, to a vantage

point to paint the Sunset through the trees, a hidden spot on the

Ridge, that Peter wished to reduce to canvas. Having rambled &amp; sailed

throughout Europe, Western Hemisphere, Asia and Africa, individually,

they settled in West Marin, in the Coastal Village of Bolinas,

continuing their artistic pursuits, where they popularized their

individual art forms, meshing with the local variegate 60's Haight

Ashbury Dead Head Counterculture. We chatted for a bit and serenaded

by Stu Art, were inspired by his Bo Counter Culture Ballad, " Way out

West in West Marin". As we parted, Mr. Brownlee turned and called back

in his gruff, New York/South Seas/Bo/Long John Silver Merchant Marine

Accent, " I am 87 years old, by the way!"

"So," Nina said as we watched them proceed jauntily toward Olema, "46

more years of this for us?"

Soon, we joined the Coastal Trail, which follows the shoreline at a

distance, atop a ridge. In the late afternoon, it broke onto rolling,

golden hills and our first view of the Pacific. Hawks and vultures

romped in the updrafts, swooping close to the shaggy-maned hills,

while paragliders sought to imitate them from a promontory, atop Mt.

Tamalpais, up ahead.

We were above the Bolinas Lagoon Preserve, part of the Audubon Canyon

Ranch[See , Sieze the Day, below] and one of the first places in the

county to be protected Ã¯Â¿Â½ a reminder that these hills are not unspoiled

by accident. Freeways and subdivisions planned in the 1960s were

blocked by local activism. Instead of sprawl on its slopes, West Marin

County has salmon in its streams.

As the sun lowered, the ocean became a molten blaze punctuated only by

the Farallon Islands near the horizon. The surf whispered from Stinson

Beach below us, and we turned toward it. The woods soon gave way to

streets of bougainvillea and Monterey cypress around '60s-era beach

houses with BMWs and surfboards out front.

We were quickly in the center of Stinson Beach: a green, some shops

and cars tooling up and down the Shoreline Highway. We made the beach

just in time to see the perfect ball of evening fire quench itself

across Bolinas Bay off Duxbury Point. The hills we had marked with our

footprints seemed improbable pink confections.

"It feels like another country," said Nina, even though we had been on

that beach many times before.

We stayed that night at the World at Peace Redwood Haus Inn,

www.stinson-beach.com, 415 868-9828, 868-1034, a bed-and-breakfast Inn

that harked back to West Marins Spanish/Pioneer/Seafaring/60's flower

child days. In the welcoming breakfast/potluck dinner room, we

listened to the owners' tales of life in San Francisco(spanning the

Eisenhower Beatnik Years, to the Flower Child 60's), nibbled set out

appetizers &amp; tea on the buffet table. Then we went upstairs and slept

like logs, the surf sighing through our open window.

We woke at dawn to murmuring in the dovecote by the longboards and the

smell of frying potatoes and eggs. We eagerly, joined in the Buffet

Style BreakFeast, set out for all, took our laden plates to the the

Biergarten, surrounded by a Rainforest of Succulents, Fruit trees and

Redwoods on a patio of bricks and cobblestones in a Buddhist Zen

atmosphere. After Breakfast and the camaraderie of international and

domestic guests/new friends and discussion covering interesting

topics, from Global Warming, Crises of Leadership in the World

Politic, Health and the need for Peace in the World, as well as trail

tips &amp; directions to, off the beaten path; Red Rock Beach Sulphur Hot

Springs; Pacific Plate Wildcat Beach, Bass Lake &amp; Alamarin Falls. We

ascended the staircase to our room, with nostalgic VCR Tapes from the

200+ Video Library &amp; the Wi-Fi Passcode for our laptops.

Noontime, Mourning Doves, in the branches of trees, that paralleled

our windows, chortled, "Surfs up". We slipped into provided wet suits

&amp; boogie boards &amp; set out to challenge the waves of the Pacific

breaking on the white sands of Stinson Beach. Afterwards, showered

away dried salt and sand, used the Haus Computer Fax &amp; Copier, scanned

RH Proprietor Handwritten Maps of the Bo Palomarin Trailhead &amp; Red

Rock Beach Goat Trail. Made calls to the Times, most cell phones don't

get service on the Coast, luckily for guests, there is a provided Long

Distance Land Line at the Redwoods Haus. Saying Goodbye to our New

Friends and Family, we shouldered our packs and headed off into the

fog along the Dipsea Trail.

We ascended through fantastical, gnarled woods into open, misty heath.

Quails, rabbits and an elegant buck Ã¯Â¿Â½ in the mist all the same carob

color as the trailÃ¯Â¿Â½granted us room to pass into a dense redwood

forest.

As we climbed, sunbeams pierced the brume to pick out pools of water

in bowls of polished rock and carpets of glistening, emerald ferns.

Big trees lay over the narrow ravine, their backs covered in moss. As

we rambled higher still, blue sky tinted the fog and, suddenly, we

were in warm sun on the golden flanks of Mount Tamalpais.

The Sacred Miwok Mount is beloved in the Bay Area, and as we

approached the Pantoll Ranger Station, the headquarters of Mount

Tamalpais State Park, the trails became crowded. Hikers, bikers,

campers, walkers, runners and others swarmed the routes to the

mountain's peak. But a friendly ranger directed us to a trail, Troop

80, that even on a sunny Sunday, was quiet and lovely. Even better,

when we emerged at the Mountain Home Inn, we were able to get a table

for lunch on the deck right away. We sat overlooking Mill Valley, and

beyond it the bustling Bay Area, while Mount Tam's green mass loomed

behind us.

. "This beats sitting on a rock with a PowerBar," observed Nina,

sipping a tall glass of iced tea mixed with lemonade. Truth be told,

anything tastes good after a few miles on the trail, West Marin is an

area, that is home to many artisanal food enterprises, such as Tomales

Bay Croat Founded, Tonys Seafood, Vladimir's of Inverness, Rancho

Nicasio, Bolinas Coast Cafe, Stinson Parkside &amp; Sandollar. Still, with

full bellies we were glad to be heading downhill. Now that we were

more than 30 miles from Olema, people we met found our ramble

enchanting: many who know these trails well had not considered linking

them together, and surprisingly few take multiday walks there.

A trail as steep as a ski slope deposited us into the Muir Woods

National Monument. A grove of truly gigantic redwoods, Muir Woods,

declared a national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt 100 years

ago, has long been a popular tourist excursion from San Francisco. The

trails at its heart are paved, and visitors are separated from the

monstrous trunks by split-rail fences.

Children with tall ice cream cones gathered around a friendly, dapper

ranger who explained the circumstances behind the latest fallen tree

(nobody was around, he told them, so it didn't make a sound). We soon

found ourselves walking past tour buses in the parking lot.

But a few more steps and we were alone again, hiking through meadows

and scented alders along a river. Evening fog gathered in the last

mile, restoring the air's coastal quality. Then we smelled wood smoke,

and came out in front of the Tudor confection of that day's

destination: the Pelican Inn.

We walked right into a cheerful scene of dark wood beams, roaring

fires, darts, and fish and chips. As guests at the inn, we repaired to

the snug private drawing room off the pub with a couple of pints and,

sloughing off our boots, propped our feet by the fire to toast the 15

miles we had walked that day.

Part of West Marin's appeal is its diversity of enclaves. Shortly

after leaving the Pelican Inn the next morning, we were walking

through fields of organic greens at Green Gulch, a Zen retreat and

organic farm.

Wool-clad Zen students nodded to us as we passed them at work cutting

chard. Visitors looking for the deeply contemplative experience of

dawn zazen and Japanese tea ceremonies can stay there, but we had just

begun our day and were soon climbing out of the valley.

On the ridge, we turned and looked back. Below us, Muir Beach sat fast

like a pleasant Hobbitown. Beyond it, the Pacific was glowering

slightly, and low, ominous streaks of rain splattered the sky.

A drizzle set in, and by midday we came to a fog-shrouded eucalyptus

copse where two paths diverged. One led down to Sausalito and the

ferry home.

"Come on, let's go," said Nina.

So we took the other path, rambling on along the ridge down to the

Golden Gate Bridge, into the city and right to our doorstep





. FIRST STEPS OF MANY





GETTING THERE



Marin is an easy drive from San Francisco. Bus service is also

available from Golden Gate Transit (415-455-2000; www.goldengate.org)

and Marin Transit (415-499-6099; www.marintransit.org); the latter's

West Marin Stagecoach (415-526-3239) serves the small towns of West

Marin. Call 511, for up to date, changes in scheduling, of local bus

routes.



WHATS NEXT in Stinson Beach



The Strip, Commercial sector bordering Hwy. #1, beginning with the

World at Peace Redwoods Haus, including the Sandollar and Stinson

Beach Grill Restaurants, as well as the Stinson Beach Market and

Meristem Florists, Many Villages Pacific Rim Indigenous Talismans &

Emporia-White Light Sage &amp; Seer, Osheno. Further on, the Cycle Race

Pack loses its cohesiveness as it passes the Stinson Beach Fitness

Center, Donnies Surfboard/Kayak Rental &amp; the Video Odyssey, [the three

have excellent provided seating &amp; vantage points for photo pics].



WHERE TO STAY



There are many options, but they all fill up fast, so make reservations.

In Olema, the Olema Inn (10000 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard;

415-663-9559; www.theolemainn.com; rooms start at $185) and the Point

Reyes Seashore Lodge (10021 Coastal Highway 1; 415-663-9000;

www.pointreyesseashorelodge.com; starting at $135) are both central

and comfortable.

Stinson Beach has many vacation rentals, but few nightly options. One

is the World at Peace Redwood Haus Inn, #1 Belvedere and Redwoods

Highway #1; 415-868-1034; www.stinson-beach.com; the five rooms start

at $55. for a single person on weekdays, $440. for a weekstay in

either the Redwood or White Room, includes Texan/German Style King

Sized Breakfast, WiFi/Computer/L.D.Phone on Site, VCR/VCR Library,

HBO/Cable T.V., Biergarten, B.B.Q. Facilities, Boogie Boards/Wet

Suits). Bus Service, is direct by the West Marin StageCoach, bicycle

friendly, just tell the driver, "The Redwoods Haus", he will drop you

off right in front, Coast Hwy. #1 and #1 Belvedere.

In Muir Beach, the Pelican Inn (10 Pacific Way; 415-383-6000;

www.pelicaninn.com) has rooms from $190, while at the very different

Green Gulch Farm Zen Center (1601 Shoreline Highway; 415-383-3134;

www.sfzc.org/ggf) doubles start at $145 with three meals a day. You

can always, take part in the functions at the Green Gulch Zen Center,

commute, from the coed lodging of the World at Peace Redwoods Haus.

Stinson Beach Chamber of Commerce, www.stinson-beach.org, 415

868-1330. Up to date, rental listings, list of B&Bs, hotels and motels

in the SW Marin Area-Bolinas, Stinson &amp; Muir Beach.





MAPS



We found the "Rambler's Guide to the Trails of Mt. Tamalpais, Muir

Woods and the Marin Headlands" (Olmstead &amp; Bros.; 510-658-6534; $8)

indispensable, even though most trails are well marked. It is a

detailed trail map that not only is printed on waterproof material,

but also includes a reassuring guarantee from the publisher, Gerald

Olmstead: "If you're lost out in the woods somewhere, please note that

my phone number is on the map. Just call me up."

Farther north, we used the "Point Reyes National Seashore and West

Marin Parklands" map from Wilderness Press (800-443-7227;

www.wildernesspress.com; $9.95). Wilderness also publishes the helpful

"North Bay Trails," by David Weintraub ($16.95).

The Proprietors of the World at Peace Redwoods Haus (circa 1910),

provide up to date info., on: trail accessibility; out of the way

places; day/night concerts at restaurants/community centers; hidden

beaches/lakes/streams/waterfalls/hot springs in West Marin. Also

Provided, hard to find services in West Marin: WiFi/Computers w FAX,

Scanner &amp; Copier/Long Distance Free Calling Onsite; VCRS w 200+VCR

Library; Breakfast-Dinner Potlucks-BBQ; BBQ [we show you how]Tomales

Bay Oysters; Boogie Boards &amp; Wetsuits; 2nd &amp; 3rd story view decks &

rooms, w views of Stinson Beach Village/MTTAM/Bolinas/Pacific Views &

Decks





ORGANIZED TRIPS



Wine Country Trekking (888-287-8735; www.winecountrytrekking.com)

offers a variety of supported rambles through West Marin that also

include things like kayaking excursions and wine tastings.

The Sierra Club runs numerous outings through West Marin as well, some

with features like meditation, birding, painting and nature study

(415-977-5522; www.sierraclub.org/outings).

The World at Peace Redwoods Haus, www.stinson-beach.com, 415 868-1034

or 868-9828, supplies up to date info. on Hikes &amp; Foot races hosted by

local internationally recognized Enviro Sports, www.envirosports.com,

&amp; other recognized local hiking/foot race event organizers. There are

spontaneous hikes, volleyball games, cookouts, campfires that occur at

the RWH daily and nightly, amongst the guests inspired by the freedom

of opportunity, freshness of the sea breeze mixed with the Scent of

the surrounding Redwoods Forest &amp; blossoming Rain Forest of the RWH.

There are also, birding expeditions, both organized &amp; spontaneous by

those interested in the Audobon Canyon Ranch Activities or their own

individual forays to the Bo Lagoon, to catch glimpses of the Blue

Herons, Pelicans, Egrets &amp; migrating Aquatic Fowl that visit the

Lagoon. Not to mention, Tule Elk, Elephant Seal &amp; Whale Watching,

maps/directions via the RWH. Wading in Duxbury Reef, Red Rock Hot

Springs, Bass Lake, Esteros of Sir Francis Drake BayÃ¯Â¿Â½Discover the

Paradise of the Coast of Marin, www.stinson-beach.com, 415 868-9828 or

868-1034..

The Places to Explore

We offer information on all of the local natural viewing locations of

interest where you can see Whales, Seal and Elephant Seal colonies,

Egrets, Herons, Pelicans, and the Tule Elk. Visit the Sulphur Hot

Springs at Red Rock Beach , 4-5 days a month during negative tide

periods of the Full Moon, the Ocean rolls back, giving 2 hrs., to

enjoy the 110 degree heated Seawater, in a open pool of rock, by the

edge of the Ocean. Walk into the tide pools of Duxbury Reef during

minus tide, study close up the indigenous sea life of the Reef: Sea

Anemones; Clams; Mussels; Starfish;Crabs;Coral; and the reef fishes in

small pools of water.

On Visitors Days of the Week, walk down the 300 steps leading to the

Point Reyes Lighthouse, on the Point Reyes Peninsula, see the interior

and the antique beacon light of French Manufacture, dating back over a

100 yrs.

Kayak with Point Reyes Outdoors www.pointreyesoutdoors.com, 415

663-8192 Sea Kayaking Tours &amp; Classes Guided Nature Hikes

Mesa Road in Bolinas: Visit the Point Reyes Bird Observatory and take

part in banding expeditions of migratory birds as well as study

statistics of their numbers and sightings; Hike to Bass Lake on the

Panoramic Trail head, from the parking lot at the end of Mesa Road ;

See Agate Beach, where all the rocks are green agate.

Hike the many trails that abound in the Golden Gate Recreation Area,

Mt. Tamalpais and Tomales State Parks , as well as the Point Reyes

National Seashore: Matt Davis-Steep Ravine-Dipsea-Lake Lagunitas-Kent

&amp; Nicasio Lakes. Gather Mussels in Season, for ethnic &amp; old fashioned

soups/stews. Dance at Smiley's Schooner Saloon &amp; dance/dine at Rancho

Nicasio, Sat. Nights to live music.

Eat at your pick of 3 art bedecked and fine food dining establishments

here in Stinson &amp; Coast Cafe in Bolinas.

Rent/Ride Horseback at Five Brooks Stable, Horse Rental, Open Year

Round in Olema. 415 663-1570, Fax 415 663-8766, www.fivebrooks.com

Workout Regimen, Beach Accessories, Kayaks, Surfboards: At the Stinson

Beach Health Club, open daily, 7a.m.-9p.m.,415 868-8801, 3605

Shoreline Hwy.#1 , full range gym, offers weight sets, stationary

bikes, Pilates studio, w views of Easkoot Creek in a Polynesian

Village Natural Setting Ambiance. Stinson Beach Surf and Kayak Co.,

same location, Rent and Sell Beach Accessories, Full Range of Kayaks &

Client friendly surfboards, Donny 415 868-8801, cell 415 257-1831.

Los Banos Surf &amp; Adventure Camp- Coach Dave Lich, certified lifeguard,

415 847-2221 or 415 380-8900, www.stinsonbeachsurfcamp.com, Surf

School Classes beginning 6/11, all ages welcome. Free shuttle from

Mill Valley. "Bringing the beach to the kids of Marin &amp; Fellow

Travelers."

BoBo Bikes located in Bolinas, 6 Wharf Rd., 415 450-0621, Bike &

Surfboard Impresario Sports Czar Terrence, Proprietor. High Tech State

of the Art Bikes, Surboards, Skates from the Czar of Sports Gear.

Every detail of hardware can be found as well as Terrence's Extensive

Knowledge of what sports gear, is right for you. Bring your equipment

in for troubleshooting &amp; maximal gain for high performance on the

roadway or surf.

Visit/Shop: Claudia Chaplines Art Gallery, Annies Bookstore for

Hiking/Biking Maps/Postcards, SurfGear/Beach Wear, Live Water Surf

Shop.

Many Villages, 2264 Hwy. #1, where you can select from a vast emporium

of indigenous jewelry, buddhist artifacts, sacred totems, folk art of

Bali, Handmade Oracles Mystical Talismans from the Island Jungles of

Thailand and the floating Villages of Indochina. Astute World

Expert/Time Traveler of White Light, Oshen, 415 868-1419.



Experience:

The Museum of Miwok Native American Artifacts at Slide Ranch; Nicasios

Russian Orthodox Church, dating back to the Russian Colonial Period at

Fort Ross; Smileys Schooner Saloon, an English Pub imported in 1850,

oldest functioning alcohol establishment in California; Bodega

Schoolhouse made famous in Alfred Hithcocks, "The Birds"; Muir Woods

Trail, the setting for Hitchcocks "VERTIGO", where Jimmy Stewart

followed Kim Novak into Muir Woods,on the Matt Davis Trailhead,

beginning at Belvedere in Stinson(Right up from the Redwoods, #1

Belvedere]; Skywalker Ranch, East of Nicasio, creative brainchild of

George Lucas; Peak of Sacred Mount Tamalpais-from which the viewer can

experience 360 degree panorama views, of the Greater S.F. Bay Area &

the City, Mt. Diablo, the Farollone Islands of the Pacific Ocean.

These and many more view spots as well as Treasures of Wild West

Architecture in West Marin Towns, will be addressed, directions will

be given &amp; an itinerary for all points of interest in Marin, Sonoma

and the S.F. Greater Bay Area.



Public Transportation: For all points in the SF Bay Area, Use the

Transit Planner site, www.511.org From San Francisco , take #70 or #80

Golden Gate Transit, to Marin City Transfer to West Marin Stage Coach,

website for schedule is: www.marintransit.org, call for info., M-F, 8

a.m.-5 a.m., 415 526-3239



Important Phone No.s Stinson Beach Lifeguard Tower-415 868-0942

Stinson Beach Visitor Center- 415 388-2596



Driving Directions to Stinson Beach

From Highway 101 Exit Highway 1/Stinson Beach (there will be a sign

for Muir Woods/ Mt. Tamalpais at this exit) Drive about .5 miles. At

the stoplight, turn left. You now have two options, both about the

same distance, both on winding steep roads. Shoreline Hwy. 1 takes you

along the Pacific Ocean, through Muir Beach, to Stinson Beach.

Panoramic Highway take you up and over Mt Tamalpais, w breathtaking

panorama views of the City, East Bay, Sonoma County, to within one

block of the Redwood Haus in Stinson Beach. To get to Panoramic from

Hwy. 101, Drive 3 miles on Shoreline Hwy. #1. At the top of the hill,

turn right onto the Panoramic Highway. From Panoramic access, Muir

Woods/Mount Tamalpais and Stinson Beach.

Or Continue straight on Shoreline Highway #1 about 12 miles to Stinson Beach.

When traveling South to North on Hwy.#1, upon entering Stinson Beach,

Make a right at the Firehouse, onto Belvedere, a u turn and park

alongside fence, at #1 Belvedere and Hwy. #1, the Redwoods Haus, On

Street Parking.

Olema intersection and Sir Francis Drake Blvd.-16 miles South to Stinson Beach.

Point Reyes Station. So. to Stinson Beach-18 miles So. to Stinson Beach.





Barbeque in the Bier-garten:

Bring your own fish/chicken/duck/lamb/meat

cuts/zucchini/corn/beverages and b.b.q. coals for barbeque, we provide

potatoes, rice, onions, bread, condiments &amp; b.b.q. coals or mesquite.

Oysters for Redwoods barbeque[Redwoods Chef gives instructions on

preparation] must be obtained beforehand at: the Tomales Bay Oyster

Farm, located on Shoreline Hwy. #1, 4 miles No. of Point Reyes

Station; the Hog Island Oyster Co. in Marshall; the Johnsons Oyster

Farm on the Point Reyes Peninsula.





Gesucht: Deutscher Schreiner oder Zimmermann fuer Renovierungs- und

Reparaturarbeiten fuer Redwood Haus fuer flexible Zeit. Keine

Arbeitserlaubnis noetig. Kommen Sie zu uns an die traumhafte

Pazifikkueste. Sagen Sie dies all Ihren Freunden. Siehe unsere

Internetseite: www.stinson-beach.de Kontakt: 415 868-1330

info@stinson-beach.com









Please check our websites for our pricing and service,

www.stinson-beach.com, in German, www.stinson-beach.de, 415 868-9828

or 868-1034. You will soon be convinced that we indeed have the BEST &

most EQUITABLE lodging service in the entire SF Bay Area!



Seize the Day





Bird Lovers flock to Stinson's Audobon Canyon Ranch



The Audobon Canyon Ranch, founded in 1962, one of the largest nesting

sites on the West Coast, offers sanctuary &amp; a birds-eye-view of the

graceful ballet-of ritual courtship, nest-building, egg-turning,

chick-rearing &amp; first flight of the Great Blue Herons, Great &amp; Snowy

Egrets in Picher Canyon. Males gather sticks for nestbuilding, then

females arrange them just so, in the closest coastal redwoods to a

24-hour food supply in Bolinas Lagoon. Eight miles of redwoods,

Douglas Fir &amp; Bay, coastal scrub &amp; chapparral, grassland, pond, stream

&amp; marsh trails cover 1K ares. Spring wildflowers display in dense

greenery. At the Redwoods Haus, located 2 miles from the Ranch,

receive trail maps &amp; a itinerary for the folks &amp; kids, of the many

other offerings afforded visitors &amp; birdwatchers of this Pearl of the

Coast.







Crab Fishing off Muir &amp; Duxbury Reef

Crab Fishing No. of the Golden Gate, then place your pot strings, off Muir and Duxbury and then, too, from Bodega Head to Carmet and from Martins Beach to Montara.



Asked New Huck Finn skip Jay Yokomizo where he would set pots if he had but, say, five, and this is his answer: "If the weather is good, off Muir Beach, at the Middlegrounds, between Dux and the Lightbucket. If I had to pull them by hand, I wouldn't drop them any deeper than 70 feet. With a puller, 110, maybe 115 feet deep."



For bait: "Salmon, the scraps, if you can buy them. Then squid, or mackerel and sardine. Something oily."





</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/san-francisco-bay-area/travel-and-tourism/lodging/why-pay-more-this-friday-at-the-beach-by-mt-tam-muir-20081197617.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-14T11:31:38Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-14T11:31:38Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Sfbay.Craigslist.Org</name>
<url>http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sfc/vac/918554253.html</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/san-francisco-bay-area/travel-and-tourism/lodging/why-pay-more-this-friday-at-the-beach-by-mt-tam-muir-20081197617.htm"><b>Why Pay More this Friday at the Beach by MT TAM+Muir Woods+BoLagoon (Lodging incl WiFi+VCR+HBO+Stinson Beach ) $55 1bd</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/san-francisco-bay-area/travel-and-tourism/lodging/why-pay-more-this-friday-at-the-beach-by-mt-tam-muir-20081197617.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Sfbay.Craigslist.Org</span> - Way out West in West Marin. SAVE $ at the Stinson Beach Redwood Haus Inn

$55. nightly / 1br single, Queen Bed w King Sized

Bkfst+WiFi+HBO+Phone- NYTimes Reporter Rambol No. of the Golden

Gate-MT TAMALPAIS+Muir Wood+BoLagoon+Audubon Canyon Migratory









The Stinson Beach Redwoods Haus Inn, www.stinson-beach.com, #1 Belvedere & Shoreline Hwy. #1, 415

868-9828 or 868-1034. Take advantage of Our Winter Special, $55. for a

single person, Sun. -Thurs., in either the White or Redwood Rooms.

Complimentary King Sized Breakfast, Potluck BBQ's include

Condiments+Bread+Salad+Potatoes+Rice+Pasta, Queen Sized Beds+Cable

T.V./HBO/VHS/200+Video Library+WiFi/Computer/Phones/Piano Onsite.

Public Transportation by way of the Marin Stagecoach or A West Marin

Taxi, 415 868-1330, or go green, hike the redwood trails, both So. &

No. to S.B.R.H.Inn Destination. Now read on, the writers account of

Trailblazing on the Redwoods Coast Trails, Destination Redwoods Haus &

The Great Blue Heron/Egret & Snowy Egret Sanctuary, the Audubon Canyon

Ranch, Way out West in West Marin..







A West Marin Taxi awaits you, A/P Marin/Sonoma/Napa/SFBAY, Oak, SJC,

SFO Airport. Receive preliminary itinerary while being driven in

comfort, to the Redwoods Coast of West Marin. Past by the Skywalker

Ranch of George Lucas, Russian outpost of Nicasio, West Marin Railroad

Central of Point Reyes, Epicenter of S.F. 1906 Earthquake, Bolinas

Lagoon, Audubon Canyon Ranch, Pacific Ocean, destination Redwoods Haus

Inn n Stinson Beach. A WEST MARIN TAXI, operating from office at #9

Belvedere next to the Redwoods Haus Inn, located on the corner of

Belvedere & Hwy. #1 in Stinson Beach. For unbeatable rate, Call 415

868-1330 cell 415 497-6656, For AWMT EMAIL REQUEST, email

awestmarintaxi@gmail.com..





The New York Times

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Travel Section Explorer/Marin county, Calif.

A Wild Ramble, Near the Golden Gate

By Gregory Dicum

Edited/Abridged/Added to by the SBCCommerce, www.stinson-beach.org,

Minister of Info.



MARIN COUNTY, just north of San Francisco, cradles wealthy bedroom

communities in picturesque bays. But nearly half of the county's 520

square miles is protected open space Ã¯Â¿Â½ bucolic and wild, its tiny

towns separated by forested mountains.







The Rambling Trails of Marin County, California



It is the kind of landscape, with miles of well-maintained trails,

that people travel across the globe to traverse Ã¯Â¿Â½ to Wales, say, or

the Cinque Terre. But Marin, particularly its western reaches, offers

something for anyone spry enough to walk a mile or two, on any budget.

One Friday afternoon last fall, my wife, Nina, and I rode the Golden

Gate Transit{www.goldengatetransit.org}to the San Rafael Bus Transit

Hub, across the Golden Gate Bridge out of San Francisco with the

hordes of commuters. We planned to spend the next three days hiking

back to the city. While our route may have been ambitious Ã¯Â¿Â½ covering

as many as 20 miles a day Ã¯Â¿Â½ it's easy to choose shorter routes, or

make connections by car or bus if you want to do it in less time.

We got off in Olema[by way of the West Marin Stagecoach, www.

marin-stagecoach.org, which we transferred to in San Rafael], a

crossroads in a long valley formed by the San Andreas fault. We

already felt a world away in the eucalyptus-scented darkness before

the understated wooden form of the Point Reyes Seashore Lodge, where

we had booked a room.

In the morning, we headed out into a dazzling fog, climbing east

toward the Bolinas Ridge. Ghostly white deer Ã¯Â¿Â½ descendants of fallow

deer imported in the last century Ã¯Â¿Â½ looked down on us through dripping

stalks of fennel. The air smelled like a cool herbal balm, and our

boots grew dark with dew.

At the ridge, fog was pouring in from a neighboring valley like heavy

cream. Tomales Bay, where the fault reaches the sea, shone in the

distance. All about us was mad morning chirping and grass bejeweled in

the sun.

Heading south along the ridge, we met our first human beings at noon.

Bolinas Artist, Peter Lee

Brownlee{wayne.browningstreet.net/bio/peterbrownlee" & BoBo Troubador

Stu Art Chapman, www.flickr.com/photos/bbraasch/251709196/, were on a

northward walk markedly better organized than our own, to a vantage

point to paint the Sunset through the trees, a hidden spot on the

Ridge, that Peter wished to reduce to canvas. Having rambled & sailed

throughout Europe, Western Hemisphere, Asia and Africa, individually,

they settled in West Marin, in the Coastal Village of Bolinas,

continuing their artistic pursuits, where they popularized their

individual art forms, meshing with the local variegate 60's Haight

Ashbury Dead Head Counterculture. We chatted for a bit and serenaded

by Stu Art, were inspired by his Bo Counter Culture Ballad, " Way out

West in West Marin". As we parted, Mr. Brownlee turned and called back

in his gruff, New York/South Seas/Bo/Long John Silver Merchant Marine

Accent, " I am 87 years old, by the way!"

"So," Nina said as we watched them proceed jauntily toward Olema, "46

more years of this for us?"

Soon, we joined the Coastal Trail, which follows the shoreline at a

distance, atop a ridge. In the late afternoon, it broke onto rolling,

golden hills and our first view of the Pacific. Hawks and vultures

romped in the updrafts, swooping close to the shaggy-maned hills,

while paragliders sought to imitate them from a promontory, atop Mt.

Tamalpais, up ahead.

We were above the Bolinas Lagoon Preserve, part of the Audubon Canyon

Ranch[See , Sieze the Day, below] and one of the first places in the

county to be protected Ã¯Â¿Â½ a reminder that these hills are not unspoiled

by accident. Freeways and subdivisions planned in the 1960s were

blocked by local activism. Instead of sprawl on its slopes, West Marin

County has salmon in its streams.

As the sun lowered, the ocean became a molten blaze punctuated only by

the Farallon Islands near the horizon. The surf whispered from Stinson

Beach below us, and we turned toward it. The woods soon gave way to

streets of bougainvillea and Monterey cypress around '60s-era beach

houses with BMWs and surfboards out front.

We were quickly in the center of Stinson Beach: a green, some shops

and cars tooling up and down the Shoreline Highway. We made the beach

just in time to see the perfect ball of evening fire quench itself

across Bolinas Bay off Duxbury Point. The hills we had marked with our

footprints seemed improbable pink confections.

"It feels like another country," said Nina, even though we had been on

that beach many times before.

We stayed that night at the World at Peace Redwood Haus Inn,

www.stinson-beach.com, 415 868-9828, 868-1034, a bed-and-breakfast Inn

that harked back to West Marins Spanish/Pioneer/Seafaring/60's flower

child days. In the welcoming breakfast/potluck dinner room, we

listened to the owners' tales of life in San Francisco(spanning the

Eisenhower Beatnik Years, to the Flower Child 60's), nibbled set out

appetizers & tea on the buffet table. Then we went upstairs and slept

like logs, the surf sighing through our open window.

We woke at dawn to murmuring in the dovecote by the longboards and the

smell of frying potatoes and eggs. We eagerly, joined in the Buffet

Style BreakFeast, set out for all, took our laden plates to the the

Biergarten, surrounded by a Rainforest of Succulents, Fruit trees and

Redwoods on a patio of bricks and cobblestones in a Buddhist Zen

atmosphere. After Breakfast and the camaraderie of international and

domestic guests/new friends and discussion covering interesting

topics, from Global Warming, Crises of Leadership in the World

Politic, Health and the need for Peace in the World, as well as trail

tips & directions to, off the beaten path; Red Rock Beach Sulphur Hot

Springs; Pacific Plate Wildcat Beach, Bass Lake & Alamarin Falls. We

ascended the staircase to our room, with nostalgic VCR Tapes from the

200+ Video Library & the Wi-Fi Passcode for our laptops.

Noontime, Mourning Doves, in the branches of trees, that paralleled

our windows, chortled, "Surfs up". We slipped into provided wet suits

& boogie boards & set out to challenge the waves of the Pacific

breaking on the white sands of Stinson Beach. Afterwards, showered

away dried salt and sand, used the Haus Computer Fax & Copier, scanned

RH Proprietor Handwritten Maps of the Bo Palomarin Trailhead & Red

Rock Beach Goat Trail. Made calls to the Times, most cell phones don't

get service on the Coast, luckily for guests, there is a provided Long

Distance Land Line at the Redwoods Haus. Saying Goodbye to our New

Friends and Family, we shouldered our packs and headed off into the

fog along the Dipsea Trail.

We ascended through fantastical, gnarled woods into open, misty heath.

Quails, rabbits and an elegant buck Ã¯Â¿Â½ in the mist all the same carob

color as the trailÃ¯Â¿Â½granted us room to pass into a dense redwood

forest.

As we climbed, sunbeams pierced the brume to pick out pools of water

in bowls of polished rock and carpets of glistening, emerald ferns.

Big trees lay over the narrow ravine, their backs covered in moss. As

we rambled higher still, blue sky tinted the fog and, suddenly, we

were in warm sun on the golden flanks of Mount Tamalpais.

The Sacred Miwok Mount is beloved in the Bay Area, and as we

approached the Pantoll Ranger Station, the headquarters of Mount

Tamalpais State Park, the trails became crowded. Hikers, bikers,

campers, walkers, runners and others swarmed the routes to the

mountain's peak. But a friendly ranger directed us to a trail, Troop

80, that even on a sunny Sunday, was quiet and lovely. Even better,

when we emerged at the Mountain Home Inn, we were able to get a table

for lunch on the deck right away. We sat overlooking Mill Valley, and

beyond it the bustling Bay Area, while Mount Tam's green mass loomed

behind us.

. "This beats sitting on a rock with a PowerBar," observed Nina,

sipping a tall glass of iced tea mixed with lemonade. Truth be told,

anything tastes good after a few miles on the trail, West Marin is an

area, that is home to many artisanal food enterprises, such as Tomales

Bay Croat Founded, Tonys Seafood, Vladimir's of Inverness, Rancho

Nicasio, Bolinas Coast Cafe, Stinson Parkside & Sandollar. Still, with

full bellies we were glad to be heading downhill. Now that we were

more than 30 miles from Olema, people we met found our ramble

enchanting: many who know these trails well had not considered linking

them together, and surprisingly few take multiday walks there.

A trail as steep as a ski slope deposited us into the Muir Woods

National Monument. A grove of truly gigantic redwoods, Muir Woods,

declared a national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt 100 years

ago, has long been a popular tourist excursion from San Francisco. The

trails at its heart are paved, and visitors are separated from the

monstrous trunks by split-rail fences.

Children with tall ice cream cones gathered around a friendly, dapper

ranger who explained the circumstances behind the latest fallen tree

(nobody was around, he told them, so it didn't make a sound). We soon

found ourselves walking past tour buses in the parking lot.

But a few more steps and we were alone again, hiking through meadows

and scented alders along a river. Evening fog gathered in the last

mile, restoring the air's coastal quality. Then we smelled wood smoke,

and came out in front of the Tudor confection of that day's

destination: the Pelican Inn.

We walked right into a cheerful scene of dark wood beams, roaring

fires, darts, and fish and chips. As guests at the inn, we repaired to

the snug private drawing room off the pub with a couple of pints and,

sloughing off our boots, propped our feet by the fire to toast the 15

miles we had walked that day.

Part of West Marin's appeal is its diversity of enclaves. Shortly

after leaving the Pelican Inn the next morning, we were walking

through fields of organic greens at Green Gulch, a Zen retreat and

organic farm.

Wool-clad Zen students nodded to us as we passed them at work cutting

chard. Visitors looking for the deeply contemplative experience of

dawn zazen and Japanese tea ceremonies can stay there, but we had just

begun our day and were soon climbing out of the valley.

On the ridge, we turned and looked back. Below us, Muir Beach sat fast

like a pleasant Hobbitown. Beyond it, the Pacific was glowering

slightly, and low, ominous streaks of rain splattered the sky.

A drizzle set in, and by midday we came to a fog-shrouded eucalyptus

copse where two paths diverged. One led down to Sausalito and the

ferry home.

"Come on, let's go," said Nina.

So we took the other path, rambling on along the ridge down to the

Golden Gate Bridge, into the city and right to our doorstep





. FIRST STEPS OF MANY





GETTING THERE



Marin is an easy drive from San Francisco. Bus service is also

available from Golden Gate Transit (415-455-2000; www.goldengate.org)

and Marin Transit (415-499-6099; www.marintransit.org); the latter's

West Marin Stagecoach (415-526-3239) serves the small towns of West

Marin. Call 511, for up to date, changes in scheduling, of local bus

routes.



WHATS NEXT in Stinson Beach



The Strip, Commercial sector bordering Hwy. #1, beginning with the

World at Peace Redwoods Haus, including the Sandollar and Stinson

Beach Grill Restaurants, as well as the Stinson Beach Market and

Meristem Florists, Many Villages Pacific Rim Indigenous Talismans &

Emporia-White Light Sage & Seer, Osheno. Further on, the Cycle Race

Pack loses its cohesiveness as it passes the Stinson Beach Fitness

Center, Donnies Surfboard/Kayak Rental & the Video Odyssey, [the three

have excellent provided seating & vantage points for photo pics].



WHERE TO STAY



There are many options, but they all fill up fast, so make reservations.

In Olema, the Olema Inn (10000 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard;

415-663-9559; www.theolemainn.com; rooms start at $185) and the Point

Reyes Seashore Lodge (10021 Coastal Highway 1; 415-663-9000;

www.pointreyesseashorelodge.com; starting at $135) are both central

and comfortable.

Stinson Beach has many vacation rentals, but few nightly options. One

is the World at Peace Redwood Haus Inn, #1 Belvedere and Redwoods

Highway #1; 415-868-1034; www.stinson-beach.com; the five rooms start

at $55. for a single person on weekdays, $440. for a weekstay in

either the Redwood or White Room, includes Texan/German Style King

Sized Breakfast, WiFi/Computer/L.D.Phone on Site, VCR/VCR Library,

HBO/Cable T.V., Biergarten, B.B.Q. Facilities, Boogie Boards/Wet

Suits). Bus Service, is direct by the West Marin StageCoach, bicycle

friendly, just tell the driver, "The Redwoods Haus", he will drop you

off right in front, Coast Hwy. #1 and #1 Belvedere.

In Muir Beach, the Pelican Inn (10 Pacific Way; 415-383-6000;

www.pelicaninn.com) has rooms from $190, while at the very different

Green Gulch Farm Zen Center (1601 Shoreline Highway; 415-383-3134;

www.sfzc.org/ggf) doubles start at $145 with three meals a day. You

can always, take part in the functions at the Green Gulch Zen Center,

commute, from the coed lodging of the World at Peace Redwoods Haus.

Stinson Beach Chamber of Commerce, www.stinson-beach.org, 415

868-1330. Up to date, rental listings, list of B&Bs, hotels and motels

in the SW Marin Area-Bolinas, Stinson & Muir Beach.





MAPS



We found the "Rambler's Guide to the Trails of Mt. Tamalpais, Muir

Woods and the Marin Headlands" (Olmstead & Bros.; 510-658-6534; $8)

indispensable, even though most trails are well marked. It is a

detailed trail map that not only is printed on waterproof material,

but also includes a reassuring guarantee from the publisher, Gerald

Olmstead: "If you're lost out in the woods somewhere, please note that

my phone number is on the map. Just call me up."

Farther north, we used the "Point Reyes National Seashore and West

Marin Parklands" map from Wilderness Press (800-443-7227;

www.wildernesspress.com; $9.95). Wilderness also publishes the helpful

"North Bay Trails," by David Weintraub ($16.95).

The Proprietors of the World at Peace Redwoods Haus (circa 1910),

provide up to date info., on: trail accessibility; out of the way

places; day/night concerts at restaurants/community centers; hidden

beaches/lakes/streams/waterfalls/hot springs in West Marin. Also

Provided, hard to find services in West Marin: WiFi/Computers w FAX,

Scanner & Copier/Long Distance Free Calling Onsite; VCRS w 200+VCR

Library; Breakfast-Dinner Potlucks-BBQ; BBQ [we show you how]Tomales

Bay Oysters; Boogie Boards & Wetsuits; 2nd & 3rd story view decks &

rooms, w views of Stinson Beach Village/MTTAM/Bolinas/Pacific Views &

Decks





ORGANIZED TRIPS



Wine Country Trekking (888-287-8735; www.winecountrytrekking.com)

offers a variety of supported rambles through West Marin that also

include things like kayaking excursions and wine tastings.

The Sierra Club runs numerous outings through West Marin as well, some

with features like meditation, birding, painting and nature study

(415-977-5522; www.sierraclub.org/outings).

The World at Peace Redwoods Haus, www.stinson-beach.com, 415 868-1034

or 868-9828, supplies up to date info. on Hikes & Foot races hosted by

local internationally recognized Enviro Sports, www.envirosports.com,

& other recognized local hiking/foot race event organizers. There are

spontaneous hikes, volleyball games, cookouts, campfires that occur at

the RWH daily and nightly, amongst the guests inspired by the freedom

of opportunity, freshness of the sea breeze mixed with the Scent of

the surrounding Redwoods Forest & blossoming Rain Forest of the RWH.

There are also, birding expeditions, both organized & spontaneous by

those interested in the Audobon Canyon Ranch Activities or their own

individual forays to the Bo Lagoon, to catch glimpses of the Blue

Herons, Pelicans, Egrets & migrating Aquatic Fowl that visit the

Lagoon. Not to mention, Tule Elk, Elephant Seal & Whale Watching,

maps/directions via the RWH. Wading in Duxbury Reef, Red Rock Hot

Springs, Bass Lake, Esteros of Sir Francis Drake BayÃ¯Â¿Â½Discover the

Paradise of the Coast of Marin, www.stinson-beach.com, 415 868-9828 or

868-1034..

The Places to Explore

We offer information on all of the local natural viewing locations of

interest where you can see Whales, Seal and Elephant Seal colonies,

Egrets, Herons, Pelicans, and the Tule Elk. Visit the Sulphur Hot

Springs at Red Rock Beach , 4-5 days a month during negative tide

periods of the Full Moon, the Ocean rolls back, giving 2 hrs., to

enjoy the 110 degree heated Seawater, in a open pool of rock, by the

edge of the Ocean. Walk into the tide pools of Duxbury Reef during

minus tide, study close up the indigenous sea life of the Reef: Sea

Anemones; Clams; Mussels; Starfish;Crabs;Coral; and the reef fishes in

small pools of water.

On Visitors Days of the Week, walk down the 300 steps leading to the

Point Reyes Lighthouse, on the Point Reyes Peninsula, see the interior

and the antique beacon light of French Manufacture, dating back over a

100 yrs.

Kayak with Point Reyes Outdoors www.pointreyesoutdoors.com, 415

663-8192 Sea Kayaking Tours & Classes Guided Nature Hikes

Mesa Road in Bolinas: Visit the Point Reyes Bird Observatory and take

part in banding expeditions of migratory birds as well as study

statistics of their numbers and sightings; Hike to Bass Lake on the

Panoramic Trail head, from the parking lot at the end of Mesa Road ;

See Agate Beach, where all the rocks are green agate.

Hike the many trails that abound in the Golden Gate Recreation Area,

Mt. Tamalpais and Tomales State Parks , as well as the Point Reyes

National Seashore: Matt Davis-Steep Ravine-Dipsea-Lake Lagunitas-Kent

& Nicasio Lakes. Gather Mussels in Season, for ethnic & old fashioned

soups/stews. Dance at Smiley's Schooner Saloon & dance/dine at Rancho

Nicasio, Sat. Nights to live music.

Eat at your pick of 3 art bedecked and fine food dining establishments

here in Stinson & Coast Cafe in Bolinas.

Rent/Ride Horseback at Five Brooks Stable, Horse Rental, Open Year

Round in Olema. 415 663-1570, Fax 415 663-8766, www.fivebrooks.com

Workout Regimen, Beach Accessories, Kayaks, Surfboards: At the Stinson

Beach Health Club, open daily, 7a.m.-9p.m.,415 868-8801, 3605

Shoreline Hwy.#1 , full range gym, offers weight sets, stationary

bikes, Pilates studio, w views of Easkoot Creek in a Polynesian

Village Natural Setting Ambiance. Stinson Beach Surf and Kayak Co.,

same location, Rent and Sell Beach Accessories, Full Range of Kayaks &

Client friendly surfboards, Donny 415 868-8801, cell 415 257-1831.

Los Banos Surf & Adventure Camp- Coach Dave Lich, certified lifeguard,

415 847-2221 or 415 380-8900, www.stinsonbeachsurfcamp.com, Surf

School Classes beginning 6/11, all ages welcome. Free shuttle from

Mill Valley. "Bringing the beach to the kids of Marin & Fellow

Travelers."

BoBo Bikes located in Bolinas, 6 Wharf Rd., 415 450-0621, Bike &

Surfboard Impresario Sports Czar Terrence, Proprietor. High Tech State

of the Art Bikes, Surboards, Skates from the Czar of Sports Gear.

Every detail of hardware can be found as well as Terrence's Extensive

Knowledge of what sports gear, is right for you. Bring your equipment

in for troubleshooting & maximal gain for high performance on the

roadway or surf.

Visit/Shop: Claudia Chaplines Art Gallery, Annies Bookstore for

Hiking/Biking Maps/Postcards, SurfGear/Beach Wear, Live Water Surf

Shop.

Many Villages, 2264 Hwy. #1, where you can select from a vast emporium

of indigenous jewelry, buddhist artifacts, sacred totems, folk art of

Bali, Handmade Oracles Mystical Talismans from the Island Jungles of

Thailand and the floating Villages of Indochina. Astute World

Expert/Time Traveler of White Light, Oshen, 415 868-1419.



Experience:

The Museum of Miwok Native American Artifacts at Slide Ranch; Nicasios

Russian Orthodox Church, dating back to the Russian Colonial Period at

Fort Ross; Smileys Schooner Saloon, an English Pub imported in 1850,

oldest functioning alcohol establishment in California; Bodega

Schoolhouse made famous in Alfred Hithcocks, "The Birds"; Muir Woods

Trail, the setting for Hitchcocks "VERTIGO", where Jimmy Stewart

followed Kim Novak into Muir Woods,on the Matt Davis Trailhead,

beginning at Belvedere in Stinson(Right up from the Redwoods, #1

Belvedere]; Skywalker Ranch, East of Nicasio, creative brainchild of

George Lucas; Peak of Sacred Mount Tamalpais-from which the viewer can

experience 360 degree panorama views, of the Greater S.F. Bay Area &

the City, Mt. Diablo, the Farollone Islands of the Pacific Ocean.

These and many more view spots as well as Treasures of Wild West

Architecture in West Marin Towns, will be addressed, directions will

be given & an itinerary for all points of interest in Marin, Sonoma

and the S.F. Greater Bay Area.



Public Transportation: For all points in the SF Bay Area, Use the

Transit Planner site, www.511.org From San Francisco , take #70 or #80

Golden Gate Transit, to Marin City Transfer to West Marin Stage Coach,

website for schedule is: www.marintransit.org, call for info., M-F, 8

a.m.-5 a.m., 415 526-3239



Important Phone No.s Stinson Beach Lifeguard Tower-415 868-0942

Stinson Beach Visitor Center- 415 388-2596



Driving Directions to Stinson Beach

From Highway 101 Exit Highway 1/Stinson Beach (there will be a sign

for Muir Woods/ Mt. Tamalpais at this exit) Drive about .5 miles. At

the stoplight, turn left. You now have two options, both about the

same distance, both on winding steep roads. Shoreline Hwy. 1 takes you

along the Pacific Ocean, through Muir Beach, to Stinson Beach.

Panoramic Highway take you up and over Mt Tamalpais, w breathtaking

panorama views of the City, East Bay, Sonoma County, to within one

block of the Redwood Haus in Stinson Beach. To get to Panoramic from

Hwy. 101, Drive 3 miles on Shoreline Hwy. #1. At the top of the hill,

turn right onto the Panoramic Highway. From Panoramic access, Muir

Woods/Mount Tamalpais and Stinson Beach.

Or Continue straight on Shoreline Highway #1 about 12 miles to Stinson Beach.

When traveling South to North on Hwy.#1, upon entering Stinson Beach,

Make a right at the Firehouse, onto Belvedere, a u turn and park

alongside fence, at #1 Belvedere and Hwy. #1, the Redwoods Haus, On

Street Parking.

Olema intersection and Sir Francis Drake Blvd.-16 miles South to Stinson Beach.

Point Reyes Station. So. to Stinson Beach-18 miles So. to Stinson Beach.





Barbeque in the Bier-garten:

Bring your own fish/chicken/duck/lamb/meat

cuts/zucchini/corn/beverages and b.b.q. coals for barbeque, we provide

potatoes, rice, onions, bread, condiments & b.b.q. coals or mesquite.

Oysters for Redwoods barbeque[Redwoods Chef gives instructions on

preparation] must be obtained beforehand at: the Tomales Bay Oyster

Farm, located on Shoreline Hwy. #1, 4 miles No. of Point Reyes

Station; the Hog Island Oyster Co. in Marshall; the Johnsons Oyster

Farm on the Point Reyes Peninsula.





Gesucht: Deutscher Schreiner oder Zimmermann fuer Renovierungs- und

Reparaturarbeiten fuer Redwood Haus fuer flexible Zeit. Keine

Arbeitserlaubnis noetig. Kommen Sie zu uns an die traumhafte

Pazifikkueste. Sagen Sie dies all Ihren Freunden. Siehe unsere

Internetseite: www.stinson-beach.de Kontakt: 415 868-1330

info@stinson-beach.com









Please check our websites for our pricing and service,

www.stinson-beach.com, in German, www.stinson-beach.de, 415 868-9828

or 868-1034. You will soon be convinced that we indeed have the BEST &

most EQUITABLE lodging service in the entire SF Bay Area!



Seize the Day





Bird Lovers flock to Stinson's Audobon Canyon Ranch



The Audobon Canyon Ranch, founded in 1962, one of the largest nesting

sites on the West Coast, offers sanctuary & a birds-eye-view of the

graceful ballet-of ritual courtship, nest-building, egg-turning,

chick-rearing & first flight of the Great Blue Herons, Great & Snowy

Egrets in Picher Canyon. Males gather sticks for nestbuilding, then

females arrange them just so, in the closest coastal redwoods to a

24-hour food supply in Bolinas Lagoon. Eight miles of redwoods,

Douglas Fir & Bay, coastal scrub & chapparral, grassland, pond, stream

& marsh trails cover 1K ares. Spring wildflowers display in dense

greenery. At the Redwoods Haus, located 2 miles from the Ranch,

receive trail maps & a itinerary for the folks & kids, of the many

other offerings afforded visitors & birdwatchers of this Pearl of the

Coast.







Crab Fishing off Muir & Duxbury Reef

Crab Fishing No. of the Golden Gate, then place your pot strings, off Muir and Duxbury and then, too, from Bodega Head to Carmet and from Martins Beach to Montara.



Asked New Huck Finn skip Jay Yokomizo where he would set pots if he had but, say, five, and this is his answer: "If the weather is good, off Muir Beach, at the Middlegrounds, between Dux and the Lightbucket. If I had to pull them by hand, I wouldn't drop them any deeper than 70 feet. With a puller, 110, maybe 115 feet deep."



For bait: "Salmon, the scraps, if you can buy them. Then squid, or mackerel and sardine. Something oily."





<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">Why Pay More this Friday at the Beach by MT TAM+Muir Woods+BoLagoon {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 14, 2008, 11:31 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 14, 2008, 12:07 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;34KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/">North America</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/">United States</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/">California</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/">Metro Areas</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/san-francisco-bay-area/">San Francisco Bay Area</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/san-francisco-bay-area/travel-and-tourism/">Travel and Tourism</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/california/metro-areas/san-francisco-bay-area/travel-and-tourism/lodging/"><b>Lodging</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{NEWS &gt; BREAKING NEWS} - The 20th Century's Industrious Designer</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/news/breaking-news/the-20th-century-s-industrious-designer-2008119005.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">: Photo: Courtesy Library of CongressIndustrial designer Raymond Loewy was a giant in his field. He produced innovative designs in every area from fashion to locomotives. If you admire the Streamlined Moderne style of Art Deco, you've probably admired a Loewy design. You like logos? Then, you like Loewy.

That's enough from us. Take a look for yourself.

Left:  Loewy poses in a mocked-up designer's office with modern décor, around 1934. At his side is a model of his 1932 Hupmobile, one of the first streamlined automobiles.: Sketch: Courtesy Library of CongressLoewy made this preliminary sketch for the Cornell-Liberty Safety Car, designed for the Cornell Aeronautical Research Laboratory and the Liberty Mutual Life Insurance Company, in 1956.: Rendering: Courtesy  Loewy Design Loewy designed the 1961 Avanti for Studebaker.: Photo: Library of CongressLoewy designed this car for Jaguar ? or maybe a Mr. Bruce Wayne of Gotham City.

: Rendering: Courtesy Library of Congress
Loewy approached the Pennsylvania Railroad in the early 1930s and told railway execs he wanted to design locomotives. Loewy's T-1 steam engine was the Pennsy's last before switching to diesel. 
: Photo: Courtesy Loewy Design
Loewy poses with an early model of his GG1 electric locomotive for the Pennsylvania Railroad, 1935. 
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
President John F. Kennedy thought the Air Force's paint scheme for the Boeing 707 Air Force One was too royal: He wanted a look that was appropriate for a president, not a king. On the advice of first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, the White House contacted Loewy, who redesigned the exterior livery and the interior cabins. 
: Sketch: Courtesy Library of Congress
Loewy played around with 18 design ideas for a new Standard Oil Company logo. Loewy OK'd a version only slightly different from the eventual, final version (next slide).
: Credit: Courtesy of  Loewy Design
Loewy designed or redesigned well-known logos for scores of corporations. 
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy DesignLoewy modernized the traditional Coke bottle, as well as designed its new larger sizes and "no deposit, no return" bottles and cans. His countertop dispenser for restaurants and soda fountains is an icon of postwar Americana. : Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
Loewy simplified the old Lucky Strike cigarette logo and changed the dark green pack to white. The underlying reasons for the change were the American Tobacco Company's desire to attract more women to the brand with a brighter package, and also that the green ink gave off an odor.

However, with the United States entering World War II, the company marketed the move as patriotism, claiming it was made to conserve the metals used make green ink. Advertisements trumpeted the slogan, "Lucky Strike Green has gone to war," and millions of packs were distributed to GIs. American Tobacco didn't forget its plan to market to women, as this ad in Ladies Home Journal makes evident. 
: Credit: Courtesy of  Loewy Design
With a hemline that low, you would guess this outfit has to be prewar or postwar, because the fashion industry conserved fabric with high hemlines during World War II. As a matter of fact, this Loewy modern black ensemble with matching accessories appeared in Vogue in 1939. 
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
Loewy created this quasi-futuristic jukebox for United Music Corp. in 1958. You might have selected from a mixed-bag playlist of 45s like these 1958 hits: 


"Don't" &#151; Elvis Presley
"Great Balls of Fire" &#151; Jerry Lee Lewis
"Johnny B. Goode" &#151; Chuck Berry
"Good Golly Miss Molly" &#151; Little Richard
"La Bamba" &#151; Ritchie Valens
"Fever" &#151; Peggy Lee
"Poor Little Fool" &#151; Ricky Nelson
"Rebel Rouser" &#151; Duane Eddy
"All the Way" &#151; Frank Sinatra 		
"26 Miles (Santa Catalina)" &#151; The Four Preps 
"A Wonderful Time Up There" &#151; Pat Boone
"Tequila" &#151; The Champs
"Catch a Falling Star" &#151; Perry Como 		
"He's Got the Whole World in His Hands" &#151; Laurie London 	
"Twilight Time" &#151; The Platters
"Witch Doctor" &#151; David Seville 	
"All I Have to Do Is Dream" &#151; The Everly Brothers 	
"Purple People Eater" &#151; Sheb Wooley	 
"Yakety Yak" &#151; The Coasters 
"Splish Splash" &#151; Bobby Darin
"Volare (Nel Blu Dipinto Blu)" &#151; Dominico Modugno 	
"Rockin Robin" &#151; Bobby Day
"Tom Dooley" &#151; The Kingston Trio 	
"To Know Him Is to Love Him" &#151; Teddy Bears 		  	 
"The Chipmunk Song" &#151; The Chipmunks/David Seville
"Jingle Bell Rock" &#151; Bobby Helms
: Photo: Courtesy Hagley Museum and Library
Loewy also created this 1950s Charcoal line china for Rosenthal.
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
Loewy designed this classic bedroom set for Mengel Furniture.

: Photo: Gottscho-Schleisner/Courtesy Library of Congress
Loewy looks over a model of Imperial House in 1959, a planned apartment complex for Manhattan's Upper East Side. 
: Credit: Courtesy Loewy DesignLoewy created this prototype store for a bakery chain in New York in 1937. The white porcelain-covered steel siding and semicircular window endings gives it an air of "Radio Deco.": Photo: Courtesy Loewy Design 

Earth was not room enough for Loewy: He created this model for the living quarters of the NASA Skylab space station. 
:  Study: Courtesy Loewy Design
Loewy's 1970 study for a NASA space station appears influenced by sets from the 1968 film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, though it is a much smaller module. 

: Credit: Courtesy Loewy Design
Loewy sifts through his designs for NASA. 
:  Photo: Courtesy Loewy Design
Raymond Loewy and his daughter Laurence enjoy a moment in 1982. Laurence was a prize-winning journalist who later headed the Raymond Loewy Foundation and served as CEO of Loewy Design. She died Oct 15, 2008, at age 55.

David Hagerman, the COO of Loewy Design says, "Laurence hoped RaymondLoewy.org would help introduce a new generation of design enthusiasts to her father."
  


   
</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/news/breaking-news/the-20th-century-s-industrious-designer-2008119005.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-05T05:00:00Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-05T05:00:00Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Wired.Com</name>
<url>http://www.wired.com/culture/design/multimedia/2008/11/gallery_loewy</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/news/breaking-news/the-20th-century-s-industrious-designer-2008119005.htm"><b>The 20th Century's Industrious Designer</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/news/breaking-news/the-20th-century-s-industrious-designer-2008119005.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Wired.Com</span> - : Photo: Courtesy Library of CongressIndustrial designer Raymond Loewy was a giant in his field. He produced innovative designs in every area from fashion to locomotives. If you admire the Streamlined Moderne style of Art Deco, you've probably admired a Loewy design. You like logos? Then, you like Loewy.

That's enough from us. Take a look for yourself.

Left:  Loewy poses in a mocked-up designer's office with modern décor, around 1934. At his side is a model of his 1932 Hupmobile, one of the first streamlined automobiles.: Sketch: Courtesy Library of CongressLoewy made this preliminary sketch for the Cornell-Liberty Safety Car, designed for the Cornell Aeronautical Research Laboratory and the Liberty Mutual Life Insurance Company, in 1956.: Rendering: Courtesy  Loewy Design Loewy designed the 1961 Avanti for Studebaker.: Photo: Library of CongressLoewy designed this car for Jaguar ? or maybe a Mr. Bruce Wayne of Gotham City.

: Rendering: Courtesy Library of Congress
Loewy approached the Pennsylvania Railroad in the early 1930s and told railway execs he wanted to design locomotives. Loewy's T-1 steam engine was the Pennsy's last before switching to diesel. 
: Photo: Courtesy Loewy Design
Loewy poses with an early model of his GG1 electric locomotive for the Pennsylvania Railroad, 1935. 
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
President John F. Kennedy thought the Air Force's paint scheme for the Boeing 707 Air Force One was too royal: He wanted a look that was appropriate for a president, not a king. On the advice of first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, the White House contacted Loewy, who redesigned the exterior livery and the interior cabins. 
: Sketch: Courtesy Library of Congress
Loewy played around with 18 design ideas for a new Standard Oil Company logo. Loewy OK'd a version only slightly different from the eventual, final version (next slide).
: Credit: Courtesy of  Loewy Design
Loewy designed or redesigned well-known logos for scores of corporations. 
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy DesignLoewy modernized the traditional Coke bottle, as well as designed its new larger sizes and "no deposit, no return" bottles and cans. His countertop dispenser for restaurants and soda fountains is an icon of postwar Americana. : Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
Loewy simplified the old Lucky Strike cigarette logo and changed the dark green pack to white. The underlying reasons for the change were the American Tobacco Company's desire to attract more women to the brand with a brighter package, and also that the green ink gave off an odor.

However, with the United States entering World War II, the company marketed the move as patriotism, claiming it was made to conserve the metals used make green ink. Advertisements trumpeted the slogan, "Lucky Strike Green has gone to war," and millions of packs were distributed to GIs. American Tobacco didn't forget its plan to market to women, as this ad in Ladies Home Journal makes evident. 
: Credit: Courtesy of  Loewy Design
With a hemline that low, you would guess this outfit has to be prewar or postwar, because the fashion industry conserved fabric with high hemlines during World War II. As a matter of fact, this Loewy modern black ensemble with matching accessories appeared in Vogue in 1939. 
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
Loewy created this quasi-futuristic jukebox for United Music Corp. in 1958. You might have selected from a mixed-bag playlist of 45s like these 1958 hits: 


"Don't" &#151; Elvis Presley
"Great Balls of Fire" &#151; Jerry Lee Lewis
"Johnny B. Goode" &#151; Chuck Berry
"Good Golly Miss Molly" &#151; Little Richard
"La Bamba" &#151; Ritchie Valens
"Fever" &#151; Peggy Lee
"Poor Little Fool" &#151; Ricky Nelson
"Rebel Rouser" &#151; Duane Eddy
"All the Way" &#151; Frank Sinatra 		
"26 Miles (Santa Catalina)" &#151; The Four Preps 
"A Wonderful Time Up There" &#151; Pat Boone
"Tequila" &#151; The Champs
"Catch a Falling Star" &#151; Perry Como 		
"He's Got the Whole World in His Hands" &#151; Laurie London 	
"Twilight Time" &#151; The Platters
"Witch Doctor" &#151; David Seville 	
"All I Have to Do Is Dream" &#151; The Everly Brothers 	
"Purple People Eater" &#151; Sheb Wooley	 
"Yakety Yak" &#151; The Coasters 
"Splish Splash" &#151; Bobby Darin
"Volare (Nel Blu Dipinto Blu)" &#151; Dominico Modugno 	
"Rockin Robin" &#151; Bobby Day
"Tom Dooley" &#151; The Kingston Trio 	
"To Know Him Is to Love Him" &#151; Teddy Bears 		  	 
"The Chipmunk Song" &#151; The Chipmunks/David Seville
"Jingle Bell Rock" &#151; Bobby Helms
: Photo: Courtesy Hagley Museum and Library
Loewy also created this 1950s Charcoal line china for Rosenthal.
: Credit: Courtesy  Loewy Design
Loewy designed this classic bedroom set for Mengel Furniture.

: Photo: Gottscho-Schleisner/Courtesy Library of Congress
Loewy looks over a model of Imperial House in 1959, a planned apartment complex for Manhattan's Upper East Side. 
: Credit: Courtesy Loewy DesignLoewy created this prototype store for a bakery chain in New York in 1937. The white porcelain-covered steel siding and semicircular window endings gives it an air of "Radio Deco.": Photo: Courtesy Loewy Design 

Earth was not room enough for Loewy: He created this model for the living quarters of the NASA Skylab space station. 
:  Study: Courtesy Loewy Design
Loewy's 1970 study for a NASA space station appears influenced by sets from the 1968 film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, though it is a much smaller module. 

: Credit: Courtesy Loewy Design
Loewy sifts through his designs for NASA. 
:  Photo: Courtesy Loewy Design
Raymond Loewy and his daughter Laurence enjoy a moment in 1982. Laurence was a prize-winning journalist who later headed the Raymond Loewy Foundation and served as CEO of Loewy Design. She died Oct 15, 2008, at age 55.

David Hagerman, the COO of Loewy Design says, "Laurence hoped RaymondLoewy.org would help introduce a new generation of design enthusiasts to her father."
  


   
<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">See the latest multimedia and applications including videos, animations, podcasts, photos, and slideshows on Wired.com {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 5, 2008, 5:00 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 7, 2008, 9:13 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;37KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/news/">News</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/news/breaking-news/"><b>Breaking News</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
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</entry>
<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - McCain makes his last stand in a town called Defiance</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/mccain-makes-his-last-stand-in-a-town-called-defiance-20081048536.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Defiance, a picture postcard town in north-west Ohio, takes its name from a fort built here in 1794 by a General "Mad" Anthony Wayne. The general was so proud of his deep moat and the fort's 2.5-metre-thick walls that he declared, according to local lore: "I defy the English, the Indians and all the devils in hell to take it."So it was easy to see why John McCain, the Republican presidential candidate, found Defiance an irresistible place to launch his final battle for the White House yesterday with a two-day bus tour of Ohio.Outgunned in the polls and on TV by his Democratic opponent, Barack Obama, and deserted by some of his fellow Republicans, McCain had little reassurance to offer his supporters yesterday except his defiance - and a little lesson in his own history.McCain cannot hope to match Obama in advertising spending, especially his half-hour broadcast on Wednesday night that the Democrat reportedly paid three television networks more than $1m (£600,000) each to air. But his sarcasm yesterday cost nothing. "Anyone see the info-mercial last night? Thank God for cable," said McCain. "We could have played it at a prison camp but it would have violated the Geneva convention."Battle busThe bus tour for McCain was heavy with its own symbolism. Nearly a year ago now, the senator for Arizona made an improbable comeback to win the Republican nomination by driving around New Hampshire aboard his "Straight Talk Express" bus.He struck a similar can-do pose in Defiance town. "We're a few points down, but we are coming back," he said. "We are never giving up. We are never going to quit."But for all the fighting talk and carefully chosen symbols of defiance, it was a visibly wilting McCain who rode into town on a brilliant autumn morning to address a crowd of several thousand in front of the local middle school.In recent days, his campaign has had a number of embarrassing leaks about feuding and recrimination between his staff and his running mate, Sarah Palin - the sure-fire sign of a losing team.McCain has had to watch as associates from his decades in Washington turn their back on him to endorse Obama, most notably Colin Powell, the former secretary of state.McCain has also had to confront the idea that many Republican candidates for Congress find him politically toxic and do not want him campaigning in their area.Unlike in Florida last Thursday, where he was flanked by the state's governor, Charlie Crist, and the former governor Jeb Bush, McCain had no comparable state notables with him in Defiance.Ohio's Republican senator, George Voinovich, has yet to appear with McCain or his running mate, Sarah Palin, at a single event in the state - even though with its 20 electoral college votes, it is one of the richest prizes in this campaign.No candidate has taken the White House without winning Ohio since John Kennedy in 1960, and McCain is a few points behind Obama in the polls.He trails Obama even further in organisation, especially the early voting which campaigns see as a safety blanket against bad weather that could stop their supporters getting to the polls on election day.According to Ohio election officials, 62% of early voters in the state have been Democrats, and 37% Republicans.McCain faced another apparent desertion yesterday, this time from Joe the Plumber, the Ohio man who became a Republican celebrity after confronting Obama about taxes at a campaign stop three weeks ago.Since then, Joe the Plumber, whose real name is Samuel Wurzelbacher, has emerged as an increasingly important prop in McCain's stump speeches. McCain has even started billing his events as Joe the Plumber rallies in Wurzelbacher's honour.Only, as it turned out yesterday, McCain could not count on him either."Joe is with us today," McCain told the crowd. "Joe, where are you? Where is Joe? Is Joe here with us today?"Wurzelbacher has campaigned for McCain this week. His moment of celebrity has also led to a recording contract offer, local television reported yesterday. But if Wurzelbacher was in Defiance he gave no sign of it."Joe, I thought you were with us today," McCain continued, somewhat plaintively. "All right. So you are all Joe the Plumbers," he told the crowd, before making one last attempt. He told Wurzelbacher he had seen him on television that morning: "Wherever you are Joe, I thought you did a good job," said McCain.Such confusion has been the running thread through the campaign in these final days. Some is no doubt due to fatigue. At one point yesterday, McCain lost his place on the teleprompter, asking aloud: "Where am I?"But he has also been lurching from theme to theme with rising desperation. In Ohio yesterday, he warned that Obama would raise taxes, which would cost people their jobs. In Florida, he warned that Obama would bring socialism and negotiate with dictators.Tarnished imageMeanwhile, campaign officials have been trying to stoke a new controversy about Obama's associations in Chicago by harping on about a dinner he had with a noted Palestinian academic, Rashid Khalidi.Such abrupt changes of direction and the negative tone of the campaign have had commentators - including conservatives - accusing McCain of tarnishing his own brand of an independent politician.Yesterday David Broder, the veteran political commentator at the Washington Post, wrote that though McCain had been burdened with George Bush's unpopularity he had failed to create a coherent vision for his campaign.For the hardcore of McCain's supporters, like the people at yesterday's rally, it is too soon to try to dissect the reasons he has been losing ground to Obama - or even for some to acknowledge it.At the last, McCain is making his underdog status part of his appeal to voters. The crowds he addresses are booing Obama louder, which they do regularly, than cheering McCain. His rallies play the theme song from Rocky - conveniently overlooking the fact that the scrappy fighter played by Sylvester Stallone lost to Apollo Creed.To his supporters it matters little. It will all come down to the wire, they say."It's going to be a tight race. All the polls seem to indicate that Obama has got the lead, and it's all wrapped up, but I don't believe it," said Mike Saxton, a retired science teacher. "Obama's still having a tough time sealing the deal."Beside him, Bob Morton, a school principal, agreed. "Every presidential election closes up at the end," he said. "This one could too."US elections 2008Barack ObamaJohn McCainOhioguardian.co.uk © Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/mccain-makes-his-last-stand-in-a-town-called-defiance-20081048536.htm</id>
<issued>2008-10-31T00:08:57Z</issued>
<modified>2008-10-31T00:08:57Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/oct/31/mccain-joe-plumber-republicans-elections</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/mccain-makes-his-last-stand-in-a-town-called-defiance-20081048536.htm"><b>McCain makes his last stand in a town called Defiance</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/mccain-makes-his-last-stand-in-a-town-called-defiance-20081048536.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
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<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - Defiance, a picture postcard town in north-west Ohio, takes its name from a fort built here in 1794 by a General "Mad" Anthony Wayne. The general was so proud of his deep moat and the fort's 2.5-metre-thick walls that he declared, according to local lore: "I defy the English, the Indians and all the devils in hell to take it."So it was easy to see why John McCain, the Republican presidential candidate, found Defiance an irresistible place to launch his final battle for the White House yesterday with a two-day bus tour of Ohio.Outgunned in the polls and on TV by his Democratic opponent, Barack Obama, and deserted by some of his fellow Republicans, McCain had little reassurance to offer his supporters yesterday except his defiance - and a little lesson in his own history.McCain cannot hope to match Obama in advertising spending, especially his half-hour broadcast on Wednesday night that the Democrat reportedly paid three television networks more than $1m (£600,000) each to air. But his sarcasm yesterday cost nothing. "Anyone see the info-mercial last night? Thank God for cable," said McCain. "We could have played it at a prison camp but it would have violated the Geneva convention."Battle busThe bus tour for McCain was heavy with its own symbolism. Nearly a year ago now, the senator for Arizona made an improbable comeback to win the Republican nomination by driving around New Hampshire aboard his "Straight Talk Express" bus.He struck a similar can-do pose in Defiance town. "We're a few points down, but we are coming back," he said. "We are never giving up. We are never going to quit."But for all the fighting talk and carefully chosen symbols of defiance, it was a visibly wilting McCain who rode into town on a brilliant autumn morning to address a crowd of several thousand in front of the local middle school.In recent days, his campaign has had a number of embarrassing leaks about feuding and recrimination between his staff and his running mate, Sarah Palin - the sure-fire sign of a losing team.McCain has had to watch as associates from his decades in Washington turn their back on him to endorse Obama, most notably Colin Powell, the former secretary of state.McCain has also had to confront the idea that many Republican candidates for Congress find him politically toxic and do not want him campaigning in their area.Unlike in Florida last Thursday, where he was flanked by the state's governor, Charlie Crist, and the former governor Jeb Bush, McCain had no comparable state notables with him in Defiance.Ohio's Republican senator, George Voinovich, has yet to appear with McCain or his running mate, Sarah Palin, at a single event in the state - even though with its 20 electoral college votes, it is one of the richest prizes in this campaign.No candidate has taken the White House without winning Ohio since John Kennedy in 1960, and McCain is a few points behind Obama in the polls.He trails Obama even further in organisation, especially the early voting which campaigns see as a safety blanket against bad weather that could stop their supporters getting to the polls on election day.According to Ohio election officials, 62% of early voters in the state have been Democrats, and 37% Republicans.McCain faced another apparent desertion yesterday, this time from Joe the Plumber, the Ohio man who became a Republican celebrity after confronting Obama about taxes at a campaign stop three weeks ago.Since then, Joe the Plumber, whose real name is Samuel Wurzelbacher, has emerged as an increasingly important prop in McCain's stump speeches. McCain has even started billing his events as Joe the Plumber rallies in Wurzelbacher's honour.Only, as it turned out yesterday, McCain could not count on him either."Joe is with us today," McCain told the crowd. "Joe, where are you? Where is Joe? Is Joe here with us today?"Wurzelbacher has campaigned for McCain this week. His moment of celebrity has also led to a recording contract offer, local television reported yesterday. But if Wurzelbacher was in Defiance he gave no sign of it."Joe, I thought you were with us today," McCain continued, somewhat plaintively. "All right. So you are all Joe the Plumbers," he told the crowd, before making one last attempt. He told Wurzelbacher he had seen him on television that morning: "Wherever you are Joe, I thought you did a good job," said McCain.Such confusion has been the running thread through the campaign in these final days. Some is no doubt due to fatigue. At one point yesterday, McCain lost his place on the teleprompter, asking aloud: "Where am I?"But he has also been lurching from theme to theme with rising desperation. In Ohio yesterday, he warned that Obama would raise taxes, which would cost people their jobs. In Florida, he warned that Obama would bring socialism and negotiate with dictators.Tarnished imageMeanwhile, campaign officials have been trying to stoke a new controversy about Obama's associations in Chicago by harping on about a dinner he had with a noted Palestinian academic, Rashid Khalidi.Such abrupt changes of direction and the negative tone of the campaign have had commentators - including conservatives - accusing McCain of tarnishing his own brand of an independent politician.Yesterday David Broder, the veteran political commentator at the Washington Post, wrote that though McCain had been burdened with George Bush's unpopularity he had failed to create a coherent vision for his campaign.For the hardcore of McCain's supporters, like the people at yesterday's rally, it is too soon to try to dissect the reasons he has been losing ground to Obama - or even for some to acknowledge it.At the last, McCain is making his underdog status part of his appeal to voters. The crowds he addresses are booing Obama louder, which they do regularly, than cheering McCain. His rallies play the theme song from Rocky - conveniently overlooking the fact that the scrappy fighter played by Sylvester Stallone lost to Apollo Creed.To his supporters it matters little. It will all come down to the wire, they say."It's going to be a tight race. All the polls seem to indicate that Obama has got the lead, and it's all wrapped up, but I don't believe it," said Mike Saxton, a retired science teacher. "Obama's still having a tough time sealing the deal."Beside him, Bob Morton, a school principal, agreed. "Every presidential election closes up at the end," he said. "This one could too."US elections 2008Barack ObamaJohn McCainOhioguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">			McCain makes his last stand in a town called Defiance |				World news |				The Guardian	 {...} Republican chooses Ohio to launch his final offensive - with Joe the Plumber strangely absent {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> October 31, 2008, 12:08 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> October 31, 2008, 10:53 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;83KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/"><b>News and Media</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
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<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - Champions League: Manchester Utd 3-0 Celtic</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/champions-league-manchester-utd-3-0-celtic-20081056523.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">It is a curious experience to be both outplayed and wronged. A wry Celtic supporter struck the correct balance in a well-constructed complaint. "They weren't the ones needing help from the officials," he said in mock indignation. The Dimitar Berbatov goals that put Manchester United 2-0 ahead had been taken from marginally offside positions.There could be no tirade from the Celtic manager, Gordon Strachan, even if he did touch upon the lapses by the referee, Frank de Bleeckere, and his assistants. Eventually United's superiority was marked.Injuries that ruled out the strikers Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink and Georgios Samaras went part of the way to explaining the visitors' ineffectuality but the deeper truth lies in the divided nature of the Champions League. United and Villarreal are already close to qualification for the group phase, while Celtic and Aalborg grapple for a spot in the Uefa Cup.Swift progress is virtually demanded at English clubs by managers who know that energy has to be conserved for the Premier League. There could be no element of the unknown in this meeting of title-holders from either side of the border. All the same the élan from Sir Alex Ferguson's team was fitful.It mattered little that a groin injury kept Rio Ferdinand out. The line-up for the Champions League holders looked designed to deal briskly with Celtic but Strachan's side were competitive at the outset. United, however, can be patient, as they showed at the weekend when their four goals against West Bromwich Albion all came in the second half. Indeed a Darren Fletcher goal against Newcastle in August remains the only one scored here in the first half of any league fixture.When Celtic did fall behind, in the 30th minute, the goal was galling. John O'Shea got a foot to Nani's corner but Berbatov was fractionally offside as he put the ball into the net. A team with the away record in the Champions League of Celtic is under enough pressure as it is without errors from officials.They have now drawn one and lost the other 18 fixtures on their travels in this competition. With his team's two tall forwards ruled out, Strachan had mused about the possibility of Snow White leading out the side. The line-up was not uniformly diminutive but the manager was wise to look for relaxing humour.Celtic gave a reasonable account of themselves before the interval. At that stage United had been flat. Only the composition of the team suggested verve, with Cristiano Ronaldo and Nani flanking the central strikers, Wayne Rooney and Berbatov. Strachan's team were containing that attack and, before half-time, had carried some menace of their own.It was Edwin van der Sar who needed to make saves, putting efforts by Aiden McGeady and Gary Caldwell behind. Celtic's system of containment was functioning, yet United are well accustomed to wrecking plans of that sort.The danger to Celtic was sporadic. Nani set up Rooney for a drive that was blocked by Mark Wilson and later Ronaldo missed the target from a promising position. All the same Fletcher, on the verge of the interval, should have doubled the lead instead of hacking Rooney's chip over the bar. Celtic had performed better than many had imagined, yet were losing and at risk of more harm.Six minutes into the second half United killed off this match. Though Ronaldo's free-kick moved in the air, the goalkeeper Artur Boruc ought to have done better than palm it into the middle of the goalmouth, from where Berbatov scored a second time. The Bulgarian had again been marginally offside when the set piece was taken but soon afterwards the flag was raised wrongly against Rooney when he had the ball in the net. It is a moot point whether Celtic's mood will be improved by evidence that poor officiating was at work rather than a conspiracy.Berbatov is most likely cursing machinations but there was nothing covert about them. The forward was denied the prospect of a hat-trick because Ferguson replaced him with Carlos Tevez. Having made sure of the win here, the manager attended to forward planning. The player removed will have to content himself with a spree of five goals in four matches.There was no more than professionalism to sustain the visitors. Tevez was soon compelling Boruc to tip an attempt round the post. Rooney made the goalkeeper put a shot over the bar before striking at last in the 76th minute, from a Tevez pass. This had been one more away match in Europe to be met with stoicism by Celtic.Champions LeagueManchester UnitedCelticguardian.co.uk © Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</summary>
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<issued>2008-10-21T22:20:34Z</issued>
<modified>2008-10-21T22:20:34Z</modified>
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<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2008/oct/22/championsleague-manchesterunited</url>
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<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - It is a curious experience to be both outplayed and wronged. A wry Celtic supporter struck the correct balance in a well-constructed complaint. "They weren't the ones needing help from the officials," he said in mock indignation. The Dimitar Berbatov goals that put Manchester United 2-0 ahead had been taken from marginally offside positions.There could be no tirade from the Celtic manager, Gordon Strachan, even if he did touch upon the lapses by the referee, Frank de Bleeckere, and his assistants. Eventually United's superiority was marked.Injuries that ruled out the strikers Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink and Georgios Samaras went part of the way to explaining the visitors' ineffectuality but the deeper truth lies in the divided nature of the Champions League. United and Villarreal are already close to qualification for the group phase, while Celtic and Aalborg grapple for a spot in the Uefa Cup.Swift progress is virtually demanded at English clubs by managers who know that energy has to be conserved for the Premier League. There could be no element of the unknown in this meeting of title-holders from either side of the border. All the same the élan from Sir Alex Ferguson's team was fitful.It mattered little that a groin injury kept Rio Ferdinand out. The line-up for the Champions League holders looked designed to deal briskly with Celtic but Strachan's side were competitive at the outset. United, however, can be patient, as they showed at the weekend when their four goals against West Bromwich Albion all came in the second half. Indeed a Darren Fletcher goal against Newcastle in August remains the only one scored here in the first half of any league fixture.When Celtic did fall behind, in the 30th minute, the goal was galling. John O'Shea got a foot to Nani's corner but Berbatov was fractionally offside as he put the ball into the net. A team with the away record in the Champions League of Celtic is under enough pressure as it is without errors from officials.They have now drawn one and lost the other 18 fixtures on their travels in this competition. With his team's two tall forwards ruled out, Strachan had mused about the possibility of Snow White leading out the side. The line-up was not uniformly diminutive but the manager was wise to look for relaxing humour.Celtic gave a reasonable account of themselves before the interval. At that stage United had been flat. Only the composition of the team suggested verve, with Cristiano Ronaldo and Nani flanking the central strikers, Wayne Rooney and Berbatov. Strachan's team were containing that attack and, before half-time, had carried some menace of their own.It was Edwin van der Sar who needed to make saves, putting efforts by Aiden McGeady and Gary Caldwell behind. Celtic's system of containment was functioning, yet United are well accustomed to wrecking plans of that sort.The danger to Celtic was sporadic. Nani set up Rooney for a drive that was blocked by Mark Wilson and later Ronaldo missed the target from a promising position. All the same Fletcher, on the verge of the interval, should have doubled the lead instead of hacking Rooney's chip over the bar. Celtic 