13 Ekim 2012 Cumartesi

First Lady Won't Host Annual Kitchen Garden Harvest Party For Kids...White House Welcomes Public For Garden Tours

To contact us Click HERE
Public invited to view Kitchen Garden and grounds beginning on Saturday; a look back at Harvests past...
First Lady Michelle Obama has invited local school children to her famous Kitchen Garden on the South Lawn for a public Fall Harvest celebration each October since 2009.  But with President Obama's re-election campaign in high gear, and just 25 days until Election Day, for the first time in three years Mrs. Obama is putting aside her own tradition, and has no such event scheduled.  Like her husband, the First Lady has been busy on the campaign trail, wooing voters in swing states.  This week, Mrs. Obama traveled to Virginia, followed by two days in Colorado.  Last week, she visited Ohio, Colorado, Washington state, and Nevada.  (Above:  Mrs. Obama at last October's Harvest event)

Mrs. Obama's annual Harvests have been high-profile events with loads of media coverage for the Let's Move! campaign.  Despite the lack of a garden party, the Kitchen Garden and Let's Move! will still be in the spotlight: The White House has expanded the schedule for the annual Fall Garden Tours, offering these over two weekends this year, and the media has been invited, too.  The public can tour the grounds beginning tomorrow, Saturday, Oct. 13, and again on Sunday, with two more days scheduled next week.  Visitors will have a nice view of the Kitchen Garden, lush with late bounty such as squash, pumpkins, sweet potatoes, and early winter lettuces.  CLICK HERE for full details about the free tickets, times and dates.  (Above: Mrs. Obama at her 2010 Harvest)


A look back at the First Lady's past Fall Harvests....
Since Mrs. Obama first broke ground for the Kitchen Garden in March of 2009, it has produced more than 4,000 pounds of food, according to Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives Sam Kass.  At the First Lady's three previous Fall Harvest events, she was of course joined by Kass, the mastermind behind the project, as well as by Executive Chef Cris Comerford and Executive Pastry Chef Bill Yosses and other kitchen staff.  Members of the East Wing team always joined in, and, of course, there were the kids, who are the point of it all.  Each Harvest was a little different, but all focused on the wonder of going from dirt to dining.  Check the sidebar of the blog for all the Kitchen Garden-inspired recipes, such as Roasted Sweet Potatoes with Apples & Chilis and Garden Vegetable Pizza(Above: Mrs. Obama and helpers harvesting sweet  potatoes in 2009)

"Over 740 pounds of food have come out of this little piece of land!" Mrs. Obama exclaimed during her first Fall Harvest in 2009, held on Oct. 29.  The Kitchen Garden was at the time its original size, 1,100 square feet, and Mrs. Obama was joined by kids from DC's Kimball and Bancroft elementary schools.  Mrs. Obama and her helpers dug up giant sweet potatoes--including four pounders--competing with Kass and his helpers to see who could go faster.  

About a third of the crops that grow in the garden are donated to DC's Miriam's Kitchen, which offers daily meals to homeless citizens. The vegetables are also used for First Family meals, which are designed around the seasonal offerings, as well as for State Dinners and other ultra-important social events.


By the time Mrs. Obama hosted her Fall Harvest in 2010, on Oct. 20, the Kitchen Garden had been expanded to 1,500 square feet in order to grow even more vegetables.  The First Lady was joined by kids from DC's Tubman and Bancroft elementary schools.  Internationally acclaimed chef Daniel Boulud and chefs representing the US in the year's international Bocuse d'Or competition also joined Mrs. Obama and her young helpers. (Above:  Mrs. Obama and her helpers sample baby white radishes with Boulud)

A highlight of the day was the first-ever Presidential pumpkins harvested from the garden.  Some were still half green.  (Above: Mrs. Obama and the kids display their bounty with Boulud, far left)

“Very cool, isn't it?"  Mrs. Obama said to her helpers.  "You guys have witnessed the first White House pumpkins.”


During the Fall Harvest in 2011 on October 5th, Mrs. Obama was again joined by kids from Bancroft and Tubman elementary schools.  The activity included a garden-side pizza party with the kids, which was subsequently included in the First Lady's book, American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens Across America, published in May of 2012. (Above:  Mrs. Obama and helpers harvesting red chilis)

The bounty from the Harvest was used the following week for the State Dinner honoring the Republic of Korea's President Lee Myung-Bak.  The 2011 Harvest also featured the first-ever Let's Move! Tweetup, with 17 adult social media users invited to the White House for meetings with Kass and other staffers.  The White House in the ensuing months dramatically expanded its use of Twitter for Let's Move!, with Kass and the other chefs engaging in more Tweetups and using social media to spread the word about Mrs. Obama's message.


Above:  Kass and a helper at the 2010 Fall Harvest, with sweet potatoes and the first-ever pumpkins.

*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama; top photo by Chuck Kennedy/White House

White House Curator Bill Allman Discusses The British Burning The White House

To contact us Click HERE

British Forces helped themselves to a sumptuous feast left behind by First Lady Dolley Madison before setting fire to the residence...
White House Curator William 'Bill' Allman stars in a new White House video, discussing the British burning of the White House during the War of 1812.  The British destruction took place on August 24, 1814, and Allman shows still-visible scorch marks on the residence as he explains that President James Madison was away from the residence, fighting the war.  But First Lady Dolley Madison was home, and she famously saved the portrait of President George Washington that now hangs in the East Room.  Mrs. Madison as she departed also left her husband's dinner ready to be served.  British troops helped themselves to what has been described as a lavish feast.


"President Madison came back from the battlefield and found dinner set, and First Lady Dolley Madison gone," Allman says onscreen. "He and his Cabinet quickly left as well.  And then later that night the British arrived and ate the dinner, then set fire to the building."

The video, posted to mark Fire Prevention Week, includes a clip of President Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron joking about the White House burning, when Mr. Cameron visited the White House last march for his State Visit and State Dinner.

Allman doesn't say onscreen what Mrs. Madison was serving for dinner, but George Gleig, a member of the British force that attacked the White House, left this account:

When the detachment sent out to destroy Mr. Madison's house entered his dining parlor, they found a dinner table spread and covers laid for forty guests. Several kinds of wine, in handsome cut glass decanters, were cooling on the sideboard; plate holders stood by the fireplace, filled with dishes and plates; knives, forks, and spoons were arranged for immediate use; in short, everything was ready for the entertainment of a ceremonious party. Such were the arrangements in the dining room, whilst in the kitchen were others answerable to them in every respect. Spits, loaded with joints of various sorts, turned before the fire; pots, utensils stood upon the grate; and all the other requisites for an elegant and substantial repast were exactly in a state which indicated that they had been lately and precipitately abandoned.

You will readily imagine that these preparations were beheld by a party of hungry soldiers with no indifferent eye. An elegant dinner, even though considerably overdressed, was a luxury to which few of them, at least for some time back, had been accustomed, and which, after the dangers and fatigues of the day, appeared peculiarly inviting. They sat down to it, therefore, not indeed in the most orderly manner, but with countenances which would not have disgraced a party of aldermen at a civic feast, and, having satisfied their appetites with fewer complaints than would have probably escaped their rival gourmands, and partaken pretty freely of the wines, they finished by setting fire to the house which had so liberally entertained them.

President Obama Proclaims National School Lunch Week 2012, Oct. 14 - 20

To contact us Click HERE
200 billion lunches served: President hails school lunch professionals, lauds First Lady's childhood obesity campaign...
President Obama on Friday issued a Proclamation declaring Oct. 14-20 as National School Lunch Week.  In his text, the President recognizes "all those whose dedicated work and care make good nutrition a reality for our sons and daughters." He discusses the origins of the program under President Harry Truman beginning in 1946, noting that more than 200 billion lunches have been served since.  The President hails First Lady Michelle Obama's efforts with the Let's Move! campaign, and discusses the importance of healthy, affordable food.  In December of 2010, the President signed the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, legislation Mrs. Obama championed through Let's Move!.  (Above:  The President signing the Act as Mrs. Obama and lawmakers look on)

The measure provided the first nutritional updates to the National School Lunch Program in fifteen years.  The standards went into effect this Fall.  About 32 million children currently participate in the program. Check USDA's site for full information.

"Through efforts like First Lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move! initiative, we are continuing to bring together stakeholders at every level of government, in the private sector, and throughout our communities to ensure more children have access to the healthy, affordable food they need to learn and grow," President Obama wrote.

NATIONAL SCHOOL LUNCH WEEK, 2012

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION


"Our children are the key to America's success in the 21st century, and it is incumbent upon us all to ensure they have the resources they need to reach their greatest potential -- including access to healthy meals at school. During National School Lunch Week, we recognize all those whose dedicated work and care make good nutrition a reality for our sons and daughters.

Our students deserve the best possible chance to live healthy, productive lives. Since the National School Lunch Program was founded over six decades ago, schools have served over 200 billion lunches that have helped generations of children achieve in the classroom and grow into our country's next generation of leaders. This school year, the program will carry that legacy forward by providing nutritious meals for tens of millions of students every day. These meals are a vital source of fruits, vegetables, and other fresh and nutritious foods for our Nation's young people. Through efforts like First Lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move! initiative, we are continuing to bring together stakeholders at every level of government, in the private sector, and throughout our communities to ensure more children have access to the healthy, affordable food they need to learn and grow.

Soon after President Harry Truman signed the National School Lunch Act in 1946, he reminded us that "nothing is more important in our national life than the welfare of our children, and proper nourishment comes first in attaining this welfare." This week, we thank the countless individuals who make our children's well-being their highest priority, and celebrate the National School Lunch Program as a foundation for their success in the years to come.

The Congress, by joint resolution of October 9, 1962 (Public Law 87-780), as amended, has designated the week beginning on the second Sunday in October each year as "National School Lunch Week," and has requested the President to issue a proclamation in observance of this week.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim the week of October 14 through October 20, 2012, as National School Lunch Week. I call upon all Americans to join the dedicated individuals who administer the National School Lunch Program in appropriate activities that support the health and well-being of our Nation's children.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twelfth day of October, in the year of our Lord two thousand twelve, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-seventh."

BARACK OBAMA

##

*Photo taken on Dec. 13, 2010, at Harriet Tubman Elementary School by Lawrence Jackson/White House

President Obama Dines At DC's 'Smith Commons' With Winners Of Last 'Dinner with Barack' Contest - UPDATE

To contact us Click HERE
The President's battleground state guests are two teachers and an auto worker; contest entries helped the President set a fundraising record in September...
Washington, DC: President Obama dined on Friday evening with the three winners of the sixth and final Dinner with Barack contest, arriving at Smith Commons Dining Room & Public House in the Atlas Arts District at 5:40 PM for a meal that lasted close to two hours.  Not surprisingly, the President's three guests hailed from battleground states he hopes to win 25 days from now--Ohio, Colorado, and North Carolina--where he is polling neck and neck with his Republican rival.   (Above: This photo tweeted by the Campaign had the caption "table for four," but showed only the President's face)

Also not surprisingly, the winners were two teachers and an auto worker.  Favorite campaign talking points for Mr. Obama include his rescue of the car industry and bashing the GOP Congress for failing to support educators.  Teachers, fire fighters, and health care workers have loaded the President's previous dinner contest guest lists.

Clad in a blue shirt and dark tie, the President fiddled with a paper menu as he was seated with his guests at a table in the main dining room covered with a brown cloth.  Votive candles, napkin rolls and water glasses were on the table.  The President laughed and quizzed his guests about their bios, leaning his head on his fist, as pool was allowed in for less than two minutes for a rapid photo op.  The neighborhood bistro on the H St. NE corridor was closed to the public so the President and the winners could dine privately surrounded by huge lights and a video crew to film campaign spots that will be used in the final sprint to Election Day. 


The lucky winners were Joe Laliberte, a social studies teacher from Colorado Springs, Colorado; Kimberley Cathey, an elementary school speech pathologist from Greensboro, North Carolina; and Mario Orosa, of North Canton, Ohio, a technical specialist at Goodyear.  The President had breakfast in July with some of Orosa's Goodyear co-workers during one of his many visits to the Buckeye State.  Each dinner winner brought a companion, and there were two spouses and one mom joining the fun. Race was a factor: Winner Cathey and her husband are African America, and Orosa is Latino, crucial voting blocs for the President.  (Above:  Cathey is second right; Orosa is beside the President and Laliberte sips water)

"Smith Commons offers something for every palate," notes the website, as well as a wide variety of craft beers.  Entrees are priced from $15-$23, and include the Smith Burger with caramelized onions, bacon, and Chipotle mayonnaise--more than likely the President's order-- as well as seared braised short rib, seared scallops, turducken, lamb chops, parsley-crusted grouper, and chickpea ravioli. The menu [PDF].

Dining with supporters has been a tradition since Mr. Obama's first presidential campaign, and he was expecting his last Campaign contest dinner to be a wee bit emotional, he said in multiple emails asking for donations.

"It's bittersweet, but this is the last time we'll do this on this campaign," the President wrote in one email

The push for entries for this particular dinner contest, the sixth since the Spring of 2011, included more emails than for any previous dinner, as well as videos, online ads, and an aggressive social media push.  It helped America's most powerful dinner companion raise a record-breaking $181 million for his campaign in September, putting him within spitting distance of a $1 billion haul for this election cycle.


The President greeted the restaurant's staffers, posed for photos, and autographed a menu before departing the restaurant at 7:24 PM.  "Great food! Barack Obama" the President wrote on the menu (above).

"Thanks for stopping by with a few friends, Mr. President. @BarackObama It was our pleasure! #POTUS" the restaurant tweeted after the President left, with the Instagram of the autographed menu.

The President was back home at the White House at 7:29 PM.  The President last dined out in DC on Oct. 6th, when he celebrated his twentieth wedding anniversary with his wife with a date at Bourbon Steak restaurant

News of street closures, a heavy security presence, and a white screening tent set up in front of Smith Commons alerted the neighborhood that the President would be visiting the eatery, and Twitter was abuzz with the news late Friday afternoon.  Crowds lined H street, cheering and clapping as the President's motorcade arrived.


The winners' bios, courtesy of the campaign...
The three winners had to pass background checks, and will pay taxes on the assigned retail value of their individual prizes, $1,600.  The Campaign flew them to DC by coach class air fare and put up for a one-night hotel stay.  (Above:  With Orosa)

*Kimberley Cathey is a mother of two young sons and is in her eighth year as a speech and language pathologist at a Greensboro, North Carolina public elementary school.  Kim is a dedicated OFA volunteer and often hosts phone-banking parties at her home.  She is a strong supporter of the President because she believes, “he is in tune with the average person.”  She is especially grateful for his work to pass health care reform so her sons never have to worry about the costs of health care while in college, as she did.  Kim’s husband, Ron, will accompany her to dinner. 

*Mario Orosa is a native Ohioan and has worked in the research and development unit at Goodyear for 12 years.  He is currently a technical specialist there.  Mario supports the President’s decision to rescue the auto industry and invest in American auto workers, because he sees the positive affects not only on his job and the auto industry, but positive affect it had on his North Canton, Ohio community.  Deidra, Mario’s wife, will accompany him to dinner.

*Joe Laliberte, a native of New Hampshire, living in Colorado Springs, CO,  is a social studies teacher at a local Colorado Springs middle school.  Joe supports the President because of his unwavering support for DREAMers, many of who are Joe’s students, and the Latino community as a whole.   Joe’s mother, Patti, will attend the dinner with Joe and the President.

 The previous Dinner with Barack contest meals...
The President has attended four previous dinners and one luncheon for the Dinner with Barack contests during this election cycle.  Online dinner contests were also used for fundraising with George Clooney, Sarah Jessica Parker and Anna Wintour, with Michael Jordan and NBA stars and with former President Bill Clinton.  A reception with Jay-Z and Beyoncé  also had a contest.  (Above:  The graphic logo for the sixth Dinner with Barack contest included First Lady Michelle Obama, though she was not part of the dinner)

Taken together, the dinners have helped drop millions of dollars into the President's war chest, though the Campaign won't specify how much.  The Clooney dinner last May was credited with raising at least $15 million.

The President and Mrs. Obama dined at DC's Mintwood Place restaurant on August 20, 2012 for the fifth Dinner with Barack contest, which had three winners and their guests.

The President enjoyed a cheeseburger and fries with the winners of the 'Dinner with Barack IV' contest on June 15th, 2012, when he took over DC's Lincoln Restaurant.

The First Lady also attended the third dinner with the President and the winners, which was held at DC's Boundary Road restaurant on March 8, 2012.

The second dinner contest was fulfilled with a luncheon; the President took his four winners to DC's Scion restaurant on January 6, 2012.

The President ate dinner with the four winners of the first Dinner with Barack contest on October 27, 2011, at The Liberty Tavern in Arlington, VA.

*CLICK HERE for links to all posts about the dinner series.


Above: The exterior of the restaurant, surrounded bys ecurity in the afternoon, tweeted by @Taylor_Gourmet.

 Info:  Smith Commons is at 1245 H Street, NE  Washington, DC 20002.  Phone: 202-396-0038.

*Top photo by Obama for America; second and third by pool; menu from Smith Commons; exterior photo by @Taylor_Gourmet

A Search Primer (you don't have to always go with Google)

To contact us Click HERE
While Google is the undisputed king of internet search, there are other options.  Try some from the list below the next time you do a search.  The bottom portion of this post contains links to search tips that will help you become a better searcher.

General Search Engines
 
All the Web, All the Time
One of the more recently developed Web indexing tools, this search engine indexes a very large database. It has separate search boxes for audio, FTP, and picture files. Advanced search options support domain filters, word filters, and allow searching in 25 different languages.

AltaVista
Alta Vista has a large database. It can perform searches in Spanish or English and translate words, phrases, and entire Web sites online into many languages using "Babelfish." Other improvements include phrase detection, spell check, Family Filter, and natural language capabilities.

Ask 
Ask is a search engine that is intended to be used with natural language questions. There are many extra features such as suggesting other terms that are along the same subject lines and local searching.

Bing
Bing is Microsoft's new search engine. On the left side of the screen, it has buttons for searching images, videos, shopping, news, travel, history and maps. There is a visual search option, as well.

Google
The most extensive search engine on the Web. Google search results are ranked based on site popularity rather than the common practice of paid positioning. Google also has specialized searches for certain operating systems, government documents, maps and scholarly articles. A single click translation service is available for most pages which will translate to the user's primary language. It also caches Web pages allowing an individual to view pages that are not currently available or that are on overburdened servers.

Hakia
Hakia is a semantic search engine that is focused on quality. Unique to Hakia, a single query brings a full set of results in all segments including Web, News, Blogs, Hakia Galleries, Credible Sources, Video, and Images. Among these segments, News, Blogs, Credible Sources, and Hakia Galleries are processed by Hakia's proprietary core semantic technology called QDEXing. Web, video, and images are processed by Hakia's SemanticRank technology using third party API feeds.

HotBot
HotBot allows many search options such as language, images, javascript, video, and MP3. Advanced search options allow searching by date, page depth, and domain name.

Mahalo
Mahalo is the one 'human-powered' search site in this list, employing a committee of editors to manually sift and vet thousands of pieces of content.  This means that you'll get fewer Mahalo hit results than you will get at Bing or Google. But it also means that most Mahalo results have a higher quality of content and relevance (as best as human editors can judge).
Mahalo also offers regular web searching in addition to asking questions.  Depending on which of the two search boxes you use at Mahalo, you will either get direct content topic hits or suggested answers to your question.

Topsy
The first index is based exclusively on Twitter statuses. When you search for something on Topsy, such as “free music,“ it finds snippets of conversations that match what you are looking for. Topsy results are the things people link to when they are talking about your search terms. Topsy ranks results based on how well they match your search terms and the influence of the people talking about them.

Twazzup
Twazzup is a Twitter search tool that provides almost all of what Twitter Search does itself, plus a list of the most influential tweeters on a topic, related photos, and keywords based on your search results to help you refine your search.

WebCrawler
WebCrawler is one of the oldest search engines and uses the Excite search software to search the Web. It is good for simple searching.

Yahoo
Yahoo is a collection of classified subject resources. If no matches are found in its own database, it searches the rest of the Web using Google. Options at the bottom of the screen link to searches in a particular country (Denmark, France, Mexico) or city (Los Angeles, New York City) which may be in the native language of that country.

Yippy
Yippy is a Deep Web engine that searches other search engines for you. Unlike the regular Web, which is indexed by robot spider programs, Deep Web pages are usually harder to locate by conventional search. That's where Yippy becomes very useful. If you are searching for obscure hobby interest blogs, obscure government information, tough-to-find obscure news, academic research and otherwise-obscure content, then Yippy is your tool.


Meta Search Engines

These search engines search multiple databases simultaneously. Both of these search engines remove the duplicates before presenting the search results.
Dogpile
Searches the major search engines simultaneously and allows the user to view the combined results or compare the results of the various engines side by side.

MetaCrawler
MetaCrawler simultaneously searches Lycos, Infoseek, WebCrawler, Excite, AltaVista, Thunderstone, DirectHit, LookSmart, and Yahoo. A brief annotation is provided with the search results.

Subject Guides

These subject guides are a starting point to specific information on the Web. Although they do provide search engines, those engines search only on the individual Web site (i.e., a search on the Librarians' Index to the Internet will only show sites listed on the Librarians' Index to the Internet).
Internet Public Library
Originally begun as a project of the University of Michigan School of Information and Library Studies, the Internet Public Library locates, evaluates, annotates and organizes the information resources of the Internet which would be of interest to patrons of a public library.

Scout Report Archives
The Internet Scout Project, located in the Computer Sciences Department of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is funded by the National Science Foundation. Resources can be searched by either a quick or complex search engine. Links can also be browsed by Library of Congress subject headings.

Web Searching Techniques


For more information on how search engines work, how to search, and tables and charts describing how these tools work, see the following articles:Beyond General World Wide Web Searching (From UC Berkeley)
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/FindInfo.html
Checklist of Internet Research Tips (from the University at Albany)
http://library.albany.edu/usered/iguides/iguides.html
Searching the Internet
http://www.sldirectory.com/search.html
Recommended Search Strategy: Search With Peripheral Vision
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Strategies.html

12 Ekim 2012 Cuma

A Search Primer (you don't have to always go with Google)

To contact us Click HERE
While Google is the undisputed king of internet search, there are other options.  Try some from the list below the next time you do a search.  The bottom portion of this post contains links to search tips that will help you become a better searcher.

General Search Engines
 
All the Web, All the Time
One of the more recently developed Web indexing tools, this search engine indexes a very large database. It has separate search boxes for audio, FTP, and picture files. Advanced search options support domain filters, word filters, and allow searching in 25 different languages.

AltaVista
Alta Vista has a large database. It can perform searches in Spanish or English and translate words, phrases, and entire Web sites online into many languages using "Babelfish." Other improvements include phrase detection, spell check, Family Filter, and natural language capabilities.

Ask 
Ask is a search engine that is intended to be used with natural language questions. There are many extra features such as suggesting other terms that are along the same subject lines and local searching.

Bing
Bing is Microsoft's new search engine. On the left side of the screen, it has buttons for searching images, videos, shopping, news, travel, history and maps. There is a visual search option, as well.

Google
The most extensive search engine on the Web. Google search results are ranked based on site popularity rather than the common practice of paid positioning. Google also has specialized searches for certain operating systems, government documents, maps and scholarly articles. A single click translation service is available for most pages which will translate to the user's primary language. It also caches Web pages allowing an individual to view pages that are not currently available or that are on overburdened servers.

Hakia
Hakia is a semantic search engine that is focused on quality. Unique to Hakia, a single query brings a full set of results in all segments including Web, News, Blogs, Hakia Galleries, Credible Sources, Video, and Images. Among these segments, News, Blogs, Credible Sources, and Hakia Galleries are processed by Hakia's proprietary core semantic technology called QDEXing. Web, video, and images are processed by Hakia's SemanticRank technology using third party API feeds.

HotBot
HotBot allows many search options such as language, images, javascript, video, and MP3. Advanced search options allow searching by date, page depth, and domain name.

Mahalo
Mahalo is the one 'human-powered' search site in this list, employing a committee of editors to manually sift and vet thousands of pieces of content.  This means that you'll get fewer Mahalo hit results than you will get at Bing or Google. But it also means that most Mahalo results have a higher quality of content and relevance (as best as human editors can judge).
Mahalo also offers regular web searching in addition to asking questions.  Depending on which of the two search boxes you use at Mahalo, you will either get direct content topic hits or suggested answers to your question.

Topsy
The first index is based exclusively on Twitter statuses. When you search for something on Topsy, such as “free music,“ it finds snippets of conversations that match what you are looking for. Topsy results are the things people link to when they are talking about your search terms. Topsy ranks results based on how well they match your search terms and the influence of the people talking about them.

Twazzup
Twazzup is a Twitter search tool that provides almost all of what Twitter Search does itself, plus a list of the most influential tweeters on a topic, related photos, and keywords based on your search results to help you refine your search.

WebCrawler
WebCrawler is one of the oldest search engines and uses the Excite search software to search the Web. It is good for simple searching.

Yahoo
Yahoo is a collection of classified subject resources. If no matches are found in its own database, it searches the rest of the Web using Google. Options at the bottom of the screen link to searches in a particular country (Denmark, France, Mexico) or city (Los Angeles, New York City) which may be in the native language of that country.

Yippy
Yippy is a Deep Web engine that searches other search engines for you. Unlike the regular Web, which is indexed by robot spider programs, Deep Web pages are usually harder to locate by conventional search. That's where Yippy becomes very useful. If you are searching for obscure hobby interest blogs, obscure government information, tough-to-find obscure news, academic research and otherwise-obscure content, then Yippy is your tool.


Meta Search Engines

These search engines search multiple databases simultaneously. Both of these search engines remove the duplicates before presenting the search results.
Dogpile
Searches the major search engines simultaneously and allows the user to view the combined results or compare the results of the various engines side by side.

MetaCrawler
MetaCrawler simultaneously searches Lycos, Infoseek, WebCrawler, Excite, AltaVista, Thunderstone, DirectHit, LookSmart, and Yahoo. A brief annotation is provided with the search results.

Subject Guides

These subject guides are a starting point to specific information on the Web. Although they do provide search engines, those engines search only on the individual Web site (i.e., a search on the Librarians' Index to the Internet will only show sites listed on the Librarians' Index to the Internet).
Internet Public Library
Originally begun as a project of the University of Michigan School of Information and Library Studies, the Internet Public Library locates, evaluates, annotates and organizes the information resources of the Internet which would be of interest to patrons of a public library.

Scout Report Archives
The Internet Scout Project, located in the Computer Sciences Department of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is funded by the National Science Foundation. Resources can be searched by either a quick or complex search engine. Links can also be browsed by Library of Congress subject headings.

Web Searching Techniques


For more information on how search engines work, how to search, and tables and charts describing how these tools work, see the following articles:Beyond General World Wide Web Searching (From UC Berkeley)
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/FindInfo.html
Checklist of Internet Research Tips (from the University at Albany)
http://library.albany.edu/usered/iguides/iguides.html
Searching the Internet
http://www.sldirectory.com/search.html
Recommended Search Strategy: Search With Peripheral Vision
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Strategies.html

Register Now for the Library 5k Run/Walk and Fun Run

To contact us Click HERE
On Sunday, September 16th, the Friends of the Library will host the annual Race for the Library. The 5k Run/Walk starts at the library with runners proceeding to the West Chop lighthouse and back. There will also be a 1/2 Mile Fun Run for Kids (13 & under). There will be prizes for winners in all age groups, and a raffle. 5k starts at 10 am; Fun Run for Kids starts at 9:45 am; Registration begins at 8:30 a.m.

Pickup a registration forms at the library or download from our website, or you can register online.

5k Race, Kid's Fun Run, Plus "Bonus" Book Sale on Sept. 16th

To contact us Click HERE
On Sunday, September 16th, the Friends of the Library will host the annual Race for the Library. The 5k Run/Walk starts at the library with runners proceeding to the West Chop lighthouse and back. There will also be a 1/2 Mile Fun Run for Kids (13 & under). There will be prizes for winners in all age groups, and a raffle. 5k starts at 10 am; Fun Run for Kids starts at 9:45 am; Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. Registration forms are available at the library or may be downloaded from our website, or you can register online.

The morning of the race, the Friends will also hold a "mini" book sale fundraiser from 9am until 11am. This is in addition to the regular monthly book sale that will be held on Saturday September 15th from 1-3pm.

NASA's Joke Goes Over Everyone's Head

To contact us Click HERE
On Sunday this week, NASA posted details of a new mission involving the craft currently orbiting the planet Mercury called MESSENGER or "MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging."


The mission, PIA 15542, or "Mooning Mercury" to the layearthling, centers on a newly discovered natural satellite (moon) measuring 230 ft. across at a distance of about 8,890 miles above the planet.  The proposed name for this moon is Caduceus.

The very, very, very small moon, Caduceus.
The mission description goes on to say that rather than study this moon, as they might normally do, NASA had another plan.  It goes like this...
...The new plan is to use the remaining propellant to crash MESSENGER into Caduceus. "Our detailed analysis tells us that if we act now, and with the right trajectory, MESSENGER will impart just enough momentum to the moon to break it free of Mercury's gravity well and set it on an Earth-crossing trajectory suitable for recovery as a Mercury meteorite," said Panini.

...If Caduceus is successfully released from the pull of Mercury and placed on a course to reach Earth, we can expect the moon to arrive at Earth by 2014. "The risk to the public is reassuringly small", offers MESSENGER mission design lead Adam McJames. "We have designed a trajectory that will bring the moon to Earth at a remote location on the Wilkes Land ice sheet in Antarctica. This trajectory will avoid all population centers and will put the moon's impact site within reach for retrieval by the scientific staff at the U.S.-operated McMurdo Station."
In other words, something a little like the plot of the 1979 movie, "Meteor."


If you don't think about the odds of being able to map that trajectory so specifically across the minimum 48,000,000 miles between Earth and Mercury, this all sounds well and good, but NASA gives its joke away with in love of acronyms.
If successful, MESSENGER's extended extended MIN-C mission will mark the first instance of the documented arrival to Earth of material from the Mercury system. Moreover, it will serve as the basis for a new Discovery-class mission proposal currently in development by the Applied Psychics Laboratory for a Mercury lander mission for in situ X-ray analysis of surface composition. That mission is to be named the Hermean On-surface Analysis with X-rays.
That's right.  The mission's name is H.O.A.X.  At least when NASA makes a joke, they do it big.  Happy April Fool's Day.

* * * * 
In related news that is not so enjoyable, NASA has begun the process of decommissioning the Space Shuttles and their overall program.  President George W. Bush first called for the retirement of the shuttle program in January of 2004, in the aftermath of the shuttle Columbia accident and its disintegration over Texas during atmospheric re-entry.  In speaking about a new focus for NASA on the International Space Station, Bush said:
Excerpt of  President Bush's 2004 remarks to NASA, announcing the
retirement of the shuttle program.
The photoblog In Focus, from The Atlantic Monthly, has compiled a series of images from the dismantling and preparation for display of shuttles Discovery and Endeavor as well as of the launching pads, cargo bays, and propulsion systems.  It is good-bye, for now, to American manned spaceflight.

Click on these images to visit the In Focus set.




We're Not the Only Ones Worried About the Census

To contact us Click HERE


Census Project presents the viewpoints about the decennial census and the American Community Survey (ACS) from various stakeholders.  A diverse group of stakeholders are involved including academic associations, public policy interest groups, retail and business organizations, and organizations representing ethnic and minority groups.

Recently the House voted not to fund the American Community Survey for 2013.  The Census Project  notes, "Currently, because of economic, fiscal and political challenges, the ongoing budgets to adequately fund planning for Census 2020 and the ACS’ ongoing work will be under a microscope in Congress."

The site includes fact sheets, issue briefs, letters, and other information.  A recent report, Eliminating America's Playbook, is a compilation of "scores of case studies and comments on why the ACS is one of the most useful tools the nation has to measure how its communities are doing each year."

Check it out!



11 Ekim 2012 Perşembe

President Obama's First Fan: Rosario Dawson

To contact us Click HERE

Keene, California: As President Obama gave an impassioned speech on Monday to dedicate the César E. Chávez National Monument, First Fan Rosario Dawson was seated directly in front of the podium.  The film actress held her camera phone aloft to film the President, and captured the attention of chief White House photographer Pete Souza (center, above) and other shutterbugs. Dawson will play United Farmworkers co-founder Dolores Huerta in "César," a biofilm about Chávez, and she was mobbed by her own fans after the event.  Huerta was also at the ceremony with the President.

Dawson, above left, chatting with fans.
"So excited to join POTUS & Dolores Huerta for Cesar Chavez National Monument Dedication!" Dawson tweeted as she arrived at La Paz.

Actor Michael Pena, who stars as Chávez in the film, was also at the event, as was country music star Kris Kristofferson, who performed for the crowd of about 7,000.

*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

Transcript & Video: President Obama's Remarks, César E. Chávez National Monument Ceremony

To contact us Click HERE
"César would be the first to say that this is not a monument to one man"...
Keene, California: Taking a break from fundraising in the Golden State, President Obama traveled to the Central Valley on Monday morning for a ceremony to dedicate the César E. Chávez National Monument.  The ceremony was attended by members of the Chávez family, including Chávez' widow Helen Chávez and their son Paul F. Chávez, the President of the Foundation that maintains his father's legacy.  Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis each spoke at the event, as did Paul Chávez and United Farm Workers President Arturo S. Rodriguez.   (Above: The President during his remarks to a crowd of about 7,000)

The President visited Chávez' home office and grave on the site, accompanied by Chávez family members and Dolores Huerta, who co-founded the National Farm Workers Association with Chávez, which later became United Farm Workers.  Huerta was honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom during a ceremony at the White House earlier this year.



About 7,000 people were bussed from the nearby town of Tehachapi to the National Chávez Center to attend the ceremony. Country music star Kris Kristofferson also performed for the crowd.

The President's remarks at the ceremony:


THE WHITE HOUSEOffice of the Press Secretary___________________________ For Immediate Release                
October 8, 2012

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENTAT THE DEDICATION OF THECESAR CHAVEZ NATIONAL MONUMENT
La Paz, Chavez National Monument
Keene, California

11:50 A.M. PDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning!  Buenos dias!  (Applause.)  Si, se puede!  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you so much.

AUDIENCE:  Four more years!  Four more years!  Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  Thank you so much.  I am truly grateful to be here.  It is such a great honor to be with you on this beautiful day, a day that has been a long time coming.

To the members of the Chavez family and those who knew and loved Cesar; to the men and women who've worked so hard for so long to preserve this place -- I want to say to all of you, thank you.  Your dedication, your perseverance made this day possible.

I want to acknowledge the members of my administration who have championed this project from the very beginning -- Secretary Ken Salazar, Secretary Hilda Solis, Nancy Sutley.  (Applause.)  To Governor Brown, Mayor Villaraigosa -- (applause) -- Congressman Grijalva -- they are here.  We are grateful for your presence.  And I also want to recognize my dear friend, somebody we're so proud of -- Arturo Rodriguez, the current president of the UFW.  (Applause.)  

Most of all, I want to thank Helen Chavez.  (Applause.)    In the years to come, generations of Americans will stand where we stand and see a piece of history -- a tribute to a great man and a great movement.  But to Helen, this will always be home.  It’s where she fought alongside the man that she loved; where she raised eight children and spoiled 31 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.  (Applause.)  This is where she continues to live out the rest of her days.

So, Helen, today we are your guests.  We appreciate your hospitality, and you should feel free to kick us out whenever you want.  (Laughter.)

Today, La Paz joins a long line of national monuments -- stretching from the Statue of Liberty to the Grand Canyon -- monuments that tell the story of who we are as Americans.  It's a story of natural wonders and modern marvels; of fierce battles and quiet progress.  But it's also a story of people -- of determined, fearless, hopeful people who have always been willing to devote their lives to making this country a little more just and a little more free.

One of those people lies here, beneath a rose garden at the foot of a hill he used to climb to watch the sun rise.  And so today we celebrate Cesar Chavez.  (Applause.)

Cesar would be the first to say that this is not a monument to one man.  The movement he helped to lead was sustained by a generation of organizers who stood up and spoke out, and urged others to do the same -- including the great Dolores Huerta, who is here today.  (Applause.) 

It drew strength from Americans of every race and every background who marched and boycotted together on behalf of "La Causa."  And it was always inspired by the farm workers themselves, some of whom are with us.  This place belongs to you, too.

But the truth is we would not be here if it weren’t for Cesar.  Growing up as the son of migrant workers who had lost their home in the Great Depression, Cesar wasn’t easy on his parents.  He described himself as "caprichoso" -- (laughter) -- capricious.  His brother Richard had another word for him -- (applause) -- stubborn.

By the time he reached 7th grade, Cesar estimated he had attended 65 elementary schools, following the crop cycles with his family, working odd jobs, sometimes living in roadside tents without electricity or plumbing.  It wasn’t an easy childhood.  But Caesar always was different.  While other kids could identify all the hottest cars, he memorized the names of labor leaders and politicians.

     After serving in the Navy during World War II, Cesar returned to the fields.  And it was a time of great change in America, but too often that change was only framed in terms of war and peace, black and white, young and old.  No one seemed to care about the invisible farm workers who picked the nation’s food -- bent down in the beating sun, living in poverty, cheated by growers, abandoned in old age, unable to demand even the most basic rights.

     But Cesar cared.  And in his own peaceful, eloquent way, he made other people care, too.  A march that started in Delano with a handful of activists -- (applause) -- that march ended 300 miles away in Sacramento with a crowd 10,000 strong.   (Applause.)  A boycott of table grapes that began in California eventually drew 17 million supporters across the country, forcing growers to agree to some of the first farm worker contracts in history.  Where there had once been despair, Cesar gave workers a reason to hope.  "What [the growers] don't know," he said, "is that it's not bananas or grapes or lettuce.  It's people."

It’s people.  More than higher wages or better working conditions, that was Cesar’s gift to us -- a reminder that we are all God’s children, that every life has value, that, in the words of one of his heroes, Dr. King, "we are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny."

Cesar didn’t believe in helping those who refused to help themselves, but he did believe that when someone who works 12 hours a day in the fields can earn enough to put food on the table and maybe save up enough to buy a home, that that makes our communities stronger, that lifts up our entire economy.

He believed that when a worker is treated fairly and humanely by their employer that adds meaning to the values this country was founded upon, and credence to the claim that out of many, we are one.  And he believed that when a child anywhere in America can dream beyond her circumstances and work to realize that dream, it makes all our futures just a little bit brighter. (Applause.)

It was that vision, that belief in the power of opportunity that drove Cesar every day of his life.  It’s a vision that says, maybe I never had a chance to get a good education, but I want my daughter to go to college.  Maybe I started out working in the fields, but someday I’ll own my own business.  Maybe I have to make sacrifices, but those sacrifices are worth it if it means a better life for my family.

That’s the story of my ancestors; that’s the story of your ancestors.  It’s the promise that has attracted generations of immigrants to our shores from every corner of the globe, sometimes at great risk, drawn by the idea that no matter who you are, or what you look like, or where you come from, this is the place where you can make it if you try.  (Applause.)

Today, we have more work to do to fulfill that promise.  The recession we're fighting our way back from is still taking a toll, especially in Latino communities, which already faced higher unemployment and poverty rates.  Even with the strides we’ve made, too many workers are still being denied basic rights and simple respect.  But thanks to the strength and character of the American people, we are making progress.  Our businesses are creating more jobs.  More Americans are getting back to work.

And even though we have a difficult road ahead, I know we can keep moving forward together.  (Applause.)  I know it because Cesar himself worked for 20 years as an organizer without a single major victory -- think about that -- but he refused to give up.  He refused to scale back his dreams.  He just kept fasting and marching and speaking out, confident that his day would come.

And when it finally did, he still wasn’t satisfied.  After the struggle for higher wages, Cesar pushed for fresh drinking water and worker’s compensation, for pension plans and safety from pesticides -- always moving, always striving for the America he knew we could be.

More than anything, that’s what I hope our children and grandchildren will take away from this place.  Every time somebody’s son or daughter comes and learns about the history of this movement, I want them to know that our journey is never hopeless, our work is never done.  I want them to learn about a small man guided by enormous faith -- in a righteous cause, a loving God, the dignity of every human being.  I want them to remember that true courage is revealed when the night is darkest and the resistance is strongest and we somehow find it within ourselves to stand up for what we believe in.  (Applause.) 

Cesar once wrote a prayer for the farm workers that ends with these words:

Let the Spirit flourish and grow,
So that we will never tire of the struggle.

Let us remember those who have died for justice,
For they have given us life.

Help us love even those who hate,
So we can change the world.  (Applause.)

Our world is a better place because Cesar Chavez decided to change it.  Let us honor his memory.  But most importantly, let’s live up to his example.  (Applause.)  

Thank you.  God bless you.  (Applause.)  God bless America.  Si, se puede!  (Applause.)

AUDIENCE:  Si, se puede!  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Si, se puede.  (Applause.)

AUDIENCE:  Si, se puede!  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)


                                      END                                   12:04 P.M. PDT

##

*Photo by Pete Souza/White House. Updated. 

At The César E. Chávez National Monument, A Passport Bridges The Past And The Future

To contact us Click HERE
On the sidelines of the Presidential dedication ceremony, a special moment for Andres Chávez and Ruben Andrade...
Keene, CA - As President Obama christened the César E. Chávez National Monument on Monday, the National Park Service's Ruben Andrade was announced as the acting superintendent who will oversee the operations at La PazThe 187-acre compound served as the Chávez family home and headquarters for the United Farm Workers from the early 1970’s until Chávez' death at 66 in 1993.   Following the President's visit, Andrade had a small ceremony of his own with 18-year-old Andres Chávez, one of Chávez' grandsons.  Visitors to America's National Parks and monuments carry special "passport" books to collect commemorative stamps from each site.  Standing at a table outside the visitor's center, Andrade and the young Chavez imprinted his passport with the first stamp from his grandfather's newly minted Monument.  (Above: Chávez, left and Andrade look at the passport book)


The stamping ceremony took place within steps of the Memorial Garden where Chávez has been laid to rest, his grave topped by a simple wood and iron cross, and surrounded by a fountain and beds of hybrid roses cultivated to be the special red of the UFW symbol, as well as especially fragrant, Andrade said. Accompanied by Chávez' widow, Helen Chávez, the President laid a rose on the grave(Above:  Andres stamps his passport as Andrade looks on)

Andres is the son of Paul F. Chávez, now President of the César Chávez Foundation.  He  grew up at La Paz, but never met his grandfather; Andres was born in January of 1994.  Thanks to the work of his grandfather and father, he has never done field work, and is now a freshman at California State University at Bakersfield.  Neither of the elder Chávez men went to college; César had to end his formal education after eighth grade to help support his family.  Like millions of Latinos, Andres claims his grandfather as a hero.

"My father worked in the fields, and my grandpa was a migrant farm worker, and the fact that I am going to college is a true example of their American Dream," Andres said. 

He was also very excited about meeting the President.

"I have had two heroes in my lifetime, and President Barack Obama happens to be one," Andres said. "I was a little starstruck.  It was very cool."

The day was very personal for Andrade, too.  He is also a native Californian, and the son of farm laborers.  He grew up in the farming community of Dixon in the northern part of the state, and worked in the fields with his parents as a child during school breaks.  He is thrilled to be the acting superintendent, a post that lasts for 180 days while a mandatory search is conducted to find a permanent overseer.  (Above: The stamp, on top of an image of Chávez' hands)

The search committee is "looking for the absolute best candidate to help interpret this important story," Andrade said.  "And I am certainly hoping they decide it is me."

An Army veteran, Andrade left his post as the superintendent of the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site in South Dakota to come to La Paz.  He was beaming as he discussed the work at the Chávez Center, and after stamping Andres' passport, he was busy answering questions and stamping the passports for other happy visitors.  The Center got phone calls about the passport stamps the minute the White House announced that the President would be designating La Paz as a Monument, Andrade said.

"People are very obsessed with their stamps," Andrade said, laughing.

Andrade began his Federal career in 1996 as a park ranger at Pine Flat Lake, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers site in California. In 1998, he accepted his first National Park Service assignment as a park ranger at the Lyndon B. Johnson National Historic Park. Andrade received both his bachelor’s degree and his master’s degree from California State University, Sacramento, in recreation administration. Andrade and his wife, Diane (Castillo), are high school sweethearts with four grown children.

CLICK HERE for links to all posts about the President's visit.


The NPS now owns two acres of the 187-acre La Paz campus.  The American Latino Heritage Fund of the National Park Foundation, the official charity of America's national parks, has donated $150,000 to support the initial operations of the Chávez monument. The ALHF supports the work of the National Park Service in preserving historic places that tell a more inclusive story of American Latinos' economic, civic and cultural contributions to the American experience.  (Above:  The President and Mrs. Chávez lay a rose on the grave)

Other buildings on the La Paz campus will continue to be operated by the United Farm Workers Union, the César Chávez Foundation and the National Chávez Center.

César E. Chávez National Monument is located at 29700 Woodford-Tehachapi Road in Keene, California, approximately 30 miles southeast of Bakersfield. The site is open to the public daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, visit the César E. Chávez National Monument website at www.nps.gov/cech.

President Obama dedicates the Monument:



*Photos by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama; gravesite photo by Pete Souza/White House

Advocates Call On First Lady Michelle Obama To Endorse California's Prop. 37 To Label GM Foods

To contact us Click HERE
A petition being delivered to the White House urges Mrs. Obama to ask her husband to keep a 2007 campaign promise...
As an ambitious young Senator battling for what seemed an unlikely shot at the White House in 2007, Barack Obama said that if he was President, he would "let folks know when their food is genetically modified, because Americans have a right to know what they're buying."  On Thursday afternoon, Alexis Baden-Meyer, the political director for Organic Consumers Association, will deliver a petition to the White House addressed to First Lady Michelle Obama, calling on her to urge her husband to keep his campaign-trail promise.  The petition has more than 203,000 signatures, Baden-Meyer said.

The petition delivery comes as California is battling over Proposition 37, the California Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act, a ballot measure for November that requires GM foods to be labeled as such.  Since President Obama entered office, the Department of Agriculture has issued a series of decisions favoring GM crops, including sugar beets, alfalfa, and sweet corn. 

The Obama Administration, says, Baden-Meyer, has "exponentially increased the public's exposure to genetically modified food."  She hopes that thanks to being the nation's foremost spokesperson for healthy eating with the Let's Move! campaign, Mrs. Obama will both endorse the California measure and leverage her influence with her husband to get GM foods labeled.  Baden-Meyer stars in a video OCA has created for the effort, titled "Michelle Obama: Tell Barack to honor his campaign promise to label GMOs."

"We know that the First Lady gets it," Baden-Meyer continued, pointing to Mrs. Obama's famous Kitchen Garden on the South Lawn as evidence that she supports non-GM food. 

"There is a very large disconnect between what Michelle Obama does as First Lady and what Barack Obama does as President," Baden-Meyer continued, adding that she feels certaint the First Family does not eat GM foods.

"It would be wonderful to have her endorsement for Prop. 37.  She's got a lot of credibility on the issue."

A spokesman for the East Wing declined to comment on the record about the petition delivery or Mrs. Obama's position on Prop. 37. And when she delivers the petition to the White House at 3:00 PM, Baden-Meyer will not be meeting with anyone from Mrs. Obama's East Wing staff or the Let's Move! campaign, she said, but rather with Stephanie Valencia, the Deputy Director of the White House's Office of Public Engagement.

Prop. 37 has received the endorsement of high-profile good food advocates, celebrities, and bestselling author Michael Pollan, who published a piece in The New York Times on Wednesday noting that the passage of Prop. 37 has the potential "to change the politics of food not just in California but nationally too."

Mrs. Obama's endorsement of Prop. 37, said Baden-Meyer, "would have more weight than Michael Pollan's."

OCA held a press conference in Washington, DC, today about delivering the petition to Mrs. Obama, and a copy will also be delivered today to the President's campaign office in San Francisco as activists rally in Oakland.

But with her husband engaged in a tight race for re-election, the chance of Mrs. Obama going on the record about California's ballot initiative is about equivalent to the chance that Big Foot will be invited for tea in the Blue Room.

The First Lady, labeling, and GM vs. organic...
Mrs. Obama has been careful to avoid using the word "organic" when discussing healthy eating as part of Let's Move!, and she has also avoided discussing GM foods. The same is true for Sam Kass, Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives and other members of the Let's Move! team.  And despite the widely held misconception that the First Lady's Kitchen Garden is organic, it is not certified as such.

But Mrs. Obama has spotlighted the importance of detailed labels for food products with the Let's Move! campaign. "Parents and children need accurate, clear, and consistent information on food packages in order to choose healthier foods," notes the Report from the White House Task Force on Childhood Obesity, the document that provides the architecture for Let's Move!.

Yet Mrs. Obama's focus on better labeling is for nutrition information rather than for the presence of GM ingredients.  The Task Force Report does not mention GM foods.* 

Although studies offer competing conclusions about whether or not GM foods are harmful to human health, citizens have been demanding to know if their food contains GM ingredients.

"Nine out of ten Americans support labeling," Baden-Meyer said, adding that some studies link GM foods to a range of health issues, including obesity and allergies.

61 countries require GM foods be labeled as such, OCA says. The group is also trying to get a question about the subject included in Town Hall-style Presidential Debate that will take place on October 16th, asking supporters to vote online for the question "Do you think we deserve the same 'right to know' that is enjoyed by people in 61 other countries where genetically engineered food is labeled? Do you support Proposition 37, the ballot initiative in California to label GMOs?"

Members of OCA have had two petitions about labeling GM foods on the White House's 'We the People' petition site, Baden-Meyer said, which both met the threshhold number for signatures  needed for a public response from the Obama Administration.  Neither got a response.

In contrast, a petition on the site calling for the release of the White House beer recipes got less than half the signatures required before the White House issued its homebrew information.  Beer is far less controversial than labeling.

A recent poll by Oklahoma State University found that 76.8 percent of California voters plan to vote "yes" on Prop. 37, but the study also found that support for the initiative went down after poll respondents were shown a "No on Prop. 37" ad.

The issue, said Baden-Meyer, "polls higher than President Obama in California."

__________________________________________
*It's worth noting that since President Obama took office, the federal government has not only failed to require GM foods to be labeled, but it has also failed to come up with a front-of-package nutrition label that has been universally adopted by food companies, something called for in the Task Force Report.  Instead, food manufacturers have offered the public a wide variety of their own front-of-pack labels that often feature useless lingo such as "all natural" and "healthy."   Walmart, the largest grocer in the world, created a label that reads "great for you" as part of its pledge to support the Let's Move! campaign.

Download: The White House Task Force Report On Childhood Obesity [PDF]

*Photo by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama

Dr. Jill Biden's Recipe For Paremesan Chicken

To contact us Click HERE
A family favorite for Sunday dinners, says the Second Lady...
Vice President Joe Biden loves his wife's Chicken Parmesan, says Dr. Jill Biden, who in a bit of election-year foodie wooing has shared the family recipe with Rachael Ray.  It makes a big feast, calling for five pounds of boneless chicken breasts and four cups of Mozzarella cheese for twelve servings.  (Above:  The Second Couple campaigning together last month in New Hampshire)

"Our family loves to get together for Sunday dinners. Our favorite chicken parm #recipe is in @rachael_ray mag  –Dr. B," the Second Lady tweeted on her husband's @VP account.

The recipe appears in Ray's Every Day magazine and online.  The Second Lady joined Ray on her TV show in 2010, to demonstrate how to make holiday care packages for members of the troops.  First Lady Michelle Obama and Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives Sam Kass have also cooked onscreen with Ray.  Mrs. Obama was last on Ray's show in September of this year.


Dr. Jill Biden's Parmesan Chicken Recipe
Ingredients
2 tablespoons EVOO, plus more for frying

1 onion, finely chopped

6 cloves garlic

6 14 ounce cans cherry tomatoes

1 bunch  fresh basil, roughly chopped

salt and pepper

3 eggs

1/4 cup milk

3 cups seasoned Italian breadcrumbs

1 1/2 cups grated Parmesan

4 cups grated Mozzarella

5 pounds skinless, boneless chicken breasts, pounded 1/4-inch thick

Method
1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees . In a large pot, heat 2 tbsp. EVOO over medium heat. Add the onion and garlic; cook for 5 minutes. Add 2 cans of tomatoes. Strain the remaining 4 cans; add the tomatoes to the pot. Using a wooden spoon, break up some of the tomatoes; simmer for 20 minutes. Turn off the heat, discard the garlic and add the basil; season.

2.  In a shallow bowl, whisk the eggs and milk. In a large, shallow dish, mix the breadcrumbs with 1/2 cup each Parmesan and Mozzarella. Coat the chicken in the egg mixture; transfer to the breadcrumbs, turning to coat.

3.  In a large skillet, heat 2 tbsp. EVOO over medium heat. Cook the chicken in batches until golden on both sides, about 5 minutes total. (Wipe out the skillet and add more EVOO as needed.) Drain on paper towels.

4.  In a 10-by-13 1/2-inch (8 qt.) baking dish, layer the sauce, chicken and remaining 312 cups mozzarella, finishing with a layer of sauce. Top with the remaining 1 cup Parmesan. Bake until the cheese is melted, 20 minutes. Serve with rigatoni, salad and Italian bread.

*Makes 12 servings.

*Biden photo from Obama for America; food photo from Rachael Ray Magazine

10 Ekim 2012 Çarşamba

President Obama Tours La Paz, Visits César Chávez Gravesite

To contact us Click HERE
Keene, California: President Obama on Monday morning visited the gravesite of civil rights icon César E. Chávez ahead of the ceremony to dedicate the César E. Chávez National Monument.  Joined by Helen Chávez, César's widow, the President laid a red rose on the grave, which has a simple wood cross with a center of iron. It is located by a fountain in a courtyard of the visitor's center at La Paz, where Chávez lived with his extended family for twenty-two years.
Holding Mrs. Chávez' hand, the President walked to the grave, and bent down and placed the rose, beneath a cloudless sunny sky.

"Beautiful," the President said as he placed the rose.

He stood to the side after, speaking for a few minutes with Paul F. Chávez, César's son and President of the César E. Chávez Foundation; Arturo S. Rodriguez, President, United Farm Workers; and Dolores Huerta, Co-Founder of the United Farm Workers.  She was honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom during a ceremony at the White House earlier this year.

The rose was a special hybrid created to honor Chávez, with its bright red the color of the United Farm Workers logo, and a fragrance beloved by the labor leader.  Beds of the special roses surround the gravesite.  After, the President spoke at the Monument dedication ceremony to a crowd of about 7,000, bussed in from a staging area in the nearby town of Tehachapi.

During his visit, the President also toured Chávez' office in his home.  Helen Chávez and other family members continue to live at the compound, despite its new designation as a national monument.  The National Park Service now owns two acres of the property, located in a canyon in the Tehachapi mountains.  (Above, in the office with from left Rodriguez, Helen Chávez, Huerta, Paul F. Chávez)

The President's Monument dedication ceremony was a break from a two-day fundraising junket through the Golden State.  He flew to San Francisco after for three more fundraisers after the event.  On Sunday, the President raised close to $7 million during three fundraisers in Los Angeles. (Above:  Chavez' grave)

The President travels to Ohio on Tuesday for more campaigning.

*Top two photos by Pete Souza/White House; third by Eddie Gehman Kohan/Obama Foodorama