Author: SeniorWomenWeb

  • Brexit, To Stay or To Go: An Exit from the European Union

    Brexit symbols

    Editor’s Note: Stock Markets rose today on the news that British voters were leaning towards supporting staying in the European Union; the vote could still be very close. The positions for each side voiced on The New York Times

    By Clifton B. Parker

    Whether the United Kingdom should remain part of the European Union will be determined in a British referendum on June 23. Stanford lecturer Christophe Crombez recommends the UK remain in the EU.

    So would other European nations, and the real winners would be countries that seek to divide European unity, said Christophe Crombez, a consulting professor in Stanford’s Europe Center in the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies.

    Britain is holding a referendum on June 23 to decide whether the country should leave or remain in the European Union.

    “It would bring but an illusion of sovereignty,” said Crombez, who studies European Union politics, parliamentary systems, political economy and economic analysis of political institutions. He is an economist from Belgium.

    The Stanford News Service recently interviewed Crombez on the upcoming vote, known as Brexit.

    What is Brexit?

    The term Brexit refers to the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union. Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union allows member states to withdraw.

    What are the arguments for and against Brexit?

    The campaign for the UK to leave the EU uses the following main arguments: leaving would save UK taxpayers money, since the UK is a net contributor to the EU budget; the UK would no longer have to comply with EU laws it does not want, whereas currently it can be outvoted in EU institutions and forced to adopt laws it opposes; and it would allow the UK to better control migration, whereas EU citizens are currently free to move and work throughout the EU.

    These three arguments can easily be refuted, however. The UK does indeed contribute to the EU budget, but the benefits it derives from being part of the EU market far outweigh the budgetary contributions. Moreover, (if Britain were to withdraw) the EU would require the UK to pay into its budget, if it wants to remain part of the EU’s internal market, as it has done with Switzerland and Norway.

    Also, about half of UK exports are destined for the EU. If the UK were to leave, it would no doubt want to continue to trade with the EU. UK products would have to conform to EU rules for them to be sold in the EU. UK companies that want to export to the EU would thus continue to comply with EU rules. The difference would be that the UK would no longer be involved in setting those EU rules. Post-Brexit, the rules would thus be less to the UK’s liking than prior to it, and UK companies would comply to these less advantageous rules.

    Finally, the EU would impose requirements on immigration and free movement of people on the UK in exchange for free trade with the EU, as it has with other countries in similar situations, such as Norway and Switzerland. Moreover, member states may no longer feel inclined to stop refugees from moving on to the UK if the UK were to leave, which may lead to higher rather than lower immigration.

    In addition to these arguments, the Britain Stronger in Europe campaign (which supports the UK remaining in the EU) argues that Britain carries more weight in world politics as part of the EU than on its own, in trade negotiations as well as on security issues, and that a united Europe is better at dealing with (Russian President Vladimir) Putin and other authoritarian rulers, terrorist threats and international crime.

    What do you think is the best decision for the United Kingdom to make on this vote?

    I see no advantages to leaving the EU. It would bring but an illusion of sovereignty — consider the points above. The vote would have a negative impact on growth in the UK and the rest of the EU and, in fact, the world, and it would weaken the UK, the EU and the West in world politics.

    What happens economically to Britain if the country leaves the European Union?

    Trade and hence gross domestic product would be negatively affected, especially in the short term. Uncertainty would reduce investment and trade. The UK and the EU would be consumed with the negotiations on the break-up for years. This would prevent both the UK and EU from tackling more important economic and security issues. In the long term, the economy would readjust, but the result would be suboptimal.

    What happens to the EU if Britain leaves?

    The EU is less dependent on trade with the UK than vice versa. There would be an economic impact, but it would be less substantial. The effect would be more significant for a few countries that trade more with the UK, such as Ireland, Belgium and the Netherlands.

    Brexit would, however, deliver a major blow to the idea of European unification. It would weaken the EU impact in world politics and strengthen such rulers as Putin and (Turkish President Recep Tayyip) Erdogan in their dealings with the EU.

    Could a British exit open up a Pandora’s Box of other EU countries exiting or spark other regional independence movements, like Catalonia?

    That is quite possible. A number of other countries may want to hold referendums on the EU. Moreover, Brexit is likely to lead to a break-up of the UK. Scotland would likely hold another referendum and decide to leave the UK in order to stay in the EU. The same may be true for Northern Ireland in the long run. Scottish secession may then give other EU regions, such as Catalonia, further incentives to secede.

  • Martha’s Vineyard, a Seafood Heaven, ‘Sea to Table’

    Aquinnah Cliffs, Martha's Vineyard
     
    Aquinnah Cliffs, Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts
     
     
    Seafood, seafood, seafood. As if you’d need another reason to want to visit  Martha’s Vineyard, the small, picturesque island off Massachusetts’ Cape Cod. It is nearly inundated by tourists come summer with a population that swells by more than six times to over 100,000.  I had the good fortune to visit in mid-May, right before the crowds, to tour the awakening island with chef Christopher Gianfreda who had returned for his seventh season of cooking here.  (Full disclosure, he is my great nephew, the son of my niece Liz Manning.)
     
    The lanky 27-year-old who says he has islands in his blood, started his culinary training in the Virgin Islands and later honed his skills by working with chefs such as Jean Georges and Jim Burke in New York, Frank McClelland in Boston and Susan Spicer in New Orleans.  This year, he takes over as chef at The Outermost Inn, a quaint hotel and restaurant owned by Hugh and Jeanne Taylor of James Taylor singing family fame. It is located up island on the rural western tip near the lighthouse in Aquinnah and its famed red cliffs. And, miles from down island and the honky tonk of Oak Bluffs and upscale boutiques of Edgartown.
     
    Gianfreda’s menu features seafood ranging from lobster and sought-after Katama Bay oysters to black bass and sea scallops. The Inn website promises Gianfreda will shadow the fishermen for the best of their labors.  And, indeed, that was where we headed on one of our first stops. We followed winding roads edged by scrub oak forests to Menemsha, a quintessential New England fishing village on the Vineyard Sound. Its working harbor was featured in that the movie JawsChef Gianfreda
     
    Chef Gianfreda on Martha’s Vineyard; photo by author
     
    Only a few buildings in the typical weathered cedar shakes lined the docks. We first stopped at Larsen’s, which sells prepared seafood. Gianfreda said we needed to sample some of the freshest lobster in the world. That and squid were then being caught, the live lobsters floating in tanks, some of them probably brought in on the early morning catch.  The owner, Betsy Larsen, clad in work clothes that included apron and rubber boots, her smile wide, was eager to share that she was the second generation running the shop. She said she has never missed a day without at least a taste of lobster for all her life.
     
    Her openness and willingness to talk was characteristic of most of the year-round inhabitants I encountered during my visit. This eagerness to stop and enjoy life that Gianfreda said matched the spirit he felt back in the Virgin Islands.  At least at this pre-season moment.
     
    Gianfreda recommended ordering the hot butter lobster roll over the version mixed with salad.  A sprinkle of hot sauce, dab of horseradish and we took our lobster rolls outside to the docks where we sat on empty lobster crates.  Imagine, succulent chunks of lobster, steamed and then finished off in butter, sitting in a plain old white hot dog bun. Didn’t matter the bun, just the conveyor for the best lobster I ever had in my life.   A fistful of it.  Juices flowing down my wrist. 
     
    There was plenty more back in the store if you wanted.  We just looked. Smoked bluefish in a cream cheese blend, oysters, to enjoy on the half shell raw. Littleneck clams you could eat raw or cooked.  Next door was our real reason for coming here: The Menemsha Fish Market was where we were met by employee Mikey Rottman. He explained that the market is the wholesale purveyor for most of the catch coming into the harbor.   “We call it ‘sea to table,’” he said. The goal is to sustainably sell as much as possible to local restaurants.

  • Inspiring Artists, Musicians, Novelists, Poets, and Filmmakers: Coney Island, Visions of an American Dreamland

     Reginald Marsh, Wooden Horses

    Reginald Marsh, Wooden Horses, 1936. Tempera, ©Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art 

    The spirit of Coney Island has come alive in South Texas when the McNay Art Museum presents Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861–2008, opened this exhibit which will run through September 11, 2016. 

     The exhibition explores and celebrates Coney Island, the most iconic, uniquely American Amusement Park in the United States, which has served as national cultural symbol inspiring artists, musicians, novelists, poets, and filmmakers. From Coney Island’s beginning as a watering hole for the wealthy, through its transformation into an entertainment mecca for the masses, to the closing of Astroland Amusement Park following decades of urban decline, this first-of-its-kind exhibition uses visual art as a lens to explore 150 years of Coney Island.

     Steeplechase image

    Charles Carmel, Carousel Horse With Head Raised, Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York, circa 1914. Collection of American Folk Art Museum, New York, 1978

     
    Coney Island was organized by the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Connecticut. The McNay is the exhibition’s only Southwest venue. It will feature more than 140 objects, comprised of both celebrated icons of American art and rarely shown works from both public and private collections, including paintings, drawings, photographs, prints, circus posters, sideshow banners, architectural artifacts and carousel animals. Visitors to the exhibition are immersed in the culture of Coney Island through memorabilia, sound recordings and film clips, including documentaries and popular films.

    The Hug

    The modern American mass-culture industry was born at Coney Island, and the constant novelty of the resort made it a seductively liberating subject for artists. From early depictions of “the people’s beach” by Impressionists William Merritt Chase and John Henry Twachtman to modern and contemporary images by photographers Diane Arbus and Walker Evans, Red Grooms, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Reginald Marsh, Joseph Stella, Swoon and George Tooker, Coney Island investigates America’s playground as a place and an idea.

    Harvey Stein (American, born 1941). The Hug: Closed Eyes and Smile, 1982. Digital, inkjet archival print, 13 × 19 in. (33 × 48.3 cm). Collection of the artist. © Harvey Stein, 2011

    What these artists saw from 1861 to 2008 at Coney Island and how they chose to portray it varied widely in style and mood over time, mirroring the aspirations and disappointments of the era and of the country. Taken together, these tableaux of wonder and menace, hope and despair, dreams and nightmares, become metaphors for the collective soul of a nation.

    “We are familiar with the phenomenon of amusement parks like Six Flags Fiesta Texas and SeaWorld in San Antonio, but Coney Island is the granddaddy of them all,” said Dr. William J. Chiego, Director of the McNay Art Museum. “This is a fun show and it is a departure for the McNay. It is the first exhibition that I can think of that really delves so much into the material culture of the time, and fine artists who were inspired by it. From the carousel animals that are now recognized as a branch of folk art, to banners done as part of side shows — meant to last or not meant to last — these are survivors of an era rather than art that museums traditionally collect. Through fine arts and vernacular arts you get a full sense of what it was like, what it has been, and how it has changed over the decades “

    Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861–2008 has been generously funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities: Celebrating 50 Years of Excellence, the Henry Luce Foundation, and The Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Horowitz Foundation for the Arts, Inc.

  • An Expert Assesses Personal Security in An On-edge America

     

    Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) special agents participate in a  training exercise utilizing armored vehicles designated for Special Response Teams

    One reason is apprehension about attacks at events scheduled from coast to coast in June as part of Gay Pride Month. Or trepidation about other summertime bombshells from out of the blue at seemingly safe venues such as the boardwalk or a concert at a park. Another reason is that America has become the land of the free and often fearful, stressed by increasingly frequent mass killings.

    For insights about how individuals can stay safe, or at least safer, UC Berkeley Public Affairs turned to Bruce O. Newsome. A lecturer with the campus’s International and Area Studies program, Newsome teaches courses on global security risks, counterterrorism and counterinsurgency, intelligence and counterintelligence and international conflict.

    Newsome also is author of several books, including the 2014  A Practical Introduction to Security and Risk Management, which has a chapter devoted to personal security. 

    Just how is personal security defined, as opposed to public security? Can we measure our safety by degrees or percentage points?

    Personal security refers to the individual person’s security. Personal security obviously is affected by the security of whatever the individual engages in: society, business, educational or recreational activities, infrastructure (such as bridges that may fail), sites, information and communication technologies (such as a computer connected to the Internet) and transport (private car driving is the riskiest public activity that most Americans engage in).

    The correct way to assess one’s own personal security is to think about exposure: if you are not exposed to something, it is not a source of risk. Consequently, one can control one’s own risk by reducing our exposure to the sources of risk, for instance, by spending less time on the roads or in high-crime areas.

    From what you know about what transpired at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando or the Bataclan in Paris last November, what else could patrons there have done to protect themselves?

    The first step is to decide where to go. You may not want to ask yourself whether a site is safe, when you are used to asking whether it is fun, good value or serves good food, but you can also ask yourself whether you are comfortable with the site’s security. If you think weapons, malicious people and narcotics are entering that site, should you?

    Having selected your site, and been so unfortunate as to be exposed to an idiot with a gun and murderous intent, the short-form advice is run, hide, fight: run if you can escape; if you can’t escape, then hide from the attacker; if you can’t run or hide, fight back. I give more detailed advice here: http://blogs.berkeley.edu/2015/11/18/surviving-new-terrorism-in-10-steps/.

    How helpful is it for workplaces to train workers to practice the “active shooter” scenario?

    Sad to say, I must say that all workplaces should be training to respond to an active shooter.

    The event is extremely unlikely, but the potential harm due to such an event is severe, so it is a high risk, to which any workplace is exposed, so all workplaces should be practicing to respond. As with any training, we should worry about making the risk worse by training incorrectly (“negative training”), so if a workplace decides on such training it should get expert advice, and plenty of officials are available to help for free, without need to pay private contractors.

  • Congressional Bills Passed & Introduced Female Veteran Suicide Prevention Act; Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Medical Assistance; Human Trafficking Hotline Funding

     Senate Passes Female Veteran Suicide Prevention ActSenator Barbara Boxer

    On June 8, the Senate passed the Female Veteran Suicide Prevention Act (S. 2487) by voice vote. The Veterans’ Affairs Committee held a hearing on this bill on May 25 (see The Source, 5/27/16). Sponsored by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA), the legislation directs the secretary of Veterans Affairs to identify mental health care and suicide prevention programs that can effectively treat women veterans.

    Retiring Senator Barbara Boxer, (D), California

    House Passes Legislative Branch Spending Bill

    On June 9, the House passed H.R. 5325, the FY2017 Legislative Branch spending bill, by a vote of 233-175. The House Appropriations Committee approved the bill by voice vote on May 17 (see The Source, 5/23/16). According to the committee report, the measure would provide $3.482 billion in FY2017. It would provide baby changing stations…

    June 13, 2016

    Senate Appropriations Committee Passes Labor, HHS Spending Bill

    On June 9, the Senate Appropriations Committee approved, 29-1, the FY2017 Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies spending bill (S. 3040). The Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies approved the legislation by voice vote on June 7. According to the committee report, the bill would…

    June 13, 2016

    Appropriations Committee Passes Financial Services Spending Bill

    On June 9, the House Appropriations Committee approved, 30-17, the FY2017 Financial Services, General Government spending bill (as-yet-unnumbered). The Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee approved the bill on May 25 (see The Source, 5/27/16). According to the committee report, the bill would provide $21.735 billion in discretionary funds for the Department of Treasury, Executive…

    June 13, 2016

    House Subcommittee Examines Impact of Malnutrition on Prenatal, Infant Health

    On June 9, the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations held a hearing, “Leveraging U.S. Funds: The Stunning Impact of Nutrition and Supplements During the First 1,000 Days.” The following witnesses testified: Beth Dunford, PhD, assistant to the administrator, Bureau for Food Security, US Agency for International…

    June 13, 2016

    On June 9, the House Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittees on Government Operations and the Interior held a joint hearing, “Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): Examining Efforts to Combat Fraud and Improve Program Integrity.” The following witnesses testified during the hearing: Kevin Concannon, under secretary, Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services, Department of Agriculture; Mary Mayhew,…
     

    Bills Introduced, June 13 and May 27th, 2016

    Family Support S. 3047—Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT)/Finance (6/9/16)—A bill to help individuals receiving assistance under means-tested welfare programs obtain self-sufficiency, to provide information on total spending on means-tested welfare programs, to provide an overall spending limit on means-tested welfare programs, and for other purposes. H.R. 5423—Rep. Matt Cartwright (D-PA)/Agriculture (6/9/16)—A bill to provide an incentive…

    Employment

    H. Res. 746—Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT)/Education and the Workforce (5/24/16)—A resolution urging the United States Soccer Federation to immediately eliminate gender pay inequity and treat all athletes with the same respect and dignity.

    Health

    S. 2983—Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH)/Finance (5/25/16)—A bill to provide states with the option of providing medical assistance at a residential pediatric recovery center to infants under one year of age with neonatal abstinence syndrome and their families.

    Human Trafficking

    S. 2974—Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)/Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (5/23/16)—A bill to ensure funding for the National Human Trafficking Hotline, and for other purposes.

  • New York Times and Consumer Reports Articles on Reverse Mortgages and the FHA Proposal to Strengthen Reverse Mortgage Program

    Kent, Ohio house

    Front and side of the Aaron Ferrey House, Kent, Ohio, United States. Built in 1866, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Wikimedia Commons

    The following four paragraphs are from a New York Times article, Getting a Reverse Mortgage, but Not From a Celebrity from June 10, 2016:

    “So yes, our retirement savings vehicles ought to be better. Until they are, however, home equity may end up being the biggest asset that many people have to draw on in retirement.

    “That is where reverse mortgages come in for people who use their homes as a primary residence. If you are 62 or older, you can apply to extract some of that equity in a variety of ways, including through a lump sum or a line of credit. Your age, prevailing interest rates and the amount of equity in your home will help lenders determine what you can borrow. The main feature — which gives the product its name — is that instead of you paying the bank as you would with a traditional ‘forward’ mortgage, the bank pays you.

    “You are still responsible for the money, though (and have to keep up with home maintenance, taxes and insurance). The lender keeps a running tab of the interest and (often expensive) fees, and once you die or move to a nursing home or sell the property, the bank takes back its money (or your heirs write a check to settle the debt and keep the home). Borrowers never have to pay additional money, even if the interest has ultimately added up to more than the home is worth at that point.

    “Reverse mortgages are complicated, and things have sometimes gotten messy for borrowers with surviving spouses or heirs who hoped to inherit the home. Federal regulators have tried to fix many of the problems in recent years, and last month, the Federal Housing Administration announced its latest attempt to tighten the rules. Still, anyone considering a reverse mortgage (or who has a parent or relative who is), should dig deep on educational material from the Department of Housing and Urban Developmentthe National Council on Aging and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.”

    The complete New York Times’ article: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/11/your-money/getting-a-reverse-mortgage-but-not-from-a-celebrity.html?em_pos=large&emc=edit_my_20160613&nl=your-money&nlid=4010090&ref=headline&te=1

    Below: FHA Proposed to Strengthen Reverse Mortgage Program:
    New rule to formalize recent improvements and adds new consumer protections for senior borrowers

    “The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) proposed a new rule to strengthen its Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) Program*. In addition to formalizing many of the structural improvements announced recently, FHA’s proposed rule is intended to make certain FHA-insured reverse mortgages remain a viable and sustainable resource for senior homeowners hoping to remain in their homes and age in place. Read FHA’s proposed rule.”

    “We’ve gone to great lengths to protect seniors and ensure they can remain in their homes where they’ve raised families and where they hope to live out their days,” said Ed Golding, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Housing at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). “As we grow older as a nation, we have a responsibility to ensure reverse mortgages remain a safe, secure, and sustainable financial option for future generations of senior homeowners.”

    In the past two years, FHA implemented several reforms to improve its HECM Program. *[HECM stands for Home Equity Conversion Mortgages for Seniors]. The proposed rule  will reinforce those changes and add new consumer protections to make certain senior borrowers are sustained in their homes. These new changes would:

    • Make certain that required HECM counseling occurs before a mortgage contract is signed;
    • Require lenders to fully disclose all HECM loan features;
    • Cap lifetime interest rate increases on HECM Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) to five percent.
    • Reduce the cap on annual interest rate increases on HECM ARMs from two percent to one percent;
    • Require lenders to pay mortgage insurance premiums until the HECM is paid in full, foreclosed on, or a Deed-in-Lieu (DIL) is executed rather than until when the mortgage contract is terminated;
    • Include utility payments in the property charge assessment; and
    • Create a “cash for keys” program to encourage borrowers to complete a DIL and gracefully exit the property versus enduring a lengthy foreclosure process.

    Background

    Since the passage of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 and the Reverse Mortgage Stabilization Act of 2013, FHA implemented several reforms to its HECM Program, which include:

    • Limited initial withdrawals to ensure the financial stability of the program;
    • Developed criteria to allow certain non-borrowing spouses to remain in the home following the death of their borrowing spouse;
    • Expanded home retention options that mortgage servicers can offer to senior borrowers who have failed to pay property taxes and hazard insurance premium payments;
    • Required financial assessments for HECM borrowers to help to make certain their reverse mortgage is sustainable in the long term (i.e., to ensure senior borrowers have adequate income to cover routine property maintenance, pay property taxes, etc.); and
    • Strengthened FHA’s prohibition against misleading or deceptive advertising of the HECM Program.

    A May 2016 Consumer Reports article, Reforms Come to Reverse Mortgages, is compelling reading for its well-researched history and concerns:

    “Karen’s experience is the kind of horror story that has long led some consumer advocates and financial planners to consider reverse mortgages too risky, a loan of last resort. In addition to problems when a surviving spouse isn’t on the loan, these compounding-­interest loans can be expensive. And seniors who can’t keep up with taxes, insurance, and home upkeep risk defaulting on the loan and losing their house.

    “But over the past three years, new government regulations aimed at protecting older borrowers and shoring up the government-­backed loan program have gone into effect.

    “To be sure, the loans remain a poor choice for some, and at Consumer Reports we believe more reforms are needed. But some experts say that for certain homeowners, with the new regulations in place, it may make sense to consider a reverse mortgage.”

  • Simple Things (Really Simple) To Keep Kids Busy, From Under Twos to Six

    Sprinkler fun

    Sprinkler Fun by Austin Kirk; Wikimedia Commons

    By Julia Sneden

    It’s summer, that season of family vacations and rich contact between grandparents and grandchildren. Those of us who live far from our grown children’s families bless the airlines, the trains, the highways that make it possible for us to meet again, whether at the beach, in the mountains, at a resort, or in our own backyards.  

    Herewith, a list of suggestions for those who find themselves racking their brains to remember the kinds of things children like to do. Having taught kindergarten for twenty-five years, I tend toward direct, interactive activities. These days, children get plenty of television, movies, and computer games at home! (But perhaps you should have a bit of technology on hand, just in case you need a break).

    Some General Principles

    Nearly all children need exposure to life skills. Our grandchildren have sat in front of screens (computer, TV, movie) with their hands in their laps for too long. Any activity that actively engages the mind and eye and hands is good, but an activity that furthers the well-being of the whole family is best, because it becomes a source of great pride to the child. They are often surprised to discover that they can contribute to the family in useful ways. Don’t be afraid to ask them to help around the house! 

    Do scope out the local offerings for good adventures. Bike trails, hiking trails, museums (short visits for the very young), short-session craft classes, libraries, miniature golf courses, live theatre, sports events, etc. are all useful for diversity in the daily plan. You don’t want to spend all day, every day at home or on the beach. 

     At the same time, you don’t want to overdo it. Allow for down-time. Just sitting around and listening to a child, or reading together for a short period, or lying on the floor and listening to music, can be restorative to both grandparent and grandchild.

    Materials to Have on Hand 
    Crayons, colored pencils and markers; paper of various kinds; scissors (blunt-tipped for the small fry); scotch tape; stapler; water-soluble glue like Elmer’s; a ruler; an art gum eraser; white and colored chalk.

    My great aunt Martha always kept a ‘fun bin’ for us children. It was just an old box filled with odds and ends like tubes from toilet paper or paper towels, bits of yarn, scraps of fabric, small boxes, bottle caps (they make great wheels!), etc. These days, I keep two drawers of an old chest filled with the same sorts of things, only now I add plastic containers, berry baskets, cardboard, scraps of Contac paper, etc. My granddaughters are allowed to use anything from those drawers to make whatever they want.  We have found that we need a rule or two, however.

    Rule #1 is that at the end of the vacation, they may each take just one of their creations home.

    Rule #2 is that it has to be something that will fit in the luggage, so that they aren’t struggling with carry-on bags. They then have the choice of leaving their creations here, or dismantling them and putting the makings back in the drawer to be used next time. 
    For older children, if you have the space, sports equipment for sports like ‘catch’, badminton, croquet and ping-pong can provide a special treat.

    Under Age Two

    • Never underestimate the power of pots and pans. Muffin tins, wooden spoons, soft plastic containers, colanders, measuring spoons, etc. are all absolute treasures to a baby sitting on the kitchen floor. The important thing here, is to watch and enjoy. You will learn all sorts of things about the baby’s personality and imagination. Don’t forget music. Sing. Play CD’s. Tap out rhythms.
    • Play pat-a-cake and peek-a-boo. Count the little piggies and Ride A Cock Horse. 
    • Read aloud!

  • By Curbing Roundups and ‘Gassing,’ States Seek to Help the Hated Rattlesnake

    By Marsha Mercer, Stateline*, June 13, 2016

    Gadsen Flag

    In the ceaseless war of man versus rattlesnake, the rattlesnake has long been the loser. Now, some states are trying to give the sometimes deadly pit viper better odds of survival.

    The Gadsen flag (right) is named after American general and statesman Christopher Gadsden (1724–1805), who designed it in 1775 during the American Revolution; Wikipedia

    The shift follows a dramatic decline in some US rattlesnake populations, as habitats have been lost to development and the reptiles have been killed, accidentally and intentionally. And it is threatening old traditions and forcing people to come to grips with animals many would rather avoid.

    The Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife plans to establish a colony of timber rattlesnakes on an uninhabited island in hopes of saving the dwindling native species. Texas wildlife officials are writing a rule that could prohibit the use of gasoline to harvest Western diamondback rattlesnakes, a practice that is already banned in 29 states.

    The rattlesnake roundups that were once common across the South and Midwest — in which the snakes are bought by the pound, displayed, decapitated, skinned, fried and eaten, or carted away to be turned into wallets and belts — have largely fallen out of favor. Today, rattlesnake events occur in only six states — Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Texas — and some leave the snakes unharmed.

    “In the past, the snakes were hated and exterminated,” said Collette Adkins, senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, which advocates bans on gassing and rattlesnake roundups. “Ecological values change. Cultural values change.”

    With greater recognition of the value of all species to the ecosystem, preservation has become a priority in wildlife management. Rattlesnakes play a role as a predator of rodents and food for top carnivores like hawks and eagles.

    Minnesota, for example, paid a bounty for timber rattlesnakes until 1989. The state put the snake on its threatened species list in 1996 and in 2009 adopted a Timber Rattlesnake Recovery Plan, which involves habitat restoration and public outreach and education. Landowners who find a rattlesnake on their property can call a Rattlesnake Responder to have it relocated rather than killed.

    Convincing people of the need for a hated species, though, is still a tough sell, wildlife experts agree.

    “Very, very young toddlers are imprinted early on with phobias about snakes,” said biologist D. Bruce Means, executive director of the nonprofit Coastal Plains Institute and Land Conservancy and an authority on the Eastern diamondback rattlesnake.

    “State legislatures are faced with constituents who would be aghast at the idea of saving or protecting these creatures,” said Means, an adjunct professor at Florida State University. “If it was butterflies we were talking about, or birds, something cute and cuddly, it would be different.”

    While the Western diamondback rattlesnake is plentiful, the Eastern diamondback and timber rattlesnakes need government help to avoid extinction in some parts of the country, advocates say. Washington state is among those attaching radio monitors to rattlesnakes to study their habits and habitat and plan for their management.

    But listing a species as federally endangered takes years, and landowners often want to avoid that designation because it limits land use. Last September, the US Fish and Wildlife Service took a more modest step, proposing its first listing of a rattlesnake as threatened — the Eastern massasauga, sistrurus catenatus, in the upper Midwest. And many states have listed species of rattlers as threatened, endangered or species of concern, which typically makes killing them illegal except when someone’s life is in danger.

    Despite its fearsome appearance and reputation, rattlesnakes tend to be shy, docile creatures that stay away from humans and strike only when they feel threatened, herpetologists say. About 60 percent of bites occur on the hands and forearms, a sign that the person was reaching toward the snake.

    An estimated 7,000 to 8,000 people are bitten by poisonous snakes in the US every year, but because of prompt medical care, an average of only five people die of poisonous snake bites each year.

  • Spotlighting Women and Amplifying Their Voices in Society Through Film

    Hooligan Sparrow poster

    The Human Rights Watch Film Festival will be presented June 10-19 with 18 topical and provocative feature films and three special interactive programs that grapple with the challenges of defending human rights around the world today. Now in its 27th edition, the festival is co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and IFC Center. Most screenings will be followed by in-depth Q&A discussions with filmmakers and Human Rights Watch experts.

    “This year’s Human Rights Watch Film Festival presents an array of women’s rights issues through inspirational and personal stories of remarkable women,” said John Biaggi, the festival’s creative director. “From a tenacious women’s rights activist in China to a teenage Afghan rapper fighting child marriage to a courageous director of a women’s health clinic in Mississippi — the festival is spotlighting women and amplifying their voices in society through film. It’s especially noteworthy that over half of the films in the 2016 program are directed or co-directed by women.”

    The festival also features three timely films on LGBT rights as well as a broad range of hot-button human rights issues including police militarization, environmental human rights, rape as a war crime, Syrian refugees, and impunity/lawlessness in Mexico. The Opening Night selection is Nanfu Wang’s Hooligan Sparrow, which documents Chinese activist Ye Haiyan (aka Hooligan Sparrow) as she protests against a school headmaster’s sexual abuse of young girls, leading both the director and Sparrow to become targets of government intimidation. In recognition of her work, Nanfu Wang will receive the festival’s 2016 Nestor Almendros Award for courage in filmmaking.

    Closing the festival is the Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner Sonita, in which filmmaker Rokhsareh Ghaem Maghami follows a determined Afghan teenager who overcomes living as a refugee in Iran (where female singers are banned from singing solo) and her family’s plans to sell her into marriage to follow her dreams of becoming a rapper. Five other outstanding documentaries broaden the theme of women’s rights at this year’s event. Jackson takes a close look at the politics of reproductive rights at Mississippi’s last remaining abortion clinic; Ovarian Psycos follows a defiant Latina bicycle gang fighting to take back the streets for women in East Los Angeles; film festival favorite Starless Dreams is an intimate portrait of young women in a rehabilitation prison in Tehran; Tempestad artfully renders the difficult life paths of two women amid the chaos and impunity in today’s Mexico; and The Uncondemned  is a gripping portrayal of a young group of lawyers and activists who fought to have rape recognized as a war crime in a landmark trial in Rwanda.  

    Three festival titles revolve around the fight for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights. Inside the Chinese Closet exposes the difficult decisions young lesbian and gay Chinese people are making — including fake marriages — when forced to balance their quest for love with parental and cultural expectations. From the United States, Growing Up Coy, shown in its world premiere, sensitively portrays the struggles of a Colorado family who take on a highly publicized legal battle to fight for their 6-year-old transgender daughter’s rights to use the girls’ bathroom, while HBO’s Suited explores the transformative work of a Brooklyn tailor company that creates bespoke suits for clients across the gender spectrum.

    Four more films from the US explore some of the most pressing human rights issues in the country today. Almost Sunrise exposes the growing epidemic of soldier suicides through the story of two friends who embark on an epic journey to heal from their time in combat; the drama Chapter & Verse focuses on a former gang leader who struggles to restart his life in Harlem after eight years of incarceration; Do Not Resist, winner of the top documentary prize at the Tribeca Film Festival, is an alarming investigation into the increasing militarization of American police departments, and how it overwhelmingly affects black Americans; and HBO’s Solitary is an unprecedented portrait of life inside solitary confinement at a supermax prison.

    A selection of international titles rounds out this year’s screening program. The Crossing follows the journey of a group of middle-class Syrian families forced into harsh choices in a desperate bid for freedom; the multi-award-winning drama The High Sun interweaves three love stories from the Balkans region with a long history of inter-ethnic hatred; P.S. Jerusalem details the filmmaker’s highly personal return to Jerusalem after two decades living in the US; and the Sundance prize-winner When Two Worlds Collide charts the dramatic standoffs between indigenous Amazonians and the Peruvian government intent on exploiting their resource-rich ancestral lands.

     Complete Program and Schedule Information: ff.hrw.org

    Sydney, Australia program: https://ff.hrw.org/sydney

  • CultureWatch: Joan L. Cannon Reviews The North Water, “a brilliant book … but …”

    THE NORTH WATER

    By Ian McGuire

    Published by Henry Holt & Co., 2016

    Hardcover, 257 pp.

    Fiction is an art that for many seems without a useful purpose. For others, it proves the ability of the mind to go where it has never been, even to places it can never go, thus broadening the life of the reader regardless of physical limitations. It is even able to take a reader to places she could not imagine.

    Ian McGregor’s story begins in a depressing place at a depressing time of day (night) in the company of depressing people. We visit the dirty, desperate lives of seamen who sail on any ship that will give them a berth, do nearly any task, however dangerous or brutalizing, if they can be paid for it. In a few pages, we meet men who appear to have absolutely no redeeming characteristics as they await the sailing of a whaler bound for Greenland.

    It is evident early on that there is some ulterior motive in this particular whale hunt. It takes place as the price of whale oil is falling rapidly in the face of cheaper coal oil, and too late in the season to warrant a hope of a good catch. The owner of the vessel is clearly interested in nothing but profit without regard for the lives of the men aboard. In his pay is a vicious mate to manage what we understand almost at once is an ill-fated voyage.

    The center of the tale is a young officer who has survived the Siege of Khartoum. He signs on as the ship’s surgeon. The circumstances of his departure from the Army are murky, He is addicted to laudanum*. His background and motivations reveal themselves gradually, but early in the story we can see his distaste for the unprincipled and cruel men who seem to be in charge.

    After increasingly distressing events of apparently gratuitous cruelty, eventually the ship becomes trapped in ice pack as cold closes in. Ultimately the crew has to abandon it as it breaks up. A few native people save some of the sailors, but most end up freezing and starving in rapidly advancing winter.

    One of the men aboard is a veritable personification of almost anything evil one can think of. The climax of the story is, naturally, a showdown between him and the young surgeon.

    It took a modicum of nerve to write a novel set mostly aboard a whaling ship in the eighteenth century, but though this story may owe something to Melville, it holds its own. Ultimately, it is a tale of fraud, amorality, psychopathic evil, and the struggle of one man just to survive for another day, he hopes, with some of his moral being still intact.

    Descriptions are nothing short of brilliant, so vivid and evocative are they. The plot moves inexorably and satisfactorily. The writing suggests the author either has some experiences similar to those of the characters, or has accomplished an amazingly detailed kind of research. In short, this is a brilliant book.

    Yes, for me there is a “but.” The horrors are of many kinds, and they are unrelieved. Melodrama is not altogether repellent in itself, perhaps. Many a famous author has chosen to write about the evil in the hearts of men, but few as explicitly as this. I found myself wishing to get to the end just so I could get away from all the awful things happening in the awful places where they were taking place and the relentless detail of such horrific suffering.

    For readers who like adventure and macho behavior, subdued heroism with a dollop of basic cynicism, this will be a memorable experience. For others who prefer some entertainment with a slice of terrible life, The North Water will be a trial in spite of its artistry.

    *An alcoholic solution containing morphine, prepared from opium and formerly used as a narcotic painkiller.

    ©2016 Joan L. Cannon for SeniorWomen.com