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Remember “I am” Meditation

June 23rd, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »

Remember “I am”

 

Step 1: Remember You Are
“Wherever you are, remember yourself, that you are. This consciousness that you are should become a continuity. Not your name, your caste, your nationality. Those are futile things, absolutely useless. Just remember that: I am. This must not be forgotten. Walking, sitting, eating, talking, remember that: I am.

“It will be difficult, very arduous. In the beginning you will keep forgetting: there will be only single moments when you will feel illuminated, then it is lost. But don’t get miserable; even single moments are much. Go on, whenever you can remember again catch hold of the thread. When you forget, don’t worry; remember again, and by and by the gaps will lessen, the intervals will start dropping, a continuity will arise.

“And whenever your consciousness becomes continuous, you need not use the mind. Then there is no planning, then you act out of your consciousness, not out of your mind. Then there is no need for any apology, no need to give any explanation. Then you are whatsoever you are; there is nothing to hide. Whatsoever you are, you are. You cannot do anything else. You can only be in a state of continuous remembrance. Through this remembrance, this mindfulness, comes the authentic religion, comes the authentic morality.

“This is what Hindus call self-remembrance, what the Buddha called right-mindfulness, what Gurdjieff used to call self-remembering, what Krishnamurti calls awareness. This is the most substantial part of meditation, to remember that: I am.

“You need not repeat it in the mind, ‘I am walking.’ If you repeat it, that is not remembrance. You have to be non-verbally aware that ‘I am walking, I am eating, I am talking, I am listening.’ Whatsoever you do, the ‘I’ inside should not be forgotten; it should remain.

“It is not self-consciousness. It is consciousness of the self. Self-consciousness is ego. Consciousness of the self is asmita…purity, just being aware that ‘I am’.

“Ordinarily, your consciousness is arrowed towards the object. You look at me: your whole consciousness is moving towards me like an arrow. But you are arrowed towards me. Self-remembering means you must have a double-arrow: one side of it showing to me, another side showing to you. A double-arrow is self-remembrance.”

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Aconcagua (22,829ft/6,962m) Argentina

June 23rd, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »

Aconcagua (22,829ft/6,962m) Argentina

Launch Slideshow

Aconcagua has been for me one of the most wonderful experiences of my life and I congratulate you and all at Alpine Ascents for your superb professionalism. I look forward to possible future trips and thank you once again for a marvelous experience. My guides were unsurpassed. —-Ian W.

Overview
Aconcagua, which translates as "Stone Sentinel" is 22,840 ft, making it the highest mountain in the Americas and the highest mountain outside of Asia. This spectacular mountain is surrounded by numerous peaks over 20,000 ft. and the surrounding lowlands (up to 13,000 ft.) consist of beautiful desert landscapes with a large diversity of flora and fauna.

Traditionally there are three guided routes on Aconcagua: Route Normal, Polish Variation, and the Guanacos Glacier Route. (Please note the Guanacos Route has been closed for the past 3 years in an effort to protect the large number of guanacos that breed and raise young in the area). We choose to guide the Polish Variation Route on the East side of the mountain because it sees one fifth the amount of climbers (1,000 vs. 5,000 yearly) and is a much more aesthetic approach. An ascent of Aconcagua by any of these routes requires minimal technical skills but does require excellent physical condition and good backpacking skills.

Over the last 19 years we have developed our own special way of guiding the mountain, which affords you the best chance of proper acclimatization and summit success. For example, we use 4 camps on the mountain while other companies use only 2 or 3. This 4th camp at 20,600 feet, cuts three or more hours off of the summit day (the hardest day of the climb) allowing you to move at a moderate pace and return to camp well before dark. Needless to say, the shortened summit day increases your chances of reaching the top. The high camp also allows us to traverse down the other side of the mountain, giving you new views and terrain to experience, as well as shorten the return trip to the trailhead by one day.

There may be many personal reasons to choose a particular guide service, but there are four main areas of concern that you should look at carefully: Safety Record, Guides, Logistics in country, and Pre-Trip Planning with the climber. In all four categories, Alpine Ascents ranks highest in the climbing industry. No other guide service has the safety record, quality of guides, finely honed programs, and customer service that we offer. For further information, please read Why Climb Aconcagua With Alpine Ascents?

Summit Success:

Simply put, we have an Expedition Summit Success of 98%
Since 1999 Alpine Ascents has had all but one team reach the summit of Aconcagua. We have led numerous expeditions in which all climbers have reached the summit, and for those who have reached Camp III, we are confident our summit success is the finest in the industry. The success is a testament to our guides and the hard work and team spirit of our climbers. We believe that with our guides and acclimatization schedule, along with our pre trip assistance, Alpine Ascents offers the best possible chance for you to reach the summit of Aconcagua. Aconcagua has literally been our home away from home. Our extensive experience guiding Aconcagua (as well as other high peaks around the world) has produced outstanding and perhaps unprecedented success rates. Alpine Ascents International has a long-standing reputation of leading successful climbs as well as acting as a prime resource for guide books, climbers and the media.

The Route:
We climb Aconcagua using the nontechnical Vacas Valley Route (Polish Variation). For those climbers who are interested and capable, we also offer an additional summit attempt via the more challenging Polish Glacier Route (on selected trips).

Polish Glacier Option
This additional summit attempt via the more technically difficult Polish Glacier route is offered for a few qualified climbers, given the rigors of climbing ice at 22,000′. On selected trips (see schedule), up to two qualified climbers may attempt the Polish, weather permitting. Guides may also decide not to take climbers up the Polish route if their skill level or fitness are deemed inappropriate during the Aconcagua climb. We make this summit bid after our first attempt of our scheduled non-technical ascent. The climb begins from Camp III and entails a 3,500′ elevation gain on steep snow and ice. The climb averages a steepness of 35º, and depending upon conditions, may have technical ice sections up to 60º. Climbers attempting this route need previous ice climbing experience and must acclimatize well to altitudes over 22,000′. This is a very rewarding climb. Only two climbers on the selected trips will be scheduled for the Polish on a first-come, first-served basis. Interested climbers will need to pay the Polish Glacier supplement fee, must have completed an advanced ice climbing course and have completed multiple ice climbs.

This is a fully guided ascent, led by American guides who climb the mountain with you. We are one of the few outfitters that offer this type of support (and in turn, high success and outstanding safety record). It should be noted that most outfitters merely offer a supported trek, where a single guide facilitates the climb but does not act as a guide during the ascent.

PREREQUISITES

Climbing Skill Level
The Vacas Valley (Polish Variation): While technical skills are not necessary, it is strongly recommended that climbers should have completed our 6-day mountaineering course or the equivalent.

Physical Conditioning
In the best interest of personal safety, success and team compatibility, adequate training and excellent physical condition are required. Prior experience carrying a heavy pack for multiple days serves as excellent preparation for this climb. Climbers must be able to carry an average of 50lbs or more and be physically and mentally prepared to deal with strenuous situations at high altitudes. Climbers need to be in excellent physical condition for both personal enjoyment and to be an integral team member. We encourage you to contact us so that we may assist you in developing a training program that meets your particular needs. Porters available upon request. Comprehensive training information can be found here.

Training Statement From the Guides:
"Although non-technical, this is a highly challenging climb and demands more than most other non-technical climbs (such as certain peaks in the U.S. and Kilimanjaro). This expedition-style climb requires the carrying of a heavy pack for multiple days, making prior physical training of three months or more critical to your success and enjoyment. We highly recommend our 6-day mountaineering course for climbers who have not climbed with a 50 lb. pack or are unsure of the rigors that a climb such as Aconcagua requires. We stress these points to continue our high summit success and ensure that teams are well-balanced."

Environmental Responsibility
Alpine Ascents is deeply committed to maintaining ecosystems at home and around the world. With each expedition, trek and course, we not only attempt to leave the environment as we found it, but strive to assist the local population in protecting the land and people indigenous to that region. Alpine Ascents reaches for the highest ethical business practices at home and abroad. Each staff member is dedicated to environmentally sound alpine ascents.

At Alpine Ascents environmental stewardship remains one of our core values and we take Leave No Trace ethics and practices very seriously. The mountains are our home and we are unwilling to sacrifice their preservation for human objectives. On every one of our courses and climbs we teach and follow the environmentally appropriate Leave No Trace principals and practices.

Over the years, with the assistance of our Sherpa teams, we have stepped up efforts to clean Mt. Everest. Our Wag Bag® program made a pioneering step in human waste management for the National Park System and Forest Service in the North Cascades. On Aconcagua, we pioneered a waste removal system on our climbs, utilizing the WAG Bag® system. And we continue our on-going maintenance and minimal impact plans wherever we guide. We believe that given the proper information most people will do all they can to help protect and maintain the environment. Alpine Ascents is committed to developing safe, self-reliant and environmentally conscious mountaineers.

 

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Humanities

June 23rd, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »

Humanities

 

Think Green

Articles about humanities.

By: Alevoor Rajagopal
Hi all. So what if I don’t know to blog? I have come on the block. Oh! No, this is not me telling. You know I was pushed into blogging when I just became aware of the word. And the words above are the (read entire article)
Viewed: 28 Times
By: Robert Baird
Juba II in America:Ahmed Osman tells us about the destruction of all knowledge around the end of the 4th Century Ad as a result of Roman edicts and the desire to make people into sheep to herd as they (read entire article)
Viewed: 26 Times
By: Randall Curtis
The true meaning of Saturn is that he is the teacher of the deeper lessons of life. Therefore, what he demands is that you learn your life lessons so well that you will never forget them. If you do (read entire article)
Viewed: 33 Times
By: Jerry Boone
"By necessity, by proclivity, and by delight, we all quote." Quotation and Originality 1876 Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) American poet and essayistShould we express our own thoughts in our own wo (read entire article)
Viewed: 28 Times
By: William Savage
Xenophon was a 4th Century BC Greek cavalry officer and military hero, student of Socrates, historian, author, and expert on horsemanship - a man of many talents. His horsemanship writings addressed (read entire article)
Viewed: 34 Times
By: Steve Hill
I am very interested in reading about ghostly stories and spirits etc. A couple of years ago I heard about a story which is apparently true, about a murder which was solved from the grave.This happene (read entire article)
Viewed: 27 Times
By: Luksi Humma
My name is Luksi Humma, I am Choctaw or, Chahta, our name in reality. I am a builder of people and log cabins. Although, I live in our present time, I talk to many people who come to Historic Prophets (read entire article)
Viewed: 23 Times
By: Mary Baker
Women have been given the greatest gift of creativity there is—the capacity of creating and having a child. Even if a woman has never had children, just the biological possibility, is life definin (read entire article)
Viewed: 27 Times

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Obama Turns FDR Upside Down

June 22nd, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »

Obama Turns FDR Upside Down

By LAWRENCE B. LINDSEY
June 20, 2008; Page A13

 

Sen. Barack Obama has a bad idea for "extending the life of Social Security." He has proposed applying the Social Security tax to incomes above $250,000, in addition to the current tax on incomes up to $102,000. It’s unfair, he explained, for middle-class earners to pay Social Security tax on "every dime they make" while the very rich pay on "only a very small percentage of their income."

Reporters cited the Obama statement without asking for the logic behind having someone making $100,000 pay on every dime and someone making $250,000 pay on just 41% of income, while someone making $10,000,000 would pay on 98.5% of income. There is no economic principle or theory of tax law that would endorse such a result.

[Obama Turns FDR Upside Down]
Chad Crowe

Sen. Obama’s logic is fairly obvious, although it hardly makes him an exemplar of the "new politics." The $100,000 to $250,000 group is a targeted voter demographic, and he really didn’t want to sock them with a 12.4 percentage point hike in their tax rate. But, as Sen. Obama himself noted in his June 13 announcement, just 3% of workers make more than a quarter-million.

Neither Franklin Roosevelt, who started Social Security, nor the intervening three dozen Congresses thought they were imposing an "unfair" system on the middle class. There is a very good and principled reason why Social Security taxes are paid on just $102,000 of income: Benefits are calculated based on that same $102,000 of income.

The fundamental principle of linking taxes and benefits was established when Roosevelt designed Social Security. He wanted to make sure that it was not a welfare system, calling Social Security "a base upon which each one of our citizens may build his individual security through his own individual efforts." His instincts have generally proved sound. Had Social Security been considered "welfare" rather than a return on taxes earned, it probably would never have had the popularity or the staying power that it has enjoyed for the last seven decades.

Although the formula connecting benefits to tax payments or "contributions" has evolved slightly over time, it still adheres to this basic message. Today, what Social Security terms a "low-wage" worker will pay (in present value terms) $77,197 over his or her lifetime and get $112,261 in benefits. A median-wage worker earning $42,000 will pay $171,550 and get back $187,085. A "high-wage" worker making $67,000 will pay $274,480 and get back $245,085.

Under the current formula, lower-wage workers get a slightly better deal than do higher-wage workers, assuming the same life expectancy. But the principle remains that as workers’ wages rise so do the taxes they pay, and so do the benefits they will get from the system.

Sen. Obama would do away with this principle by requiring higher-end workers to pay taxes without getting any extra benefits linked to their higher contributions. This would be a big step toward turning Social Security from a contributory pension scheme into just another welfare program.

The economics of what Sen. Obama is proposing should be at least as troubling. A high-income entrepreneur would see his or her federal marginal tax rate rise to 53% from 37.7% under Sen. Obama’s tax plan. He proposes a 4.6 percentage point hike in the personal income tax rate, a loss of some itemized deductions, and a 12.4 percentage point hike in the Social Security payroll tax. This would take a successful entrepreneur’s effective marginal tax rate higher than what it was under Jimmy Carter or Richard Nixon, when the maximum tax on an entrepreneur was 50%.

One of the lessons from the disastrous economics of the 1970s and the subsequent Reagan tax cuts is that everyone – particularly entrepreneurs – responds to incentives. If you take away 10% of a high earner’s after-tax income at the margin, he will cut his taxable income by at least 4%. At the margin, this taxpayer now takes home 62.3% of his earnings, a figure that will drop to 47% under the Obama plan. According to a widely accepted economics rule of thumb, the entrepreneur’s taxable profit would drop by 11.2%.

Now consider how the Obama plan would affect the taxes paid by such an entrepreneur with a taxable profit from his business of $500,000. Under current law, he would pay $27,148 in Social Security and Medicare taxes, plus $142,969 in personal income taxes, for a total of $170,117. If the taxpayer did not change his behavior at all, under the Obama plan he would face a $31,000 Social Security tax hike and a $11,494 hike in his personal taxes – or a 25% tax hike. But, if the taxpayer responds as the economic models predict, his taxable profit would drop to $444,000. His Social Security and Medicare tax bill would still soar to $51,580. But his income taxes, even with a higher tax rate, would drop to $132,882 for a total of $184,462.

In other words, Sen. Obama is planning on a combined series of tax hikes to produce $42,000 in tax revenue, but consensus economic modeling suggests the government’s net take would rise only $14,000.

We should also keep in mind that the economic well-being of the country is not measured by how much taxes the government can collect, or even the size of the deficit. Rather, it is measured by the country’s productive capacity. Our theoretical entrepreneur’s 11.2% decline in taxable income reflects both less effort on his part and a less efficient use of his income in order to avoid confiscatory tax rates. Or, to put it directly, Sen. Obama’s plan would reduce an entrepreneur’s after-tax profits by $70,000 – $56,000 in lost profits and $14,000 more in taxes – just to produce a net revenue gain to the government of $14,000.

It is shocking to think that we have a presidential candidate who would make the private sector $5 poorer in order to make the government $1 richer. More likely, given the calculated political design of the proposal, no one in the Obama campaign told the candidate about the economic, ethical or historical consequences of his suggestion.

This indicates that what is really on offer is not some postpartisan approach to politics, but a Democratic candidate far to the left of Bill Clinton.

Mr. Lindsey is president and CEO of the Lindsey Group, and author of "What a President Should Know . . . But Most Learn Too Late" (Rowman & Littlefield, 2008).

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Do It Yourself IRA LLC Kits Pop Up Online

June 21st, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »

Do It Yourself IRA LLC Kits Pop Up Online -

Can You Spell Audit?

We are beginning to see the inexpensive DIY products for the development of the IRA LLC offered to self-directed IRA investors unfortunately, the enticing price tag may become the Fly Trap of the self-directed world luring penny concerned investors into an uncontrollable IRS audit. There are three big problems with this product.

By Daniel Cordoba, CEA

We are beginning to see the inexpensive DIY products for the development of the IRA LLC offered to self-directed IRA investors unfortunately, the enticing price tag may become the Fly Trap of the self-directed world luring penny concerned investors into an uncontrollable IRS audit. There are three big problems with this product.

1) The operating agreement which is one of the key components may not meet the scrutiny of an IRS auditor.

2) There is no where to go to for support.

3) Most of the custodians listed as acceptable recipients will not accept the submitted format.

While in Hollywood all things are easy and simple to do is sound thinking to place your nest egg in the hands of a website that has no identity disclosure and has a third party complete all of the fulfillment.  And why is that a problem?  There is no due diligence on the part of the producer they assume the address the product is being sent to is the state the LLC should be organized in.  So if you were temporarily in Texas but lived in Nevada ordered the kit while in Texas you would receive a Nevada product.  That is exactly what happened when I bought one.

Now you are in possession of the documents for the wrong state.  What if you needed to make a procedural change or wanted to name a contingency manager to the LLC, where do you go for support?  No one, there is no way to reach them.  How about your local attorney?  Doubt it, they would have to learn much of what you were trying to avoid increasing your costs.  No you have defeated your intended purpose of saving money by doing it yourself.  Maybe professional help is looking cheaper?

Ongoing support?  If the producer is unwilling to disclose a contact how do you keep up with changes in the tax code?

I read a blog in one of the large investor sites about an investor who felt our price was too high and the same for our competitors.  So he did some research and got some of the answers right.  He then described to his colleagues how he cracked the code on this mysterious product.  Backslapping was thunderous, the problem is he only had half of his facts straight.  It seemed to me that if he had spent that same energy on finding a good investment deal he would have made a much higher return on investment.  After all the partially correct LLC may come back to bite him.

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Why Investors Should Consider Real Estate

June 21st, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »

Why Investors Should Consider Real Estate

 

by JEFF D. OPDYKE

 

In Some Segments Makes Case For REITs and Other Vehicles

With housing prices softening and subprime lenders tanking, investors have been running from anything that smells of real estate. But they may be bailing too quickly, as some parts of the sector are still doing well.

New money going into mutual funds that own real estate has plunged to just $2 million a week, on average, from nearly $400 million a week as recently as mid-February, according to AMG Data Services. Investors in droves are also selling off their shares in real-estate investment trusts, the publicly traded stocks of companies that own everything from apartment buildings to medical centers and shopping malls.

But in some cases, jittery investor sentiment isn’t a good proxy for the strength of the underlying assets. It is true that residential real estate is struggling in many parts of the country. But commercial real estate is driven by job growth and the economy, and both are relatively healthy. In fact, commercial-building occupancy is growing nationally, while rents are up about 4.25% in the past year, according to Los Angeles-based CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. Midtown Manhattan set a record in March for the city’s highest rents ever: $69.99 a square foot, on average.

There is another reason to think twice before fleeing the real-estate sector. From a financialplanning

perspective, real estate is an asset that investors should have in their portfolios over the long term. That is because real estate serves as a counterweight to inflation, while REITs, according to data from research firm Ibbotson Associates, have a low to moderate correlation with stocks, meaning Wall Street’s trends tend not to impact REIT trends.

Investment pros routinely agree that a portfolio should have between 5% and 20% invested in real estate that isn’t a primary residence. But "real estate" encompasses everything from single homes and duplexes, to skyscrapers and apartments, to strip-malls, medical offices and assisted-living centers scattered around the country.

So where to invest, given the meltdown in some parts of the sector? The options are growing. Just last year, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange began trading futures and options tied to the movement of the S&P/Case-Shiller Metro Area Home Price Indices that track housing prices in the U.S. as well as a variety of cities, including New York, Miami, Chicago and Las Vegas.

Meanwhile, just last month, Santa Monica, Calif.-based Dimensional Fund Advisors launched an international real-estate fund that provides investors access to markets where REITs are growing in popularity, including Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan and Turkey.

Here are some of the options to consider:

Real-Estate Mutual Funds and ETFs

The easiest means for creating instant diversity across regions and property styles is to buy a realestate index mutual fund such as Vanguard’s REIT Index fund, or an exchange-traded fund such as the iShares Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index fund. Both are low-cost options for owning broad exposure to various types of REITs, and both have fared well over the past year, though each has fallen off in the past couple of months as real-estate woes have mounted.

The drawback: You won’t see the potentially big price pops you could by owning individual REITs or even the stocks of home builders.

Sector REITs

Not all real-estate sectors fire on the same cycle, since different sectors play off different economic drivers. Office properties, particularly in urban locations, currently offer the best opportunities, says Bob Gadsden, portfolio manager at New York’s Alpine Woods Capital Investors, which runs the Alpine mutual funds. He says companies such as Vornado Realty Trustin Paramus, N.J., and strong>Boston Properties Inc. are examples of the REITs investors should consider.

Those companies operate in land-restricted markets such as New York City, San Francisco, Boston and Washington, D.C., cities "where there’s limited ability to create new supply," says Ken Heebner, portfolio manager for the Boston-based CGM Realty Fund who singles out the same two REITs.

Apartment REITs also offer some potential, as former homeowners slip back into the rental market in the wake of the subprime debacle and the exploding number of foreclosures. The increasing legion of renters is pushing demand higher, allowing apartment companies to raise rents. That is a good combination for leading apartment REITs such as Home Properties Inc. in Rochester, N.Y., and Denver’s Archstone-Smith says Mr. Gadsden.

Yet the foreclosure woes are dumping increasing numbers of homes into the residential property market at marked-down prices, and some are certain to land in the hands of real-estate investors who will turn them into rental properties. That means affordably priced rental homes will be competing against apartments for tenants. That is potentially bad for apartment REITs, says Mr. Heebner. Moreover, once the subprime crisis abates and interest rates fall again, renters will again become homeowners.

International REIT Mutual Funds

These operate just like domestic REIT funds, but they own real-estate trusts in various countries. A number of financial planners are now including them in client portfolios because "they provide another level of diversification," says Lance Alston, vice president at JWA Financial, a Dallas planning firm that in the past month has begun putting about half of its clients’ real-estate exposure in the Dimensional Fund Advisors’ International Real Estate Securities Portfolio.

Just like the U.S. commercial property market, commercial real estate globally is doing well amid a strong world economy. CB Richard Ellis global data show that rents are moving up by as much as 30% in some markets, while vacancy rates are falling.

Jeremy Mitchell, a financial planner in Sun City, Ariz., says his firm this year has been buying shares in Cohen & Steers International Realty Fund for clients because "you’re putting a ceiling over yourself by focusing just on domestic REITs."

The risk: The REIT market in many countries is nascent, as is the local real-estate market. If global economies crumble, real-estate prices — and REIT prices — will come down.

Private REITs

Unlike REITs that trade on Wall Street, private REITs are generally available only through financial planners, advisers and brokers. These REITs typically maintain a constant share price — often $10 a share. And they generate income through their yield, often in the 5% to 7% range, and provide capital gains only when the portfolios are liquidated, sold to other real-estate companies or go public.

Dean Harman, a financial planner in the Woodlands, Texas, has been putting clients into a handful of private REITs, such as KBS, Wells and Hines real-estate investment trusts.

The benefit: income as well as price stability. When the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 400 points in February, "the value of my clients’ REITs didn’t move," Mr. Harman says.

The drawback: a lack of liquidity. Private REITs allow withdrawals only occasionally, often once a quarter. Moreover, they generally require a holding period of at least one year, and for a few years after that the REIT generally redeems the shares at a discount to the original purchase price.

Home-Builder Stocks

These stocks have been hammered in recent months, yet companies like D.R. Horton Inc., Toll Brothers Inc. and

It will take some time, but once the subprime and foreclosure shakeout has passed, the builders’ stocks — all down roughly a third in the past year — could be fashionable again, says Ernie Ankrim, chief investment strategist at Russell Investment Group in Tacoma, Wash. "If housing prices stay soft, you’ll see price declines in land and raw materials, giving the builders stronger margins."

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Indian Summer in the Tetons

June 16th, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized 1 Comment »

Indian Summer in the Tetons

Grand TetonsWhen summer days start to slip away and winter looms ahead, fall becomes a cherished time in Grand Teton National Park. Jackson Hole locals have always known autumn as the perfect time to enjoy the park — summer crowds are gone and the weather is perfect for hiking, biking, fishing or just lounging while taking in the sights and sounds of autumn.

Autumn is a particularly beautiful time in the park with the fall colors unfolding in all directions. Aspen and cottonwood leaves transform the valley floor into a patchwork of orange, yellow and fiery red. Peak colors generally occur from mid-September through early October in Grand Teton National Park. Early morning and late afternoon are the best times for photographing the colorful displays.

Be sure to check out these prime locations for fall foliage in Grand Teton National Park:

Oxbow Bend and Jackson Lodge

 

Look for brilliant yellow colors in aspen and cottonwood trees around Oxbow Bend and on the west side of Jackson Lake Lodge in the Willow Flats area. Jackson Lake Lodge’s View Terrace is a perfect spot to take in autumn colors and the Tetons.

Signal Mountain Summit

 

Dazzling red and orange colors of huckleberry warm the forest floor along the drive to Signal Mountain Summit.

Snake River Overlook

 

Snake River Overlook is a spectacular viewing platform for the colors decorating the Snake River.

Cottonwood Creek and Moose-Wilson Road

 

Cottonwood Creek, located near the Taggart Lake Parking Area, and the Moose-Wilson Road by Moose Village all offer splendid autumn displays.

In addition to the autumn colors, visitors to Grand Teton National Park find themselves witnessing another amazine autumn ritual — the elk rut. The elk breeding season, or the rut, occurs from late August to early November and during this period the elk are concerned about few things besides mating.

As autumn colors begin to peak throughout the park, the haunting sound of bugling elk fills the air. During the autumn months, males gather harems of females that they mate with and zealously guard. The bull elk bugle, a high-pitched whistling sound followed by grunts, as part of their mating ritual. A fascinating and beautiful sound, bugling is a male dominance display that attracts females and states the rank of the male. Rival males respond by bugling back. The exchange of bugling in the evening air is something Grand Teton National Park visitors never forget.

The rut can get pretty intense for the bull elk. Bulls may actually spar with their challengers, after first demonstrating threat postures, by thrashing the ground with their antlers. To witness the spectacle of elk during the rut, park visitors should look for bulls and their harems along the Teton Park Road between Signal Mountain, Jenny Lake Lodge and Moose in addition to the Colter Bay area.

"Mornings and early evening are the best times for observing the rut, between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. is when the elk seem to be most active," states Tim Bywater, public affairs specialist for the Grand Teton National Park. "The important thing for park visitors to remember is give the elk plenty of space, especially during the mating season."

After a full day of autumn hiking or biking through the park, nothing compares to relaxing by a warm fire, enjoying a fine meal and a good night’s sleep. Grand Teton Lodge Company provides that bit of luxury at Jackson Lake Lodge.

Located in the heart of Grand Teton National Park, Jackson Lake Lodge is situated on a bluff overlooking Willow Flats and Jackson Lake. Jackson Lake Lodge offers amazine views of the Teton range from the 60-foot picture windows located in the lodge’s Upper Lobby. This ideal location, chosen by John D. Rockefeller in the 1950s, possesses one of the best views in all of Jackson Hole of Mount Moran and the Tetons.

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Art for Boomers Peter Paul Rubens

June 1st, 2008 John Krol Posted in Uncategorized 2 Comments »

 http://blog.ira-401k-realestate.biz

Table of Contents

 

    * Main

    * Education and early career.

    * Return to Antwerp.

    * Later career.

    * Assessment and influence.

    * Additional Reading

    * Related Links

    * Supplemental Information

          o Spotlights

    * External Web sites

    * Citations

 

Media

 

    * Images

    *

 

    * Peter Paul Rubens, self-portrait in oil, c. 1639; in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.[Credits : Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna] [Peter Paul Rubens, self-portrait in oil, c. 1639; in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.[Credits : Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna]]

    * “The Hippopotamus Hunt,” oil on canvas by Peter Paul Rubens, c. 1615–16; …[Credits : Alte Pinakothek, Munich; photograph, Joachim Blauel—Artothek] [“The Hippopotamus Hunt,” oil on canvas by Peter Paul Rubens, c. 1615–16; …[Credits : Alte Pinakothek, Munich; photograph, Joachim Blauel—Artothek]]

    * “Le Coup de Lance,” oil on panel by Peter Paul Rubens, 1620; in the Koninklijk Museum …[Credits : Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerpen, Belgium] [“Le Coup de Lance,” oil on panel by Peter Paul Rubens, 1620; in the Koninklijk Museum …[Credits : Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerpen, Belgium]]

    * Anne of Austria, detail of a portrait by Peter Paul Rubens, in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam[Credits : Courtesy of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam] [Anne of Austria, detail of a portrait by Peter Paul Rubens, in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam[Credits : Courtesy of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam]]

    * Marie de Medicis, detail of a portrait by Peter Paul Rubens; in the Prado, Madrid[Credits : H. Roger-Viollet] [Marie de Medicis, detail of a portrait by Peter Paul Rubens; in the Prado, Madrid[Credits : H. Roger-Viollet]]

    * Saint Judas, detail of oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens, 1618; in the Prado, Madrid (painting is …[Credits : Archivo Mas, Barcelona] [Saint Judas, detail of oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens, 1618; in the Prado, Madrid (painting is …[Credits : Archivo Mas, Barcelona]]

    * “The Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus,” oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens, c. …[Credits : Scala/Art Resource, NY] [“The Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus,” oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens, c. …[Credits : Scala/Art Resource, NY]]

    * Poussinists versus Rubenists[Credits : Courtesy of The Art Institute of Chicago, All Rights Reserved, A.A. Munger Collection, 1930.500]Poussinists versus Rubenists[Credits : Courtesy of The Art Institute of Chicago, All Rights Reserved, A.A. Munger Collection, 1930.500] [Poussinists versus Rubenists[Credits : Courtesy of The Art Institute of Chicago, All Rights Reserved, A.A. Munger Collection, 1930.500]]

 

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Peter Paul RubensFlemish artist

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born June 28, 1577, Siegen, Nassau, Westphalia [Germany] died May 30, 1640, Antwerp, Spanish Netherlands [now in Belgium]

 

Peter Paul Rubens, self-portrait in oil, c. 1639; in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.[Credits : Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna]Flemish painter who was the greatest exponent of Baroque painting’s dynamism, vitality, and sensuous exuberance. Though his masterpieces include portraits and landscapes, Rubens is perhaps best known for his religious and mythological compositions. As the impresario of vast decorative programs, he presided over the most famous painter’s studio in Europe. His powers of invention were matched by extraordinary energy and versatility.

Education and early career.

 

Rubens was born in the German town of Siegen, in Westphalia. His father, Jan Rubens, a lawyer and alderman of Antwerp, had fled the Spanish Netherlands (present-day Belgium) in 1568 with his wife, Maria Pypelinckx, and four children to escape religious persecution for his Calvinist beliefs. After Jan’s death in 1587, the family returned to Antwerp, where young Peter Paul, raised in his mother’s Roman Catholic faith, received a classical education. His artistic training began in 1591 with his apprenticeship to Tobias Verhaecht, a kinsman and landscape painter of modest talent. A year later he moved on to the studio of Adam van Noort, where he remained for four years until being apprenticed to Antwerp’s leading artist, Otto van Veen, dean of the painters’ guild of St. Luke. Van Veen imbued Rubens with a lively sense of painting as a lofty humanistic profession.

 

Most of Rubens’ youthful works have disappeared or remain unidentified. The “Portrait of a Young Man” (1597; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City) is his earliest dated work. In 1598 Rubens was admitted into the painters’ guild in Antwerp. He probably continued to work in van Veen’s studio before setting off on a sojourn in Italy in May 1600. In Venice he absorbed the luminosity and dramatic expressiveness of the Renaissance masterpieces of Titian, Tintoretto, and Veronese. Hired by Vincenzo I Gonzaga, duke of Mantua, Rubens proceeded to Mantua, where his chief duties were to make copies of Renaissance paintings, mainly portraits of court beauties. In October 1600 Rubens accompanied the duke to Florence to attend the marriage-by-proxy of Gonzaga’s sister-in-law Marie de Médicis to King Henry IV of France, a scene Rubens was to re-create a quarter-century later for the queen. By the end of the first year he had traveled throughout Italy, sketchbook in hand. The copies he made of Renaissance paintings offer a rich survey of the achievements of 16th-century Italian art.

 

In August 1601 Rubens arrived in Rome. There the new Baroque style heralded by Annibale Carracci and Caravaggio—a bold naturalism coupled with a revival of the heroically idealized forms of Michelangelo and Raphael—was quickly assimilated by Rubens. His first major Roman commission was for three large paintings (1601–02) for the crypt chapel of St. Helena in the Basilica of Santa Croce. In 1603 Gonzaga sent him on his first diplomatic assignment to Spain to present a shipment of paintings to King Philip III. For Philip’s prime minister, the duke of Lerma, Rubens painted his first major equestrian portrait (1603; Prado Museum, Madrid), which took the Venetian tradition of Titian and Tintoretto a giant step forward in the conveyance of physical power and psychological confrontation.

 

Toward the end of 1605 Rubens made his second trip to Rome. With his brother Philip he undertook an intensive study of ancient art and philology and began to amass a sizable collection of Roman sculpture, reliefs, portrait busts, and ancient coins. In 1606 he received his crowning commission in Rome: the painting over the high altar of the Chiesa Nuova (Church of Santa Maria in Vallicella), whose precious icon Rubens enshrined in an apotheosis borne aloft by a host of putti—a quintessentially Baroque conceit that was later adapted in sculpture by Gian Lorenzo Bernini.

Return to Antwerp.

 

In October 1608, having received news that his mother was gravely ill, Rubens rushed home to Antwerp—but too late. Yet despite his personal loss, his arrival was otherwise timely. His brother Philip had been appointed secretary of Antwerp. More important, negotiations for the Twelve Years’ Truce (1609–21) were being concluded between the Dutch separatists and Spain, which raised the prospects of peace and economic recovery for war-torn Flanders. Rubens was commissioned to paint for the Antwerp Town Hall a celebratory “Adoration of the Magi” (1609; Prado), which quickly established his fame at home. Though he still yearned for Italy, the Spanish Habsburg regents of Flanders, the Archduke Albert and Archduchess Isabella, made him an offer too good to refuse. As their new court painter, Rubens was exempted from all taxes, guild restrictions, and official duties in Brussels. He could remain in Antwerp and organize his own studio. In October 1609 Rubens married the 19-year-old Isabella Brant, and he celebrated their happy union in his “Double Portrait in a Honeysuckle Bower” (1609–10; Alte Pinakothek, Munich). In 1610 Rubens bought a magnificent townhouse to which he annexed a palatial studio, classical portico, and garden pavilion—an Italian villa transplanted to Antwerp.

 

The Twelve Years’ Truce prompted a major refurbishing of Flemish churches. The first of Rubens’ two great Antwerp triptychs, “The Raising of the Cross” (1610–11; Antwerp Cathedral), combined Italianate reflections of Tintoretto and Caravaggio with Flemish realism in a heroic affirmation of redemptive suffering. His second triptych for Antwerp’s cathedral, “The Descent from the Cross” (1611–14), is more classical and restrained in keeping with its subject. This work reflected Rubens’ vigorous renewal of the early Netherlandish tradition of Jan van Eyck, Hans Memling, and Rogier van der Weyden. Its widespread fame was insured by the publication of an engraving; among its future admirers was the young Rembrandt.

 

“The Hippopotamus Hunt,” oil on canvas by Peter Paul Rubens, c. 1615–16; …[Credits : Alte Pinakothek, Munich; photograph, Joachim Blauel—Artothek]The decade from 1610 to 1620 witnessed an enormous production of altarpieces for Roman Catholic churches—powerful, emotive images of Christ, the Virgin Mary, and the saints—as Rubens became the chief artistic proponent of Counter-Reformation spirituality in northern Europe. Among his more important religious compositions from this period are “The Last Judgment” (c. 1616, Alte Pinakothek) and “Christ on the Cross” (also called “Le Coup de Lance,” 1620; Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp [see photograph“Le Coup de Lance,” oil on panel by Peter Paul Rubens, 1620; in the Koninklijk Museum …[Credits : Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerpen, Belgium]]). Yet during this same decade Rubens also produced many paintings on secular themes—mythological, historical, and allegorical subjects, hunting scenes, and portraits. Among the finest of his mythological paintings is the “Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus” (c. 1617–18; Alte Pinakothek), while the “Hippopotamus Hunt” (c. 1615–16; Alte Pinakothek) typifies his vision of wild animal hunts.

 

Rubens was able to maintain this tremendous output owing to his large studio of assistants, apprentices, collaborators, and engravers. A major painting would often begin as a modello—i.e., an oil sketch painted by Rubens on a small panel, after which he would make preparatory drawings of individual figures within the composition. The execution of the full-scale work would often be entrusted to assistants, though Rubens would usually paint key areas and thoroughly retouch the finished painting. Many of Rubens’ paintings were then reproduced in engravings, thereby guaranteeing the wide disssemination of his compositions throughout Europe.

 

Rubens’ most talented assistant was the young Anthony Van Dyck, 22 years his junior, who arrived at his studio as an apprentice about 1616 and stayed for four years. A true prodigy, Van Dyck quickly absorbed Rubens’ robust style—his muscular, graceful physiques and sensuous interplays of light and colour—and faithfully imitated it under the master’s supervision. Rubens’ own coproductions with specialists such as the animal painter Frans Snyders and the flower-landscapist Jan Bruegel mark the Baroque zenith of artistic collaboration. At the same time, his “Four Continents” (c. 1615; Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), “Lion Hunt” (1621; Alte Pinakothek), “Landscape with Carters” (c. 1618; Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg), and his many sketches from nature reveal his own versatility in the specialized areas of landscape and animal painting.

 

In 1616 Rubens received his first tapestry commission, a series depicting the life of the legendary Roman consul Decius Mus. For each scene he painted a modello, which his assistants then enlarged into a full-scale canvas whose imagery was then duplicated in a tapestry by weavers. From Sir Dudley Carleton, the English ambassador to The Hague, Rubens acquired in 1618 a vast collection of ancient sculptures. His interest in sculpture was not limited to collecting. He designed monumental sculpture for the facade and interior of the magnificent new Jesuit church (now St. Charles Borromeo) in Antwerp, which was dedicated in 1621. He also contributed to the church’s architectural design. Its high altar, enshrining his two interchangeable altarpieces devoted to Saints Ignatius and Francis Xavier (1617–18; Kunsthistorisches), was crowned by a semidome and illuminated by an oculus, resembling Rubens’ own recently completed “pantheon” for sculpture in his home. In 1620 Rubens contracted to design 39 ceiling paintings for the Jesuit church, to be executed by Van Dyck and other assistants after his oil sketches revealing “the great speed and frenzy of his brush.” Finished within a year, these paintings justified Rubens’ claim to be “by natural instinct, better fitted to execute very large works than small curiosities.”

 

In 1621, following the expiration of the Twelve Years’ Truce and the death of Archduke Albert, the widowed infanta Isabella engaged Rubens as her confidential agent in Spain’s diplomatic search for peace between Habsburg-controlled Flanders and the independent Dutch Republic to the north. (The war between the Protestant Dutch and the Catholic Flemings resumed, however, and was sadly to continue for the rest of Rubens’ life.) By this time Rubens’ widespread fame as “the painter of princes and the prince of painters” permitted him to travel freely among royal courts for discreet meetings with sovereigns and their ministers, who would discuss matters of state while sitting for portraits.

 

In 1622 Rubens was called to Paris by the queen mother of France, Marie de Médicis, to decorate one of the two main galleries of her newly built Luxembourg Palace. The widow of Henry IV sought to promote, in 21 huge canvases (1622–25; Louvre Museum, Paris), her life and her regency of France in epic fashion. Marie’s thwarted career required an unprecedented exercise of poetic license, but by exploiting his encyclopaedic knowledge of classical mythology and allegory, Rubens raised her life to a mythic plane on which mortals mingle freely with the Olympian gods. At the same time, he designed for Louis XIII a tapestry cycle on the life of the Emperor Constantine (1622–25; Philadelphia Museum of Art). During the 1625 marriage-by-proxy in Paris of King Louis’s sister, Henrietta Maria, to King Charles I of England, Rubens met the duke of Buckingham, who commissioned Rubens to paint his equestrian portrait (1625; destroyed; oil sketch in Kimbell Museum, Fort Worth, Texas), the epitome of High Baroque flamboyance in that genre.

 

Rubens complained that he was “the busiest and most harassed man in the world,” yet he continued to accept important ecclesiastical commissions. His “Adoration of the Magi” (1624; Antwerp Museum) for the Abbey of St. Michael was crowned by three monumental sculptures of his own design. For the high altar of Antwerp’s cathedral he framed his “Assumption of the Virgin” (1624–27) with a marble portico that featured a typically Baroque interplay of painting and sculpture, spiritually “charging” the surrounding space.

 

Nor did Rubens neglect private patrons. In the 1620s he executed masterly portraits of his physician and friend Ludovicus Nonnius (c. 1627; National Gallery, London), his future sister-in-law Susanna Fourment (“Le Chapeau de Paille,” c. 1622–25; National Gallery, London), and of his sons Albert and Nicolaas (c. 1624–25; Liechtenstein Collection, Vaduz). His “Landscape with Philemon and Baucis” (c. 1625; Kunsthistorisches) reveals, in a poetic vein, his heroic and cataclysmic view of nature. In 1625 the infanta Isabella commissioned from Rubens a vast tapestry cycle, the “Triumph of the Eucharist” (1625–27; Descalzas Reales, Madrid). For these 20 separate hangings, which form his most elaborate and complex program of religious art, Rubens invented a two-tiered architectural framework featuring tapestries-within-tapestries, an unprecedented display of Baroque illusionism.

 

In 1626 Rubens’ domestic happiness was shattered by the death of his wife Isabella. He soon embarked on a diplomatic odyssey in search of a peace between England and Spain as a first step toward negotiating a settlement with the Dutch Republic, which was England’s ally. The duke of Buckingham, who was the favourite of King Charles of England, was negotiating to purchase Rubens’ entire collection of antiquities. In the course of their meetings, Rubens tried to convince the skeptical Buckingham that England should cease supporting the Dutch in their struggle against Spanish rule in Flanders. Initially the Spanish king, Philip IV, was aghast that such diplomacy be entrusted to a mere painter. But in August 1628 Rubens left for the Spanish court in Madrid en route to England.

 

During his seven months in Madrid, besides pleading for a peace treaty with England, Rubens spent his time in the royal art gallery painting copies of masterpieces by Titian, to whose style he was now completely attuned as he explored the great Venetian’s fluent brushwork, vibrant colours, and luminous modeling. Looking over his shoulder was Philip IV’s young court painter, Diego Velázquez. By April 1629, England was ready to negotiate, and Charles I sent for Rubens directly, indicating his eagerness to meet a man with his international reputation for intellect and artistic genius. Philip IV gave Rubens the title of “secretary of the king’s privy council of the Netherlands” in order to elevate the standing of his painter-envoy at the foreign court.

 

In London, Rubens encountered a maze of factions and intrigues through which he had to negotiate. Yet he prevailed, and it is to him personally that the peace treaty of 1630 between England and Spain can be attributed. He was awarded an honorary master of arts degree from the University of Cambridge. Awaiting the arrival of the Spanish ambassador, he painted his effusive “Allegory of Peace and War” (1629–30; National Gallery, London) as a memento of his successful diplomacy and gave it to the admiring English king. In turn, Charles awarded Rubens a long-coveted commission to decorate the ceiling of the royal Banqueting House, which had recently been designed by the architect Inigo Jones as part of the Whitehall Palace complex of buildings in London. On the eve of his departure from England, Rubens was knighted by King Charles.

Related Links

 

Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.

Assorted References

 

    * Luxembourg Palace decoration ( in Marie De Médicis )

    * model for Rubenists ( in Rubenist )

    * mural painting ( in mural )

    * narrative applied to painting ( in painting: Narrative )

    * oil painting ( in oil painting )

    * printmaking ( in printmaking: Flemish printmaking )

    * Stuart style ( in Stuart style )

 

association with

 

    * Bruegel the Elder ( in Bruegel, Jan, The Elder )

    * Charles I ( in Charles I )

    * Snyders ( in Snyders, Frans )

 

contribution to

 

    * Antwerp ( in Antwerp: Cultural life )

    * Baroque art ( in Baroque period; in painting, Western: Early and High Baroque in Italy; in painting, Western: The Spanish Netherlands )

    * chalk drawing ( in chalk drawing )

    * drawing ( in drawing: 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries )

    * Flemish art ( in Flemish art; in Belgium: Economic developments )

 

influence on

 

    * Coypel ( in Coypel, Antoine )

    * De Crayer ( in Crayer, Caspar de )

    * Gainsborough ( in Gainsborough, Thomas: Bath period )

    * Janssens ( in Janssens, Abraham )

    * Rembrandt ( in Rembrandt van Rijn: Rembrandt and Rubens )

    * Reynolds ( in Reynolds, Sir Joshua: Later years )

    * Tiepolo ( in Tiepolo, Giovanni Battista: Later Life. )

    * van Dyck ( in Van Dyck, Sir Anthony; in Van Dyck, Sir Anthony: Assessment )

    * van Gogh ( in Gogh, Vincent van: The productive decade )

    * Velázquez ( in Velázquez, Diego: Court painter in Madrid )

    * Watteau ( in Watteau, Antoine: Early life and training. )

 

Supplemental Information

Spotlights

 

Encyclopædia Britannica’s Guide to ShakespeareEncyclopædia Britannica’s Guide to Shakespeare

External Web sites

 

This topic is discussed at the following external Web sites.

 

National Gallery of Art - Sir Peter Paul Rubens

Olga’s Gallery - Peter Paul Rubens

 

Citations

 

MLA Style:

"Peter Paul Rubens." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 29 Jun. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/511894/Peter-Paul-Rubens>.

 

APA Style:

Peter Paul Rubens. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 29, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/511894/Peter-Paul-Rubens

Peter Paul Rubens

 

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