Thursday, 15 March 2012

British Merchants in Nineteenth-Century Brazil: Business, Culture and Identity in Bahia, 1808-1850

British Merchants in Nineteenth-Century Brazil: Business, Culture and Identity in Bahia, 1808-1850. By Louise H. Guenther. Oxford: Centre for Brazilian Studies, 2004. xi + 211 pp. Notes, bibliography, index. Paper, �20.00. ISBN: 0-954-40703-2.

This brief, interesting, and accessible study offers a microcosmic counterpoint to macroeconomic studies of British informal empire in Latin America. Taking as her focus the minuscule British merchant colony that formed in Bahia after the opening of Brazil's ports in 1808, Louise Guenther offers an "anthropological examination" of the early expatriates and the self-consciously isolated community they created. Guenther argues throughout that …

Zimbabwe reach 205 against Bangladesh

Bangladesh all-rounders Shakib Al Hasan and Naeem Islam took three wickets each to reduce Zimbabwe to a mediocre 205-9 in Saturday's opening match of a triangular limited-overs international series.

Elton Chigumbura hit a half century to steady Zimbabwe innings after they had slipped to 94-5, allowing the visitors to post a defendable total.

Al Hasan, a left-arm spinner, trapped lbw opener Vusi Sibanda (15) and middle-order batsman Sean Williams (3) then dismissed Zimbabwe skipper Prosper Utseya (9) to finish …

Storm gives area another wet whack

A quick-moving severe thunderstorm whacked the already soakedChicago area with lightning, high winds and up to 2.7 inches of rainSunday night, knocking out electricity for thousands of users.

But it didn't appear to seriously worsen the flood problemsbrought by rains Thursday and Friday.

While some suburban communities said the new downpour caused afew more roads to be blocked off, some - like Des Plaines - said thenew rain didn't make any difference to the already soggy suburb.

O'Hare Airport, a focal point of the historic rain problem lastweek, was closed to arriving and departing planes for about 1 1/2hours during the height of the storm Sunday …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Police Detail Attack on College Punter

GREELEY, Colo. - Northern Colorado's backup punter asked a friend to lie about his whereabouts the night the starting punter was stabbed in the parking lot of his apartment complex, according to a police affidavit obtained Thursday.

Mitch Cozad is accused of stabbing rival Rafael Mendoza in his kicking leg Monday night in Evans, a small town adjacent to Greeley and about 50 miles north of Denver.

Cozad of Wheatland, Wyo., was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of second-degree assault. He remained free Thursday on $30,000 bond, and Weld County prosecutors said they have until Sept. 22 to formally charge him.

Mendoza, treated and released from a Greeley hospital, will …

Afghanistan's Karzai declines to say whether he'll seek another term as president

Afghan President Hamid Karzai isn't saying whether he will seek another term as president in elections scheduled next year.

Karzai was speaking to journalists alongside U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney after the two met at Kabul's presidential palace.

Chicagopedia

fingerprints / FING guhr PRINTZ / n. Leaving your fingerprints behind at a crime scene started spelling big trouble for criminals in 1911, when Thomas Jennings -- in a Cook County court -- became the first person in U.S. history to be convicted …

Trends of Abnormal Birthweight among Full-term Infants in Newfoundland and Labrador

ABSTRACT

Objectives: The objective of this study was to investigate whether any observed trends in birthweight are accompanied by changes in maternal socio-demographic characteristics, including age, marital status, and education.

Methods: We conducted a population-based study of term singletons born in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, between 1992 and 2005 (N=66,638). Large-sample significance tests for two population proportions were used to test whether differences in mean birthweight, the proportion of low and high birthweight infants, and differences in maternal socio-demographic characteristics between 1992-95 and 2002-05 were statistically significant. Chi-square …

Mars lander prepares for 3-month digging mission

NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander spent its first full day in the Martian arctic plains checking its instruments in preparation for an ambitious digging mission to study whether the site could have once been habitable.

The three-legged lander set down Sunday in relatively flat terrain covered by fissures outlining polygon shapes. The geometric cracks are likely caused by the repeated freezing and thawing of buried ice.

Images beamed back late Monday showed the elbow joint of Phoenix's trench-digging robotic arm still partly covered by a protective sheath. The sheath was supposed to fully unwrap after landing.

Mission scientists downplayed the problem, …

Advertisers looking for more horsepower

It's no secret. NASCAR is already hot. Numerous high-profilesponsors have discovered the sport has an intensely loyal and --thanks to an increasingly high profile presence on television --growing fan base that is an ideal target for many types ofadvertisers.

But months ago, Wally Hayward, CEO of Relay Sports and EventMarketing in Chicago, was already looking beyond NASCAR to hook upwith the next big thing in sports sponsorship. And Hayward thinks hehas found it in the somewhat unlikely arenas where rodeo cowboys andbull riders bravely strut their stuff.

"Rodeo and bull-riding fans are passionate about those sports, andthe audiences are as All-American as they come," …

James Cotton blows harmonica at Blues Festival

Among the legendary blues specialists and entertainers appearing at the 19th Annual Blues Festival honoring Muddy Waters, Thursday, May 30 to Sunday, June 2 will be James Cotton and his Five-Star Band.

Cotton is scheduled to perform at 7:25 p.m. Friday, May 31 following the performance of Muddy Waters Alumni Association at 6 p.m. featuring Pinetop Perkins, Carey Bell, Luther Johnson, John Primer, Willie Smith and Calvin "Fuzzy" Jones.

Climaxing the evening when Cotton plays will be Bo Diddley at 8:40 p.m. who will be reunited with Billy Boy Arnold, Jody Williams, Clifton James, Ken Saydak and Robert Stroger.

Legendary harpist Cotton with the assistance of producer …

Phelps returns to Michigan, his 2nd home

Olympic swim star Michael Phelps returned to the University of Michigan, his home for four years before the Beijing Games.

"It feels good to be back," he said Saturday. "It feels good to be back in the maize and blue."

Phelps was honored with other Olympians with ties to the school before Saturday's football game against Wisconsin. He sported a Wolverines football jersey with his name and No. 8, representing the record-setting gold medals he won last month.

Phelps lived and trained in Ann Arbor after emerging as a star at the Athens Games in 2004 and returned to campus for the first time this week since leaving for workouts June …

Lyons beats Oak Park as Kowalski fans 13

Scott Kowalski struck out 13 and top-ranked Lyons scored eightruns in the first two innings on its way to an 11-5 victory overvisiting Oak Park on Tuesday.

The win completed a three-game sweep for Lyons (12-2, 8-1) againstits West Suburban Silver rivals.

Lyons had homers from Kevin Diete, Matt Bolt and Brian Hochberg,while Paul Coglianese homered for Oak Park (6-8, 2-4).

This sweep puts us in great shape in the conference and puts OakPark in a deep hole," said Kowalski, who struck out seven of thefirst 10 batters and allowed only one earned run.

*Minooka defeated host Morris 12-5 in the Suburban Prairie Whiteopener for both teams. Minooka (11-4, 1-0) has …

Bulgaria to host WTA Tournament of Champions

LONDON (AP) — The WTA says the Tournament of Champions will move from Bali to a new venue in Sofia, Bulgaria from 2012.

The tournament features the six highest-ranked players who have won a title during the year, but have not qualified for the end-of-season WTA Championships.

Bali will host the event for the last time Nov. 2-6 this year before it moves to the Arena Sofia for three years from 2012. The venue will be opened in July.

Bulgaria hasn't hosted a WTA tournament for 22 years.

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Somali pirates hijack German-owned ship

A U.S. Navy spokesman says Somali pirates have hijacked a German-owned ship with its 11 Romanian crew members in the Gulf of Aden.

Lt. Nate Christensen, a spokesman for the Bahrain-based U.S. 5th Fleet, says the ship was seized Tuesday afternoon in an area 75 miles (120 kilometers) south of Yemen.

The new seizure brings to 19 the number of ships being held by Somali pirates.

Andrew Mwangura of the East African Seafarers Assistance Program said Wednesday the crew are unhurt.

Piracy has become perhaps the biggest money-maker in Somalia because the pirates almost always get paid.

Their wealth is all the more shocking in light of Somalia's deep poverty. There has been no effective central government in nearly 20 years, plunging the arid country into chaos.

Stress Taking Toll on Lawyers // More Attorneys Finding Reality No `L.A. Law'

Two and a half years ago George Bullwinkel decided to drop out ofhis law firm and set up shop with four other attorneys. All agreedto submit to a full psychological work-up first.

"We just wanted to be sure each person selected for this groupwas capable of functioning as a full member of the team and did notcarry any hidden baggage," Bullwinkel explains.

Conducting the interviews was psychologist Paul Bomrad, a lawfirm and business management consultant who has worked with a numberof Chicago offices.

"Law firms are cutting back these days and are morediscriminating on who they take on board and elevate to partnershipstatus. And obviously, stress is involved," says Bomrad.

Despite a popular image of stability and authority - perpetuatedby such TV shows as "L.A. Law" and "Law and Order" - lawyers have toacknowledge that they, like their clients, are vulnerable toemotional difficulties.

The figures tell the story.

The American Bar Association estimates that 20 percent of thenation's 700,000 lawyers are chemically dependent.

Recent studies by Johns Hopkins University and the WashingtonState Bar Association showed lawyers were three times more likely tobe depressed than the general population.

Bar officials say Illinois attorneys fit the national profileand are calling on professionals for psychological support.

Bomrad is just one consultant in a burgeoning new field helpinglawyers and firms deal with psychodynamic issues.

The problems can extend beyond an individual attorney. If alawyer is a substance abuser or depressed or worried about personalconflicts, he or she may not give full attention to a practice.

Stress-related problems "took a huge amount of emotional energyand distracted the firm from what it should be doing," saidadministrator Peter Fritts of the firm Wildman, Harrold, Allen &Dixon which now provides its 185 lawyers with referrals to counselorsin an Employee Assistance Program.

Mary Robinson, administrator of the Illinois AttorneyRegistration and Disciplinary Commission, which last yearinvestigated 5,969 complaints against attorneys, says an attorney'semotional well being "can affect consumers, and they don't have anyway of checking things out themselves."

Incompetence and neglect are the two biggest complaints receivedby the commission. Robinson said investigators often find a lawyeris not just neglecting a case "but paralyzed. It is not alwayspossible to identify the precise cause, but depression and stressare contributing factors." Joel Henning is an attorney andmanagement consultant who counsels law firms on how to handle issuessuch as attorney burnout, partners selection, compensation andpreventing a partner from bolting with clients.

"I often find myself playing a role that is not unlike marriagecounseling," says Henning. "The same pathology arises out ofcircumstances in a law practice."

One firm has become so dependent on Henning's services, it willnot hold an executive committee meeting without him present.

When people who are together every day won't or can't talk toeach other about important things, Henning says, tension builds.

"Very often this leads to burnout and a decline in productivity.Consequently, it means that as a result of psychological problems,the law firm is often exposed to malpractice risk," Henning says.

Among strategies developed in the last few years by the legalprofession are: The nonprofit Lawyers Assistance Program has a crisis Hotline(800-LAP-1233), and offers confidential referrals to attorneysdependent on alcohol or drugs. An Illinois State Bar Association subcommittee is studying theextent of depression and suicide among lawyers and the need for aconfidential assistance program. Several firms have hired psychological consultants for advice oninterpersonal relations or management strategy. At least a half-dozen Chicago law firms offer confidential referralsto mental health professionals through Employee Assistance Programs. The Northwest Suburban Bar Association supports a lawyer self-helpgroup that discusses how to handle psychological pressures. Lawyersfor Lawyers meets monthly in Arlington Heights to talk about mutualfrustrations.

"The whole drive toward objectivity tends to isolate an attorneyand bleed into his personal life if it is not controlled," saysBenjamin Sells, a lawyer who left the Jenner & Block law firm lastyear to become a psychotherapist. His patients are mostly lawyers.

"The mind-set of the way you are trained to think as a lawyercan be distancing and detaching," says Sells.

The state bar panel is studying counseling programs offered byother states to find ways to help lawyers deal with emotionaldifficulties.

"The potential for depression, suicide and other severeemotional problems in the legal profession should be addressed by theorganized bar," says Chairman Robert Kane. "Members should beprovided avenues to seek help in a confidential, compassionatemanner."

Nominees Celebrate on Eve of Emmy Awards

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. - In their last hours as neither winners nor losers, Emmy nominees gathered to celebrate being in contention for American television's highest honor - and to get free stuff.

On Friday, the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences hosted a party honoring nominees for Sunday's 59th Primetime Emmy Awards, which will air on Fox.

Denis Leary, who is up for lead actor in a drama series for "Rescue Me," said the select group of actors showed up to receive certification that they were nominees.

"But no, really, the reason everybody's here: You get a swag bag," he told The Associated Press, apparently only half-joking. "That's why I'm here ... There's enough stuff in there - there's probably eight or nine things - that my wife gets something, and then we have something that we spread around with the relatives. So everybody's happy at the end."

Leary said he's rooting for James Gandolfini, star of the "The Sopranos."

"They should give him an Emmy that's even bigger than him, a chocolate Emmy that he can eat," Leary said. "I just think he's the greatest character in the history of television."

The reception at the Wolfgang Puck restaurant in the Pacific Design Center also included supporting-actress nominees Sandra Oh ("Grey's Anatomy") and Holland Taylor ("Two and a Half Men"). Supporting-actor nominees T.R. Knight ("Grey's Anatomy"), Neil Patrick Harris ("How I Met Your Mother"), August Schellenberg ("Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee") and Jon Cryer ("Two and a Half Men") showed up, too.

Cryer revealed that he and fellow nominee Felicity Huffman (lead actress in a comedy series, "Desperate Housewives") would be participating in a 22.5-mile triathlon Sunday before walking down the red carpet at the Shrine Auditorium. He expected endorphins to help keep him calm on Emmy night.

Last year, Cryer said he was nervous as a first-time nominee.

"I didn't know how I was supposed to act," he said. "I would just sort of sit around, going, 'Am I supposed to be sitting here? What's going on? Is there something we're supposed to be doing now?'"

Oscar winner Anna Paquin ("The Piano") said she was just too busy to fret about her Emmy nod as supporting actress in "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee."

"I'm about to start shooting a new series for HBO," Paquin said. "So that's really distracting me from feeling nervous about Sunday night."

Last year's lead-actress drama winner Mariska Hargitay ("SVU") said her previous Emmy and a new baby helped keep the event in perspective. After a baby "decisions come so much easier," she said.

"This year, it was so easy," she said. "I tried on this dress. It was the first dress I tried on, and, I said, 'I'm done.'"

Finding red-carpet couture wasn't quite as easy for Conchata Ferrell (supporting actress, "Two and Half Men").

"Particularly for a woman my size, it's really very difficult to find anything," she said. "There's no designer knocking on my door, going, 'Oh, here. Wear this,' she said. Ferrell eventually went to the set's costume designer, Mary T. Quigley, who came up with a silver sparkling number.

For Masi Oka (supporting actor, "Heroes") clothes weren't the problem for Emmy night. Finding a date was.

Even his own mother turned him down, choosing to stay home in Japan.

"My mom is actually very superstitious," he said. "She tells me every time she's in Japan, she gets good news, like 'I got nominated for a Golden Globe,' or 'I got nominated for an Emmy.'

"Anytime she's in the states, she gets bad news, like, 'I want to be an actor.'"

Sales of existing US homes fall 1 percent in April, eighth drop in past 9 months

Sales of existing homes in the U.S. fell for the eighth time in the past nine months, with the backlog of unsold single-family homes rising to the highest level in more than two decades.

The National Association of Realtors said that existing home sales dropped by 1 percent to 4.89 million units, matching the all-time low set in January. These records go back to 1999.

The median price for an existing home dropped 8 percent, compared with a year ago, to $202,300 (euro128,510). Analysts predicted further price declines given the huge backlog of unsold single-family homes, which rose in April to 10.7 months supply at the current sales pace, the highest inventory level since June 1985.

The April sales drop was slightly smaller than had been expected. The housing industry is being battered by a prolonged slump that has seen sales and prices decline and mortgage foreclosures soar, the aftermath of a five-year housing boom.

Sales were down the most in the Midwest, a drop of 6 percent, followed by a 4.4 percent decline in the Northeast. Sales were up 6.4 percent in the West, a region of the country where prices fell by the sharpest amount, and were unchanged in the South.

Even with the weak results for April, Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors, said he saw reasons for optimism for the second half of this year as more types of mortgages become available as industry and the government respond to a severe credit crunch that began last August.

"I would encourage buyers who were disappointed by poor mortgage options to take another look at the market because the lending changes are significant," he said.

However, other economists were not as optimistic about a rebound in sales, contending that the continued drop in prices was keeping potential buyers sitting on the fence, waiting for prices to fall further.

"With prices collapsing, the incentive not to buy a home is increasing by the week, and with inventory showing no sign of improvement, prices will keep falling," predicted Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.

The severe slump in housing and the related credit crunch, which has resulted in multibillion-dollar losses at some of the nation's largest financial institutions, has depressed growth and raised worries about a recession.

However, the Bush administration believes that the 130 million economic stimulus payments being sent out currently will help keep the country out of a full-blown recession.

Where to call for assistance resolving landlord-tenant issues

Excrement floating in the basement, rats running through thebedrooms, sewer water flowing down walls: these are some of thehighlights featured in the Sun-Times continuing series on Chicagoslumlords. While landlords play peek-a-boo with inspectors and thecourts, tenants remain at jeopardy, waiting for help and justice.

For most tenants in Chicago, and for most repair and maintenanceproblems, tenants can take immediate action on their own to makefixes at the landlord's expense, reduce the rent, or break the leaseand leave.

The Chicago Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance allowstenants to divert $500 of their monthly rent, or half the rent ifthey pay more $1,000 a month, toward correcting minor problems. Formajor problems, diminishing rents equal to the reduced market valueof the unit is allowed, usually between 25 and 50 percent. Majorproblems also are grounds for outright termination.

Tenants are required to provide the landlord a written notice ofwhat conditions exist, and inform the landlord of what actions thetenant intends to take. Except in an emergency, the landlord must begiven 14 days to cure the problem. After that, the tenant can makethe repairs and deduct, or start reducing the rent next time it isdue, or move out within two weeks. If a landlord retaliates bylocking out a complaining tenant, the landlord is subject to arrest.Evicting or canceling a lease is also prohibit if based on tenantcomplaints.

There is plenty of free help and advice for tenants.

* For building inspectors, call 311.

* For lock-outs, call 911 and refer to Special Order 93-12.

* For a list of not-for-profit groups providing help to landlordsand tenants, call the city's Rents Right automated information line,(312) 742-7368

* Local neighbor groups across Chicago, many funded by the city,work with tenants, aldermanic offices, building inspectors and thecourts to enforce code violations corrections. Check with the localalderman's office for the closest group.

* The Metropolitan Tenants Organization has pamphlets, sampleletters, and tenants' rights advice for Chicago residents. (773) 292-4988.

* For qualifying low-income tenants Legal Assistance Foundation,(312) 341-1070, and Lawyers Committee for Better Housing, (312) 347-7600 might be able to help.

* The RADR program of the Center for Conflict Resolution providesfree mediation, but no legal information, when tenants and landlordsare willing to negotiate (312) 922-6464.

* Complaints about landlords who hold real estate licenses can bemade to the State Office of Banking and Real Estate, (312) 793-3000.

Write mediator Ed Sacks at Apartment Watch, Homelife, Chicago Sun-Times, 401 N. Wabash, Chicago 60611, or via e-mail atedsacks@suntimes mail.com.

Mets get back Beltran, wait on Reyes

Manager Jerry Manuel had a spark in his step as he came to the ballpark Thursday, planning to write out the New York Mets' lineup card with both Carlos Beltran and Jose Reyes in it for the first time in more than a year.

"You go through the break and you're so anxious to write that lineup," Manuel said before playing the San Francisco Giants. "I couldn't wait to get here to see what happens."

What happened was that Reyes still felt some pain on his sore right side and would have to be scratched. Manuel still gets the chance to enjoy the 2010 debut of Beltran, who returned from offseason surgery on his right knee.

Beltran batted cleanup and played center field. The Mets are hoping he can spark their slumping offense in the second half. New York entered the second half 48-40 and in second place in the NL East, four games behind Atlanta.

"I'm not a savior," Beltran said. "I'm just going to come here and play the game hard and do my job like I had done in the past. I believe with everyone in the lineup, and adding myself, I believe I can help this team."

The Mets are hoping to get Reyes back at shortstop soon as well. They have not had both stars in the lineup together since last May 20 in Los Angeles. Reyes missed the rest of last season with a hamstring injury and Beltran missed 2 1/2 months with a bone bruise on his right knee.

Reyes hurt his oblique on June 30 while taking batting practice before a game against the Florida Marlins in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Reyes returned on July 6, but the injury flared up on a play in the field last Saturday against Atlanta.

Reyes missed the All-Star game, but was expected to be fully healed with the three-day break. But he still feels some pain in his side and has not resumed baseball activities.

"I still feel something there," he said. "It's getting better, but slow. The doctors say they don't want to take a chance. They say when you're pain free you can get back on the field."

Beltran is fully recovered. The five-time All-Star played 14 games on a rehab assignment with Class-A St. Lucie before rejoining his teammates last Sunday in New York before the All-Star break.

He took the three-day break to rest up and said Thursday felt just like opening day.

"For me it is," he said. "After being out for so long and not being able to be with the guys, it was tough. But at the same time, I felt all the sacrifice that I did in Port St. Lucie and rehabbing, that's paying off."

Beltran is in the sixth season of a $119 million, seven-year contract. He was limited to 81 games last season because of a painful bone bruise. He had arthroscopic surgery Jan. 13 in Colorado to clean out the arthritic area of his right knee.

The 33-year-old Beltran batted .367 (18 for 49) with no homers and five RBIs for St. Lucie. He had five doubles and scored five runs, spending time in center field and at designated hitter.

Index fund is here to stay

Way back in 1978, in the third annual report of Vanguard IndexTrust, the first index fund, I used a quotation from Englishlexicographer Samuel Johnson to make a point: "It was the triumph ofhope over experience." With his inimitable wit, Dr. Johnson wasspeaking of a man who married for the second time; I was speaking ofa poll of pension managers taken by Institutional Investor. Just 17percent of these money management professionals, the magazinereported, had outpaced the Standard & Poor's 500 Index during theprevious decade, but fully 95 percent expected to outpace the indexin the coming decade.

In the years that followed, what we witnessed was quite thereverse: "the triumph of experience over hope." The hope of beatingthe index was dashed; the hard experience that had characterized somany professional managers before 1978 has repeated itself over andover. The index has outpaced 79 percent of all managers of equitymutual funds that survived the 20 years since then. As 1995 began, Ihad the temerity to publish a booklet titled The Triumph of Indexing,describing both the relative performance of the Standard & Poor's 500Index and the growing acceptance of index mutual finds by theinvesting public, a trend that I had awaited for so long.

The timing of the booklet, as it turned out, was auspicious.Since its publication, the word "triumph" has hardly done justice tothe colossal success that index funds have enjoyed. On theperformance front, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, given its biastoward stocks with large market capitalizations, has outpaced astunning 96 percent of all actively managed equity funds. The morerepresentative all- market Wilshire 5000 Equity Index has outpaced 86percent of those funds, also an imposing performance. On theacceptance front, assets of index mutual funds have risen more thansixfold, from $30 billion to some $200 billion.Index mutual funds, which accounted for only 3 percent of equityfund assets in 1995, represented 6.4 percent just three years later.With estimated cash inflow of $50 billion in 1998, index fund flowswere equal to 25 percent - fully one-fourth - of total equity fundcash flow. Index funds have become the fastest growing segment ofthe entire mutual fund industry.The index fund is a most unlikely hero for the typical investor.It is no more (nor less) than a broadly diversified portfolio,typically run at rock-bottom cost, without the putative benefit of abrilliant, resourceful and highly skilled portfolio manager. Theindex fund simply buys and holds the securities in a particularindex, in proportion to their weight in the index. The concept issimplicity writ large. . . .But since the creation of the first index mutual fund in 1975,based on the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, the concept hasemerged triumphant. . . . I am, if possible, a stronger beliver inthe concept today than I was when I created that fund.After a slow start, the concept has not only steadily gainedacceptance by investors but has come to play a dominant role in theevaluation of traditional, actively managed mutual funds. The indexfund, arguably, is now the standard that dominates the debates aboutinvestment strategy, asset allocation and fund selection. When Ifirst looked at the record in 1975, the S&P 500 Index hadoutperformed the average actively managed mutual fund by about 1.6percentage points per year during the prior 25 years. Updating thestatistics today, its long-term record reflects an annual advantageof 1.3 percent, although in the past 15 years the margin has swelledto 4.0 percent annually. . . .I fully recognize that during the past 15 years the large-capitalization stocks that dominate the S&P 500 Index have led theoverall market by a solid margin. I would emphasize that theaccelerating advantage of the S&P 500 Index may well recede, and mayeven become a shortfall during interim future periods when stockswith smaller market caps return to favor. But its margins ofsuperiority are nonetheless impressive, and surely undergird thepowerful endorsement that index funds have received from the academiccommunity and the financial media, from many astute investmentadvisers and from the investing public. Nearly all of the major no-load fund complexes have now begun to offer index funds - and notonly index funds modeled on the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock PriceIndex. Even the major stock brokerage firms are offering funds on ano-load basis, as is virtually essential. However, they make theirindex funds available only in investment management accounts, whichentail, to whatever avail, an advisory fee that is charged directlyto the client. I fear that this trend is less the result ofenlightenment than of self-interest. Nonbelievers have been dragged- kicking and screaming - into the fray to meet a public demand thatis now palpable. The need for traditional fund managers to fill outtheir product line has outweighed their resistance to accepting themarkedly lower fees that index funds must carry. . . .To state what must by now be obvious, the index fund is here tostay. What began as a controversial idea, bereft of public demand in1975, has come to represent the standard of investment return - butthe apparently unreachable star - for the mutual fund industry. Atlong last, we are witnessing the triumph of experience over hope.Actual experience has reflected the triumph of passively managedindex funds over actively managed funds. Common sense has carriedthe day. In time, index funds will change the very fabric and natureof the mutual fund industry.Excerpted from Common Sense on Mutual Funds: New Imperatives forthe Intelligent Investor. Copyright 1999 by John C. Bogle.Excerpted with permission of the publisher John Wiley & Sons Inc. Toorder a copy of this work call 1-800-CALL WILEY or visit the WileyWeb site at www.wiley.com.

Pucinski to Dems: no refund // Party leader calls for resignation, restitution

Cook County Commissioner Calvin Sutker called Friday for CircuitCourt Clerk Aurelia Pucinski to resign her post and give back anycampaign donations raised from Democrats, in the strongest reactionyet to her Republican conversion.

Sutker said Pucinski betrayed Democratic leaders and voters whoelected her when she decided this week to switch parties to run forthe same office he is seeking - County Board president.

"I would hope that the people would see the crassness of thismove, the cynicism of this move, the opportunism of this move," saidSutker, who is opposing incumbent John Stroger for the Democraticnomination.Pucinski said through a spokesman that she will not resign anddoes not intend to return any campaign contributions. However, thespokesman said Pucinski intends to "set aside" the $75,000 currentlyin her campaign fund and will not use it in her pursuit of the CountyBoard presidency.Stroger continued to take a softer approach than Sutker, sayingthat while he is disappointed by Pucinski's party switch, it is herright.Stepping aside would be the "honorable thing for her to do,"Sutker said during the taping of WBBM-AM's "At Issue" program. Hecited the example of U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas, who resigned as aDemocratic congressman to switch parties and then successfullyregained his seat as a Republican."She won it as a Democrat. She was funded as a Democrat. Shewas from a Democratic family," Sutker said of Pucinski's county post.He said Pucinski should provide restitution to all Democrats whocontributed to her 1996 re-election campaign or who have given moneyto her since then."While she was negotiating and initiating a relationship withthe Republican Party, she was seeking Democratic money. I find thatcrass," Sutker said.He said she could start with a $150 donation he gave her threemonths ago."I never dreamed that money would come back and I would see itagain used by her in a candidacy against me for the presidency of theCounty Board in November of 1998, but it might well do that," Sutkersaid.Sutker, a longtime Pucinski supporter, said he was moredisappointed and embarrassed than angry about her switch.The 74-year-old Skokie Democrat traces his current estrangementfrom Stroger to his decision four years ago to back Pucinski overStroger for the board presidency. Sutker also said he wasinfluential as state Democratic chairman in Pucinski's 1986 slatingfor secretary of state, a primary race she lost to a follower ofpolitical extremist Lyndon LaRouche."I've spent a lot of time, effort and funds on her behalf," saidSutker, who is the Niles Township Democratic committeeman.Most Democratic leaders have been cautious in their commentsabout Pucinski, whose office employs many Democratic patronageemployees. Even if she loses the County Board campaign, her term asCircuit Court clerk will not conclude until after the 2000 election.Sutker said that if Pucinski had wanted to move up, she shouldhave run for statewide office again next year as a Democrat."At the same time she was flirting with the Republicans, sherejected the opportunity to be a statewide candidate," Sutker said.Pucinski was first elected to the clerk's job in 1988. Shepreviously had served as a commissioner of what is now theMetropolitan Water Reclamation District.

Monday, 12 March 2012

Alvis, Hayes (Julian)

Alvis, Hayes (Julian)

Alvis, Hayes (Julian), jazz tuba player, string bassist; b. Chicago, May 1, 1907; d. N.Y., Dec. 29, 1972. Originally a drummer, Alvis played in The Chicago Defender Boys' Band. He played drums and tuba with Jelly Roll Morton on tour dates from 1927 to early 1928, then concentrated mainly on tuba, gigging with many bands in Chicago, then with Earl Hines from late 1928 to 1930. Switching to string bass, Alvis went to N.Y. with Jimmie Noone in the spring of 1931. He worked with The Mills Blue Rhythm Band from 1931 until early 1935 when he joined Duke Ellington (sharing bass duties with Billy Taylor). Alvis left Ellington's band in spring 1938 and formed a short-lived band with Freddy Jenkins. From October 1938 until March 1939 he worked in N.Y. with the "Blackbirds Show" He joined Benny Carter's Big Band at the Savoy in March 1939 and worked with Joe Sullivan from November 1940. During the following spring, Alvis played with Bobby Burnet's band in N.Y. He then joined The Louis Armstrong Orchestra until February 1942, when he joined The N.B.C. Orchestra. After army service from 1943 until 1945, he worked with The Gene Fields Trio and LeRoy Tibbs. During 1946–47 he played with The Dave Martin Trio and in Harry Dial's Combo; he then spent a long spell as house musician at Cafe Society, N.Y. (From 1940 he was also active in running his own millinery business in New York.) During the 1950s, Alvis was active as a freelancer in N.Y., worked for a spell in Boston with Joe Thomas (1952), and took part in Fletcher Henderson reunion sessions in the summer of 1957. Alvis continued regular playing in the 1960s, including regular work with singer Dionne Warwick.

—John Chilton/Lewis Porter

Arnie Duncan backs teacher tuition plan

Now that the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) has approved a new four-year contract, CPS/CEO Arne Duncan Thursday endorsed a proposed plan where the corporate community would reimburse teachers who upgraded their skills.

It was an idea promoted by CPS Officer James Deanes during an interview on WVON's Cliff Kelley show.

Deanes called on Chicago's corporate community to help finance a teacher reimbursement plan to serve as an incentive for instructors to either continue their education or fine-tune their skills.

Duncan made his remarks during a press conference held at Gallery 37, 72 E. Randolph, where, joined by Chicago Parks District Gen. Supt. David Doig, Nancy Wachs, executive director of After School Matters, Jerry Siegel, president/CEO of the Midway Moving & Storage, Renae Ogletree, director of the Youth Division for the Department of Human Services, Gil Walker from CHA, he endorsed the city of Chicago's "Asks Teens to `Holla Back'" program that provides after school programs, Duncan said while the CPS "has a pool of money" to help teachers improve their education, it isn't across the board.

Duncan said "there's common interest" in working with the corporate community "and we should be working together with the teachers to increase that sum ($4 million) of money.

"There is no reason why we can't increase that," Duncan said. "Whether that is done by the corporate side or is part of the common legislative agenda where you go to Springfield and ask for some state help in these area" it should be done.

"There is huge interests in having the most educated work forcepossible," he said. "We have an aging workforce, and these younger generation of teachers coming in who're energetic and may want to get their Master's or Ph.D., and we need to pull out all of those stops to work together to better support them."

Duncan said he wants to work with the CTU to "improve the working conditions of our teachers" and said lobbying the corporate community, which has a vested interest in helping to develop a better skilled jobs bank, is the way to go.

But, he, Mayor Daley, Alds. Manuel Flores (1st), Toni Preckwinkle (4th), Freddrenna M. Lyle (6th), Todd H. Stroger (8th), and Ed H. Smith (28th) praised the teachers for approving their contract which averted a strike.

The CTU voted 15,104 (54 percent) in favor of the contract and 12,599 against it. Daley said their actions clearly sent a message that "our children and their education comes first. It was also a vote of thanks to our taxpayers who the schools."

Duncan told the Chicago Defender, "We want to make sure our teachers feel appreciated because all too often our teacgers feel unappreciated and siarespected. I challenge the media to focus on some of the teachers who are doing a good job," said Duncan praising the Chicago Defender's Bud Billiken Section which highlights teachers and students.

CTU President Deborah Lynch said: "While we are proud of the gains we have made in this contract, the largest salary increases in ten-years, a commitment to lower class sizes in kindergarten and first grade, and additional compensation for paraprofessionals and veteran teachers...we will continue to demand and fight for the respect, payment and benefits that teachers deserve."

Article copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Kinetic movement ; Video game consoles are changing the way humans interact with digital devices.

So you bought yourself that fancy high-definition LED flat paneldisplay this Diwali. Sales were so good that direct-to-homesatellite TV providers ran short of high-definition set-top boxes.Now that you have your fancy new TV, how about buying a video gameconsole to go with it?

You might worry that your children might spend far too much timein front of a console and become digital zombies. We do not have asolution, other than to say that a game console is not just forchildren - most of the better game titles today are aimed at anolder audience.

The second worry you might have is that by spending time prettymuch motionless in front of a television, your physical well-beingwill suffer. But this is an unwarranted worry with the latestgeneration of consoles. The Nintendo Wii console has brought about amassive change in the way gamers interact with consoles. While someof the most extreme gamers may still prefer the old joypad or playgames on a computer using a keyboard and mouse, casual gamers haveflocked to the Wii in droves thanks to the ease of playing games onthat console. Instead of pressing buttons and triggers, gamers haveto wave the Wii's controller (the "Wiimote") around.

The spectacular success of Wii has forced the other two gameconsoles in the market to copy the Wii's strategy. Sony has modifiedits PlayStation3 with the 'Eye' camera and 'Move' controller, whichcome as an add-on pack for the console at Rs 3,650 though standalonecontrollers are not yet available. However, while Sony hasreplicated the Wii, Microsoft has taken the concept a lot furtherwith the Kinect.

Why so? Simply because Kinect does away with the controllercompletely, you wave your hands or jump around, the camera capturesthat motion and translates it into action on-screen. While Microsofthas commercialised it, the underlying technology was developed bythe Israeli military-industrial complex and further developed byIsraeli company PrimeSense. The Kinect will be available in Indiasoon at around Rs 8,000 as an add-on to any Xbox 360 console.

The rapid advances in interface technology over the past three-four years have transformed the way we use devices. The adaptationof the touch interface has changed the way we use mobile phones andmade Steve Jobs an icon for technology acolytes. The Wii has helpedNintendo, which has far less money than both Microsoft and Sony, winthe first part of the current-generation console war.

More importantly, Apple's success is making a variety ofmanufacturers adopt its touch technology as the primary interfacefor mobile devices and tablets. Microsoft, which is now rarelyspoken about in the same breath as Apple as a technology innovator,could lead the transformation of how we interact with larger screensin the future.

Little Rock's lessons need to be relearned

Ernest Green has come a long way since 1957, when he was one ofnine students who integrated Central High School in Little Rock,Ark., with the help of the National Guard.

Today, Green is the managing director of public finance for LehmanBrothers in Washington, D.C., quite a feat for a young man who whoonce lived with the "petty inconveniences" of the segregated South.

After graduating from Central High, he earned a bachelor's insocial science and a master's degree in sociology from Michigan StateUniversity. Last year, the "Little Rock Nine" were awardedCongressional Gold Medals for enduring the chaos surrounding theintegration of Central High.

He was in Chicago on Wednesday to keynote a fund-raiser for"Facing History and Ourselves," a nonprofit organization that helpsteachers develop a history curriculum that teaches students theconsequences of anti-Semitism, racism and violence.

While I was talking with Green, local civil rights leaders wereleading a march from a worn-down, predominantly African-American andLatino school on the Southwest Side to the modernized Cook CountyJuvenile Detention Center to highlight the state's mixed-uppriorities.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson and about 1,000 marchers used theanniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination tobring attention to what Jackson calls "the gap of embarrassment."

And while all this marching was going on, Chicago police wereinvestigating whether a white Columbia College supervisor was avictim of a hate crime when a black teenager attacked him with a golfclub.

These are indeed puzzling times.

Green, a living legend from the South, comes to a northern citywhere the majority of public schools still are segregated to tell hisstory, hoping that it will encourage students to choose tolerance.

At the same time, Jackson and his followers are trying to raisepublic awareness of a nagging issue that should have been resolved in1954 when the Supreme Court ruling in Brown vs. Board of Education ofTopeka outlawed segregation.

And a black teenager, most likely a product of the school systemthat Jackson is trying to improve, takes out his frustration on awhite citizen who lives in one of the most integrated areas of thecity.

It makes me wonder whether the stand made by Green and hisclassmates made much of a difference.

Unfortunately, the hate remains with us, too. Only now hate is nota white thing. Last year in Chicago, nearly as many hate crimes werecommitted by blacks, 20, as were committed by whites, 22.

"Yes, (integration) was worth it," Green told me with a convincingtwinkle in his eye. "It expanded our opportunities and expanded ourbeliefs and the belief of other African- American children that theycould compete and that they ought to have a broader view of theworld.

"We have to breathe a little life in these decisions. These werereally choices that were made by ordinary people," Green said.

"The tragedy is not getting more young people to believe that theycan control their own destiny and that they can take advantage oftheir environment and widen their options for themselves and theirfamilies for the future."

Clearly, this message is as important today as it was 42 yearsago. But how many people are willing to update this message and carryit to the African-American youths who harbor hatred against whitesbecause of perceived and real discrimination that is still part ofour society?

According to police reports, the teenager who attacked ChristopherKerr, 25, as he walked to his art studio on the South Side, shouted:"You're white and don't belong here," before striking him with a golfclub.

Kerr now says he will move his art studio to the North Side.

The attack, which police suspect is a hate crime, was prompted bythe same thing that Green faced years ago as he walked into CentralHigh School and is the one thing that laws alone cannot eliminate.

Overcoming such hate took courage, and it took people standing upwith Green and his classmates in the face of racial hatred.

Who will stand up for someone like Kerr?

E-mail: marym@suntimes.com

Pursuers are no match for fugitive wallaby

It sounds like the beginning of a bad joke - "How do you catch awallaby?"

But it was very real Wednesday, as the Missing Marsupial ofLemont led pursuers on a merry chase around the Cog Hill golf coursebefore disappearing near the 15th hole for another day of freedom.

The animal, resembling a small kangaroo, has been loose in thesouthwest suburb since Sunday, when it leaped over a fence at anestate run by Paul Marchetti and his brothers, owners of the Como Innin Chicago.

Passersby spotted the wallaby at Cog Hill about 10:30 a.m. Theysummoned golf course personnel, who called Marchetti, who arrivedwith an assistant, and the group pursued the it over the back nine.

Capture seemed imminent at one point, but the wallaby leapedbetween the grasping hands of two men and escaped. It was last seenheading toward St. Mary's Seminary, 1400 Main St., Lemont.

Police have been "bombarded with calls" reporting sightings ofthe animal, which is not dangerous, but could kick or scratch ifprovoked.

Marchetti said he had no idea how to catch the bounding beast.

"It's very fast; gonna be tough to catch," he said, adding thathe hoped the wallaby, used to a rich diet of guinea pig chow, mightweaken after a few days and be easier to subdue.

Though they originate in Australia, wallabies are notparticularly rare or valuable - they are raised as nearby as Indianaas exotic pets. Nor is there great sentimental value attached tothis particular wallaby: Marchetti, who has a dozen llamas, a cameland several African pygmy goats and miniature horses, has not evennamed the beast.

"I could replace him," Marchetti said, forgetting that thewallaby is a she. "But I'd like not to have to."

Aboriginal leaders welcome new Australian government's acknowledgment, apology

Aborigines have long been fringe-dwellers of Australian society, but will take center stage when Parliament resumes with a historic ceremony to acknowledge the nation's capital is built on their land. The government also plans to apologize for past injustices.

An Aboriginal elder, Matilda House, will welcome lawmakers on Feb. 12 to Parliament House and surrounding land that was inhabited by her Ngunnawal tribe before British settlers came in the 19th century.

"I think it's just a marvelous thing," House said Thursday of the inclusion of traditional owners for the first time in Parliament's 107-year history.

House, who was born in an Outback Aboriginal reserve and spent her adolescence in a harsh Sydney reform school, has revealed little about plans for the welcome ceremony.

She has suggested a low-key affair and said there will be no ceremonial dancing.

The ceremony underscores the new government's ambition to end mainstream Australia's neglect of Aborigines, who are the nation's poorest minority group and die an average of 17 years younger than other Australians.

"This welcome will carry national significance in symbolizing a future of respect and partnership with indigenous people," Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin said in a statement.

The Ngunnawal have no official title over the national capital, Canberra, or its surroundings. Europeans cleared the land without a treaty with the indigenous inhabitants, and the city was founded in 1913.

The first act of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's new government will be to ask Parliament on Feb. 13 to pass a motion apologizing for past policies of taking mostly mixed-race children from Aboriginal mothers to try to make them grow up like white Australians.

The government plans to fly 70 of these people, members of the so-called "stolen generations" _ some of whom live in dilapidated Outback camps or on the outskirts of cities _ to witness the event in Canberra, said Barbara Livesey, chief executive of Reconciliation Australia. The agency is tasked with bringing black and white Australians together.

A national inquiry into the past assimilation policies found in 1997 that many children taken from their families suffered long-term psychological effects stemming from the loss of family and culture, and recommended that Parliament apologize.

Former Prime Minister John Howard had long refused to do so, arguing his government should not be held responsible for the policies of formal officials.

Megan Davis, an Aboriginal lawyer and director of the University of New South Wales' Indigenous Legal Center, described the indigenous focus of the first week of Parliament as "a good start" after the Howard era, when so-called symbolic reconciliation had been dismissed.

"The apology in itself is a hugely historic moment in the history of this country," Davis said.

Rudd has asked for bipartisan support for the apology, but opposition lawmakers appear divided over the issue.

Former Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser, who led Howard's conservative coalition until election defeat in 1983, warned lawmakers from his Liberal Party that most Australians now support an apology.

"If they are not prepared to support the apology, they're painting themselves into a corner," Fraser told Nine Network television. "That sort of attitude is one of the reasons why the last election was lost."

Opposition Sen. Barnaby Joyce dismissed the apology as "confusing, empty and rhetorical."

Rudd's center-left Labor Party swept to power in elections last November, after almost 12 years in opposition, with a promise to apologize to the stolen generations.

He has, however, ruled out indigenous leaders' demands to pay compensation.

Aborigines account for about 450,000 of the country's 21 million people. They are the Australians most likely to be jailed, unemployed or illiterate.

From 1910 until the 1970s, about 100,000 mostly mixed-blood Aboriginal children were taken from their parents under state and federal laws based on a premise that Aborigines were a doomed race, and that saving the children was a humane alternative.

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Summary Box: Hopes for Greek debt deal lift stocks

GREECE DEAL: Greece may be nearing a deal to get another package of financial aid from its neighbors in Europe. Germany may back off its push for an early restructuring of Greece's debt, a shift that would help Greece get more aid.

DEFLATING CONFIDENCE: The Conference Board reported that its monthly survey found that Americans are losing faith that the economy is improving. The surprisingly poor results were caused by worries about jobs and inflation. .

DOWN MONTH: Major indexes each fell by more than 1 percent in May despite Tuesday's gains. The Dow rose 128 points to 12,569.79.

And heaven in a wild flower: celebrating wildflowers means slowing down, looking closely, and having just a little bit of luck.(EXCURSIONS)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

They have wreathed the locks of royalty, fragranced the privies of the Middle Ages, and been prescribed as cures for everything from snake bites to the pangs of unrequited love. To scientists they speak of soil types and photoperiods and offer hints about global climate change. To poets like William Blake, who saw "a world in a grain of sand / and heaven in a wild flower," they offer a very different vision.

Flowering plants are the most widespread plant types on the landmass of our planet, with more than a quarter of a million species known and new species still being discovered. Still, when it comes to wildflowers in our national parks, most of us just drive right on by never knowing what we may be missing.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

"When you take the time to look at a flower," says Donald Davidson, a renowned botanical illustrator who runs workshops in the national parks, "you are not just looking at beauty but at natural history, human history, art, poetry--all of it."

To do that, however, you must slow down. "The speedsters miss so much," he says, referring to the car-bound visitors who rush from scenic overlook to scenic overlook seeking out postcard views. "Get out of the car, look closely. There is so much to see and learn from wildflowers. It may take a little patience, but the genius is in the details."

And maybe heaven really is in a wildflower, if only we would slow down and look.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK * North Carolina and Tennessee

Call it Wildflower National Park. "The diversity of plants in the Smokies is dazzling," says Peter White, author of Wildflowers of the Smokies. "Some 1,660 kinds of flowering plants are found in Great Smoky Mountains National Park--more than in any other North American national park, even though a number of other parks are considerably larger." With a temperate climate, hidden grottos and waterfalls, and elevations ranging from 875 feet to 6,643 feet, something is almost always in bloom in the Smokies.

Spring ephemerals emerge in the valleys and along the creek sides as early as February. Look for trillium, hepaticas, fire pink, lady slippers, and bleeding heart, even as the high peaks are still blanketed in snow. Along the Porters Creek Trail, the sound of rushing water provides the background for a setting dominated by dwarf iris, bloodroot, Robin's plantain, rue anemone, and whole trailsides dusted with drifts of spring beauty.

By early summer, blossoms rise like scented mist up the hillsides. The climbing Kanati Fork Trail or Chestnut Top Trail can lead you to displays of Dutchman's britches, fire pink, jewel weed, and larkspur. Higher up and deeper into the summer, look for trout lily, flame azalea, bee balm, wood sorrel, and painted trillium. By July the hillsides seem aflame with Catawba rhododendron. As summer wanes you can still find the starbursts of asters, shrouds of monkshood, and if you are not too distracted by the fall foliage, yellow flowers of witch-hazel that bloom into early winter.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Beyond their beauty, wildflowers are also closely studied for the effects of lowered air quality (there is concern that high levels of air pollution hamper a flower's ability to attract pollinators by scent), global warming, and the influx of more than 380 invasive species already identified in the park. Learn the science in the annual Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage (www. springwildflowerpilgrimage.org, 865.436.7318), a week-long event that attracts more than 1,200 flower lovers to lectures, programs, and guided hikes among a park in bloom.

GATES OF THE ARCTIC NATIONAL PARK * ALASKA

Long-time Alaskan Ray Bane, a former ranger at Gates of the Arctic, has called summer "a lie" in the Arctic. "Winter is the truth about Alaska," he says. But if summer is a lie, what a spectacular lie it is. Sit on a ridge in Gates of the Arctic on a warm July day and the tundra surrounding you almost buzzes with life: mountain avens nodding "yes and yes and yes" in the soft breeze, puffs of cotton grass like tufts of summer clouds, white dryad and the yellow pinwheels of arnica, the fragile petals of forget-me-nots as blue as the clear Arctic sky.

Summer is a sky-rocket season this far north--short but spectacular. In the 24-hour summer sunlight, plants can photosynthesize almost constantly, fueling an unparalleled burst of life. Still, the cold, windy conditions that dominate most of the year are never far away. You can see the fingerprints of Alaska's "truth" in the plants themselves. Moss campion clings like a clenched fist of purple flowers to the tundra floor to avoid the wind. The Arctic poppy is heliotropic, tracing the sun's path with its flower head to maximize the solar rays and covering its stem in dark hairs to absorb heat. Everything that grows in the Arctic must be tough. In 1967, seeds from a 10,000-year-old tundra lupine discovered frozen in permafrost actually germinated within 48 hours of being planted.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Without a single maintained trail, the 7.2 million acres of wilderness set above the Arctic Circle are not the kind of place to expect interpretive signs to guide you to wildflowers. Many visitors drive up the rugged Dalton Highway, which skirts the eastern edge of the park, and hike in through fields of yellow oxytrope, bluebells, and Arctic daisies. Paddling the upper reaches of the Noatak River can lead you beneath hillsides dancing with saxifrage and daubed with Indian paintbrush. In July, hiking into the popular rock-climbing routes of the Arrigetch Peaks can land you hip-deep in fireweed.

Soak it in the way the plants and animals store up energy for winter. The "truth about Alaska" is never far away.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK * California & Nevada

Park Ranger Charlie Callagan has learned to be careful with superlatives when it comes to the wildflower displays of Death Valley National Park. "In 1998 we had great wildflowers, and I was telling people that this was the bloom of the century," he says. "Then in 2005, we had an even better year. People were kidding me saying, 'Well, that was a pretty quick century!'"

At first glance, Death Valley can seem like an unlikely place for wildflowers, or much else in the way of life. With an annual average of just 1.9 inches of rain and summer temperatures as high as 134 degrees, it is one of the hottest and driest spots on the continent. Still, looks can be deceiving. There are 1,032 species of plants in this 3.3-million acre park, and under the right conditions--sufficient warmth, a lack of moisture-robbing winds, and above-average rainfall from well-spaced storms in winter and early spring--the show can be spectacular.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In good years, the displays begin as early as mid-February at the lower elevations. Look on the valley floor and along the base of alluvial fans in the southern section of the park for desert gold, blazing star, poppies, and an array of cactus species. By April, the show has moved up the slopes of the Amargosa and Panamint Mountains where you'll find Panamint daisies, paintbrush, desert rue, and lupine. In the final flourish in early June, the highest reaches of the park such as Dante's View and the shoulders of Telescope Mountain are fringed with wildrose, mariposa lilies, and colorful wands of lupine.

"Even in an average year the wildflowers of Death Valley can be incredibly beautiful if you know where to look," says Callagan. And just knowing that the big blooms do happen, he says, "opens our eyes to the possibilities of the desert, makes us realize that there are millions and billions of seeds out there lying dormant, just waiting for the next time the perfect storm of conditions comes along again."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK * Colorado

A "highway to the sky" and the "highest paved road in the world," Rocky Mountain National Park's Trail Ridge Road has been called many things. Add one more: Wildflower Way. "There are dozens of great places to see wildflowers all over the park," says naturalist Jared Gricoskie, who leads tours for the Rocky Mountain Nature Association and his own company Yellow Wood Guiding. "But if all you did was to drive the 48 miles of Trail Ridge, stopping at every pull out, you'd get a wonderful cross-section of the park's flowers."

Rocky Mountain stands more than a mile tall, stretching from 7,840 feet at the Beaver Meadows entrance to the 14,259-foot summit of Longs Peak and reaching through three major ecosystems, each with its own constellations of wildflowers. Below 9,000 feet, the wooded trails of Sprague Lake and the Gem Lake Trail shimmer with fairy slippers, western wallflower, daisies, larkspur, and buttercups blooming as early as April. A bit higher in the sub-alpine areas, columbine, silver lupine, and shooting star fringe the popular hike stringing together Nymph, Dream, and Emerald Lakes. But the star of the show is the alpine tundra, a "world by itself in the sky," as early conservationist Enos Mills called it. Trail Ridge Road is the pathway to that world.

Mid-July is peak season on the tundra. "At the height," says Gricoskie, "you can't walk ten steps without seeing a dozen different species." There are alpine forget-me-nots, fairy primrose, phlox, blue harebell, iris, alpine sunflower. There are snow buttercups, golden draba, alp lily, and sky pilot. More than 200 varieties in all, and each one a survivor in this land above the trees where winds can top 170 miles an hour and snow can fall any month of the year. Ranger-led hikes run every day at 10 a.m. during the summer from the Alpine Visitor Center--or try self-guided hikes at the Medicine Bow, Rock Cut, or Lake Irene pull-outs areas.

It's a short season--just six to eight weeks by the calendar--but Gricoskie uses a different measure: the Arctic gentian. "It is one of the last alpine flowers to bloom and, for me, a symbol of the season winding down," he says.

LEAVE NO TRACE

As fragile as they are beautiful, wildflowers face a host of environmental pressures from pollution to poachers. Don't become yet another danger. Follow these Do's and Don'ts for flower-friendly viewing.

DO know before you go.

Consult guidebooks and local experts for prime blooming seasons and locations.

DON'T pry open blossoms, spray with mist bottles to simulate dew, jostle stems to simulate wind, or in any other way manipulate plants for photographic purposes.

DO carry a magnifying glass or a macro camera lens to look closely at the beauty of flowers.

DON'T remove surrounding vegetation, rocks, or logs for a better view. The flower may be dependent on the exact, tiny microclimates created by such things to survive.

DO carry a guidebook for field identification or photograph and identify later.

DON'T pick or remove flowers in national parks-it's illegal.

DO stay on trails or tread lightly if you must step off-trail.

DON'T trample flowers with boots or stake your tent on top of them.

Get Some Flower Power

Guidebooks:

General guides such as Wildflowers of North America by Frank D. Venning can be a good starting point; also visit the park bookstore for local guidebooks.

Websites:

Get up-to-date wildflower information for individual parks at www.nps.gov. The National Park Service also maintains the "Celebrating Wildflowers" website at www.nps.gov/plants/cw.

Wildflower Tours:

Most national parks offer ranger-led wildflower walks during peak bloom seasons. For a list of tour times and locations, contact the park's main visitor center.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Jeff Rennicke has stopped to enjoy the wildflowers in more than 40 of our national parks.

And heaven in a wild flower: celebrating wildflowers means slowing down, looking closely, and having just a little bit of luck.(EXCURSIONS)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

They have wreathed the locks of royalty, fragranced the privies of the Middle Ages, and been prescribed as cures for everything from snake bites to the pangs of unrequited love. To scientists they speak of soil types and photoperiods and offer hints about global climate change. To poets like William Blake, who saw "a world in a grain of sand / and heaven in a wild flower," they offer a very different vision.

Flowering plants are the most widespread plant types on the landmass of our planet, with more than a quarter of a million species known and new species still being discovered. Still, when it comes to wildflowers in our national parks, most of us just drive right on by never knowing what we may be missing.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

"When you take the time to look at a flower," says Donald Davidson, a renowned botanical illustrator who runs workshops in the national parks, "you are not just looking at beauty but at natural history, human history, art, poetry--all of it."

To do that, however, you must slow down. "The speedsters miss so much," he says, referring to the car-bound visitors who rush from scenic overlook to scenic overlook seeking out postcard views. "Get out of the car, look closely. There is so much to see and learn from wildflowers. It may take a little patience, but the genius is in the details."

And maybe heaven really is in a wildflower, if only we would slow down and look.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK * North Carolina and Tennessee

Call it Wildflower National Park. "The diversity of plants in the Smokies is dazzling," says Peter White, author of Wildflowers of the Smokies. "Some 1,660 kinds of flowering plants are found in Great Smoky Mountains National Park--more than in any other North American national park, even though a number of other parks are considerably larger." With a temperate climate, hidden grottos and waterfalls, and elevations ranging from 875 feet to 6,643 feet, something is almost always in bloom in the Smokies.

Spring ephemerals emerge in the valleys and along the creek sides as early as February. Look for trillium, hepaticas, fire pink, lady slippers, and bleeding heart, even as the high peaks are still blanketed in snow. Along the Porters Creek Trail, the sound of rushing water provides the background for a setting dominated by dwarf iris, bloodroot, Robin's plantain, rue anemone, and whole trailsides dusted with drifts of spring beauty.

By early summer, blossoms rise like scented mist up the hillsides. The climbing Kanati Fork Trail or Chestnut Top Trail can lead you to displays of Dutchman's britches, fire pink, jewel weed, and larkspur. Higher up and deeper into the summer, look for trout lily, flame azalea, bee balm, wood sorrel, and painted trillium. By July the hillsides seem aflame with Catawba rhododendron. As summer wanes you can still find the starbursts of asters, shrouds of monkshood, and if you are not too distracted by the fall foliage, yellow flowers of witch-hazel that bloom into early winter.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Beyond their beauty, wildflowers are also closely studied for the effects of lowered air quality (there is concern that high levels of air pollution hamper a flower's ability to attract pollinators by scent), global warming, and the influx of more than 380 invasive species already identified in the park. Learn the science in the annual Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage (www. springwildflowerpilgrimage.org, 865.436.7318), a week-long event that attracts more than 1,200 flower lovers to lectures, programs, and guided hikes among a park in bloom.

GATES OF THE ARCTIC NATIONAL PARK * ALASKA

Long-time Alaskan Ray Bane, a former ranger at Gates of the Arctic, has called summer "a lie" in the Arctic. "Winter is the truth about Alaska," he says. But if summer is a lie, what a spectacular lie it is. Sit on a ridge in Gates of the Arctic on a warm July day and the tundra surrounding you almost buzzes with life: mountain avens nodding "yes and yes and yes" in the soft breeze, puffs of cotton grass like tufts of summer clouds, white dryad and the yellow pinwheels of arnica, the fragile petals of forget-me-nots as blue as the clear Arctic sky.

Summer is a sky-rocket season this far north--short but spectacular. In the 24-hour summer sunlight, plants can photosynthesize almost constantly, fueling an unparalleled burst of life. Still, the cold, windy conditions that dominate most of the year are never far away. You can see the fingerprints of Alaska's "truth" in the plants themselves. Moss campion clings like a clenched fist of purple flowers to the tundra floor to avoid the wind. The Arctic poppy is heliotropic, tracing the sun's path with its flower head to maximize the solar rays and covering its stem in dark hairs to absorb heat. Everything that grows in the Arctic must be tough. In 1967, seeds from a 10,000-year-old tundra lupine discovered frozen in permafrost actually germinated within 48 hours of being planted.

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Without a single maintained trail, the 7.2 million acres of wilderness set above the Arctic Circle are not the kind of place to expect interpretive signs to guide you to wildflowers. Many visitors drive up the rugged Dalton Highway, which skirts the eastern edge of the park, and hike in through fields of yellow oxytrope, bluebells, and Arctic daisies. Paddling the upper reaches of the Noatak River can lead you beneath hillsides dancing with saxifrage and daubed with Indian paintbrush. In July, hiking into the popular rock-climbing routes of the Arrigetch Peaks can land you hip-deep in fireweed.

Soak it in the way the plants and animals store up energy for winter. The "truth about Alaska" is never far away.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK * California & Nevada

Park Ranger Charlie Callagan has learned to be careful with superlatives when it comes to the wildflower displays of Death Valley National Park. "In 1998 we had great wildflowers, and I was telling people that this was the bloom of the century," he says. "Then in 2005, we had an even better year. People were kidding me saying, 'Well, that was a pretty quick century!'"

At first glance, Death Valley can seem like an unlikely place for wildflowers, or much else in the way of life. With an annual average of just 1.9 inches of rain and summer temperatures as high as 134 degrees, it is one of the hottest and driest spots on the continent. Still, looks can be deceiving. There are 1,032 species of plants in this 3.3-million acre park, and under the right conditions--sufficient warmth, a lack of moisture-robbing winds, and above-average rainfall from well-spaced storms in winter and early spring--the show can be spectacular.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In good years, the displays begin as early as mid-February at the lower elevations. Look on the valley floor and along the base of alluvial fans in the southern section of the park for desert gold, blazing star, poppies, and an array of cactus species. By April, the show has moved up the slopes of the Amargosa and Panamint Mountains where you'll find Panamint daisies, paintbrush, desert rue, and lupine. In the final flourish in early June, the highest reaches of the park such as Dante's View and the shoulders of Telescope Mountain are fringed with wildrose, mariposa lilies, and colorful wands of lupine.

"Even in an average year the wildflowers of Death Valley can be incredibly beautiful if you know where to look," says Callagan. And just knowing that the big blooms do happen, he says, "opens our eyes to the possibilities of the desert, makes us realize that there are millions and billions of seeds out there lying dormant, just waiting for the next time the perfect storm of conditions comes along again."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK * Colorado

A "highway to the sky" and the "highest paved road in the world," Rocky Mountain National Park's Trail Ridge Road has been called many things. Add one more: Wildflower Way. "There are dozens of great places to see wildflowers all over the park," says naturalist Jared Gricoskie, who leads tours for the Rocky Mountain Nature Association and his own company Yellow Wood Guiding. "But if all you did was to drive the 48 miles of Trail Ridge, stopping at every pull out, you'd get a wonderful cross-section of the park's flowers."

Rocky Mountain stands more than a mile tall, stretching from 7,840 feet at the Beaver Meadows entrance to the 14,259-foot summit of Longs Peak and reaching through three major ecosystems, each with its own constellations of wildflowers. Below 9,000 feet, the wooded trails of Sprague Lake and the Gem Lake Trail shimmer with fairy slippers, western wallflower, daisies, larkspur, and buttercups blooming as early as April. A bit higher in the sub-alpine areas, columbine, silver lupine, and shooting star fringe the popular hike stringing together Nymph, Dream, and Emerald Lakes. But the star of the show is the alpine tundra, a "world by itself in the sky," as early conservationist Enos Mills called it. Trail Ridge Road is the pathway to that world.

Mid-July is peak season on the tundra. "At the height," says Gricoskie, "you can't walk ten steps without seeing a dozen different species." There are alpine forget-me-nots, fairy primrose, phlox, blue harebell, iris, alpine sunflower. There are snow buttercups, golden draba, alp lily, and sky pilot. More than 200 varieties in all, and each one a survivor in this land above the trees where winds can top 170 miles an hour and snow can fall any month of the year. Ranger-led hikes run every day at 10 a.m. during the summer from the Alpine Visitor Center--or try self-guided hikes at the Medicine Bow, Rock Cut, or Lake Irene pull-outs areas.

It's a short season--just six to eight weeks by the calendar--but Gricoskie uses a different measure: the Arctic gentian. "It is one of the last alpine flowers to bloom and, for me, a symbol of the season winding down," he says.

LEAVE NO TRACE

As fragile as they are beautiful, wildflowers face a host of environmental pressures from pollution to poachers. Don't become yet another danger. Follow these Do's and Don'ts for flower-friendly viewing.

DO know before you go.

Consult guidebooks and local experts for prime blooming seasons and locations.

DON'T pry open blossoms, spray with mist bottles to simulate dew, jostle stems to simulate wind, or in any other way manipulate plants for photographic purposes.

DO carry a magnifying glass or a macro camera lens to look closely at the beauty of flowers.

DON'T remove surrounding vegetation, rocks, or logs for a better view. The flower may be dependent on the exact, tiny microclimates created by such things to survive.

DO carry a guidebook for field identification or photograph and identify later.

DON'T pick or remove flowers in national parks-it's illegal.

DO stay on trails or tread lightly if you must step off-trail.

DON'T trample flowers with boots or stake your tent on top of them.

Get Some Flower Power

Guidebooks:

General guides such as Wildflowers of North America by Frank D. Venning can be a good starting point; also visit the park bookstore for local guidebooks.

Websites:

Get up-to-date wildflower information for individual parks at www.nps.gov. The National Park Service also maintains the "Celebrating Wildflowers" website at www.nps.gov/plants/cw.

Wildflower Tours:

Most national parks offer ranger-led wildflower walks during peak bloom seasons. For a list of tour times and locations, contact the park's main visitor center.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Jeff Rennicke has stopped to enjoy the wildflowers in more than 40 of our national parks.

And heaven in a wild flower: celebrating wildflowers means slowing down, looking closely, and having just a little bit of luck.(EXCURSIONS)

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They have wreathed the locks of royalty, fragranced the privies of the Middle Ages, and been prescribed as cures for everything from snake bites to the pangs of unrequited love. To scientists they speak of soil types and photoperiods and offer hints about global climate change. To poets like William Blake, who saw "a world in a grain of sand / and heaven in a wild flower," they offer a very different vision.

Flowering plants are the most widespread plant types on the landmass of our planet, with more than a quarter of a million species known and new species still being discovered. Still, when it comes to wildflowers in our national parks, most of us just drive right on by never knowing what we may be missing.

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"When you take the time to look at a flower," says Donald Davidson, a renowned botanical illustrator who runs workshops in the national parks, "you are not just looking at beauty but at natural history, human history, art, poetry--all of it."

To do that, however, you must slow down. "The speedsters miss so much," he says, referring to the car-bound visitors who rush from scenic overlook to scenic overlook seeking out postcard views. "Get out of the car, look closely. There is so much to see and learn from wildflowers. It may take a little patience, but the genius is in the details."

And maybe heaven really is in a wildflower, if only we would slow down and look.

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GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK * North Carolina and Tennessee

Call it Wildflower National Park. "The diversity of plants in the Smokies is dazzling," says Peter White, author of Wildflowers of the Smokies. "Some 1,660 kinds of flowering plants are found in Great Smoky Mountains National Park--more than in any other North American national park, even though a number of other parks are considerably larger." With a temperate climate, hidden grottos and waterfalls, and elevations ranging from 875 feet to 6,643 feet, something is almost always in bloom in the Smokies.

Spring ephemerals emerge in the valleys and along the creek sides as early as February. Look for trillium, hepaticas, fire pink, lady slippers, and bleeding heart, even as the high peaks are still blanketed in snow. Along the Porters Creek Trail, the sound of rushing water provides the background for a setting dominated by dwarf iris, bloodroot, Robin's plantain, rue anemone, and whole trailsides dusted with drifts of spring beauty.

By early summer, blossoms rise like scented mist up the hillsides. The climbing Kanati Fork Trail or Chestnut Top Trail can lead you to displays of Dutchman's britches, fire pink, jewel weed, and larkspur. Higher up and deeper into the summer, look for trout lily, flame azalea, bee balm, wood sorrel, and painted trillium. By July the hillsides seem aflame with Catawba rhododendron. As summer wanes you can still find the starbursts of asters, shrouds of monkshood, and if you are not too distracted by the fall foliage, yellow flowers of witch-hazel that bloom into early winter.

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Beyond their beauty, wildflowers are also closely studied for the effects of lowered air quality (there is concern that high levels of air pollution hamper a flower's ability to attract pollinators by scent), global warming, and the influx of more than 380 invasive species already identified in the park. Learn the science in the annual Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage (www. springwildflowerpilgrimage.org, 865.436.7318), a week-long event that attracts more than 1,200 flower lovers to lectures, programs, and guided hikes among a park in bloom.

GATES OF THE ARCTIC NATIONAL PARK * ALASKA

Long-time Alaskan Ray Bane, a former ranger at Gates of the Arctic, has called summer "a lie" in the Arctic. "Winter is the truth about Alaska," he says. But if summer is a lie, what a spectacular lie it is. Sit on a ridge in Gates of the Arctic on a warm July day and the tundra surrounding you almost buzzes with life: mountain avens nodding "yes and yes and yes" in the soft breeze, puffs of cotton grass like tufts of summer clouds, white dryad and the yellow pinwheels of arnica, the fragile petals of forget-me-nots as blue as the clear Arctic sky.

Summer is a sky-rocket season this far north--short but spectacular. In the 24-hour summer sunlight, plants can photosynthesize almost constantly, fueling an unparalleled burst of life. Still, the cold, windy conditions that dominate most of the year are never far away. You can see the fingerprints of Alaska's "truth" in the plants themselves. Moss campion clings like a clenched fist of purple flowers to the tundra floor to avoid the wind. The Arctic poppy is heliotropic, tracing the sun's path with its flower head to maximize the solar rays and covering its stem in dark hairs to absorb heat. Everything that grows in the Arctic must be tough. In 1967, seeds from a 10,000-year-old tundra lupine discovered frozen in permafrost actually germinated within 48 hours of being planted.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Without a single maintained trail, the 7.2 million acres of wilderness set above the Arctic Circle are not the kind of place to expect interpretive signs to guide you to wildflowers. Many visitors drive up the rugged Dalton Highway, which skirts the eastern edge of the park, and hike in through fields of yellow oxytrope, bluebells, and Arctic daisies. Paddling the upper reaches of the Noatak River can lead you beneath hillsides dancing with saxifrage and daubed with Indian paintbrush. In July, hiking into the popular rock-climbing routes of the Arrigetch Peaks can land you hip-deep in fireweed.

Soak it in the way the plants and animals store up energy for winter. The "truth about Alaska" is never far away.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK * California & Nevada

Park Ranger Charlie Callagan has learned to be careful with superlatives when it comes to the wildflower displays of Death Valley National Park. "In 1998 we had great wildflowers, and I was telling people that this was the bloom of the century," he says. "Then in 2005, we had an even better year. People were kidding me saying, 'Well, that was a pretty quick century!'"

At first glance, Death Valley can seem like an unlikely place for wildflowers, or much else in the way of life. With an annual average of just 1.9 inches of rain and summer temperatures as high as 134 degrees, it is one of the hottest and driest spots on the continent. Still, looks can be deceiving. There are 1,032 species of plants in this 3.3-million acre park, and under the right conditions--sufficient warmth, a lack of moisture-robbing winds, and above-average rainfall from well-spaced storms in winter and early spring--the show can be spectacular.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In good years, the displays begin as early as mid-February at the lower elevations. Look on the valley floor and along the base of alluvial fans in the southern section of the park for desert gold, blazing star, poppies, and an array of cactus species. By April, the show has moved up the slopes of the Amargosa and Panamint Mountains where you'll find Panamint daisies, paintbrush, desert rue, and lupine. In the final flourish in early June, the highest reaches of the park such as Dante's View and the shoulders of Telescope Mountain are fringed with wildrose, mariposa lilies, and colorful wands of lupine.

"Even in an average year the wildflowers of Death Valley can be incredibly beautiful if you know where to look," says Callagan. And just knowing that the big blooms do happen, he says, "opens our eyes to the possibilities of the desert, makes us realize that there are millions and billions of seeds out there lying dormant, just waiting for the next time the perfect storm of conditions comes along again."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK * Colorado

A "highway to the sky" and the "highest paved road in the world," Rocky Mountain National Park's Trail Ridge Road has been called many things. Add one more: Wildflower Way. "There are dozens of great places to see wildflowers all over the park," says naturalist Jared Gricoskie, who leads tours for the Rocky Mountain Nature Association and his own company Yellow Wood Guiding. "But if all you did was to drive the 48 miles of Trail Ridge, stopping at every pull out, you'd get a wonderful cross-section of the park's flowers."

Rocky Mountain stands more than a mile tall, stretching from 7,840 feet at the Beaver Meadows entrance to the 14,259-foot summit of Longs Peak and reaching through three major ecosystems, each with its own constellations of wildflowers. Below 9,000 feet, the wooded trails of Sprague Lake and the Gem Lake Trail shimmer with fairy slippers, western wallflower, daisies, larkspur, and buttercups blooming as early as April. A bit higher in the sub-alpine areas, columbine, silver lupine, and shooting star fringe the popular hike stringing together Nymph, Dream, and Emerald Lakes. But the star of the show is the alpine tundra, a "world by itself in the sky," as early conservationist Enos Mills called it. Trail Ridge Road is the pathway to that world.

Mid-July is peak season on the tundra. "At the height," says Gricoskie, "you can't walk ten steps without seeing a dozen different species." There are alpine forget-me-nots, fairy primrose, phlox, blue harebell, iris, alpine sunflower. There are snow buttercups, golden draba, alp lily, and sky pilot. More than 200 varieties in all, and each one a survivor in this land above the trees where winds can top 170 miles an hour and snow can fall any month of the year. Ranger-led hikes run every day at 10 a.m. during the summer from the Alpine Visitor Center--or try self-guided hikes at the Medicine Bow, Rock Cut, or Lake Irene pull-outs areas.

It's a short season--just six to eight weeks by the calendar--but Gricoskie uses a different measure: the Arctic gentian. "It is one of the last alpine flowers to bloom and, for me, a symbol of the season winding down," he says.

LEAVE NO TRACE

As fragile as they are beautiful, wildflowers face a host of environmental pressures from pollution to poachers. Don't become yet another danger. Follow these Do's and Don'ts for flower-friendly viewing.

DO know before you go.

Consult guidebooks and local experts for prime blooming seasons and locations.

DON'T pry open blossoms, spray with mist bottles to simulate dew, jostle stems to simulate wind, or in any other way manipulate plants for photographic purposes.

DO carry a magnifying glass or a macro camera lens to look closely at the beauty of flowers.

DON'T remove surrounding vegetation, rocks, or logs for a better view. The flower may be dependent on the exact, tiny microclimates created by such things to survive.

DO carry a guidebook for field identification or photograph and identify later.

DON'T pick or remove flowers in national parks-it's illegal.

DO stay on trails or tread lightly if you must step off-trail.

DON'T trample flowers with boots or stake your tent on top of them.

Get Some Flower Power

Guidebooks:

General guides such as Wildflowers of North America by Frank D. Venning can be a good starting point; also visit the park bookstore for local guidebooks.

Websites:

Get up-to-date wildflower information for individual parks at www.nps.gov. The National Park Service also maintains the "Celebrating Wildflowers" website at www.nps.gov/plants/cw.

Wildflower Tours:

Most national parks offer ranger-led wildflower walks during peak bloom seasons. For a list of tour times and locations, contact the park's main visitor center.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Jeff Rennicke has stopped to enjoy the wildflowers in more than 40 of our national parks.