April 6, 2010

  • NASA’s Mini X-Plane Completes Initial Flight Testing

     
    Copyright wired.com 2010

  • Debunkers of Fictions Sift the Net

    April 06

     

    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    After the death of Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Snopes dissected a letter purporting to explain why he was unfit for acclaim. It was the site's most searched subject soon after.

    April 4, 2010

    Debunkers of Fictions Sift the Net

    By BRIAN STELTER

    It is one of the paradoxes of the Internet.

    Along with the freest access to knowledge the world has ever seen comes a staggering amount of untruth, from imagined threats on health care to too-easy-to-be-true ways to earn money by forwarding an e-mail message to 10 friends. “A cesspool,” Google’s chief executive, Eric E. Schmidt, once called it.

    David and Barbara Mikkelson are among those trying to clean the cesspool. The unassuming California couple run Snopes, one of the most popular fact-checking destinations on the Web.

    For well over a decade they have acted as arbiters in the Age of Misinformation by answering the central question posed by every chain letter — is this true? — complete with links to further research.

    The popularity of Snopes — it attracts seven million to eight million unique visitors in an average month — puts the couple in a unique position to evaluate digital society’s attitudes toward accuracy.

    After 14 years, they seem to have concluded that people are rather cavalier about the facts.

    In a given week, Snopes tries to set the record straight on everything from political smears to old wives’ tales. No, Kenya did not erect a sign welcoming people to the “birthplace of Barack Obama.” No, Wal-Mart did not authorize illegal immigration raids at its stores. No, the Olive Garden restaurant chain did not hand out $500 gift cards to online fans.

    The Mikkelsons talk matter-of-factly about why these stories spread the way they do.

    “Rumors are a great source of comfort for people,” Mrs. Mikkelson said.

    Snopes is one of a small handful of sites in the fact-checking business. Brooks Jackson, the director of one of the others, the politically oriented FactCheck.org, believes news organizations should be doing more of it.

    “The ‘news’ that is not fit to print gets through to people anyway these days, through 24-hour cable gasbags, partisan talk radio hosts and chain e-mails, blogs and Web sites such as WorldNetDaily or Daily Kos,” he said in an e-mail message. “What readers need now, we find, are honest referees who can help ordinary readers sort out fact from fiction.”

    Even the White House now cites fact-checking sites: it has circulated links and explanations by PolitiFact.com, a project of The St. Petersburg Times that won a Pulitzer Prize last year for national reporting.

    The Mikkelsons did not set out to fact-check the Web’s political smears and screeds. The site was started in 1996 as an online encyclopedia of myths and urban legends, building off the couple’s hobby. They had met years earlier on a discussion board about urban legends.

    Mr. Mikkelson was a dogged researcher of folklore. When he needed to mail letters requesting information, he would use the letterhead of the San Fernando Valley Folklore Society, an official-sounding organization he dreamed up. They would investigate the origins of classic tall tales, like the legend of the killer with a prosthetic hook who stalked Lovers’ Lane, for a small but devoted online audience.

    After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, users overwhelmed the Mikkelsons with forwarded e-mail claims and editorials about the culprits and the failures of the government to halt the plot, and the couple reluctantly accepted a larger role. They still maintain a thorough list of what they call “Rumors of War.”

    Less than a year later, Snopes became the family’s full-time job. Advertisements sold by a third-party network cover the $3,000-a-month bandwidth bills, with enough left over for the Mikkelsons to make a living — “despite rumors that we’re paid by, depending on your choice, the Democratic National Committee or the Republican National Committee,” Mr. Mikkelson said.

    Much of the site’s resources are spent on investigating political claims, even though the Mikkelsons say politics is the last subject they want to write about. (Barbara cannot even vote in American elections; she is a Canadian citizen.) Claims relating to President Obama are now the top searches on the site but “even when there were Republicans in the White House, the mail was still overwhelmingly anti-liberal,” Mr. Mikkelson said.

    In late August, Mr. Mikkelson studied an e-mail chain letter titled “The Last of the Kennedy Dynasty” purporting to explain why the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy was unfit for acclaim. Some of its 10 bullet points were true (yes, Mr. Kennedy was cited for reckless driving while in college), but others were misleading assumptions (no, his accomplishments were not “scant”).

    Mrs. Mikkelson rolled her eyes at her husband’s plans to fact-check the chain letter. “That’s ephemera,” she said.

    He agreed, but the Kennedy report wound up being the Web site’s most-searched subject the next weekend.

    The Mikkelsons employ two others full time to manage the enormous volume of e-mail to the site. Increasingly, curious readers are sending videos and photos as well as e-mail, requiring even more investigation. They publish on average one new article each day.

    The enduring articles are the ones about everyday fears: computer viruses, scams, missing children. Some e-mail chain letters, like the one offering users $245 for forwarding the message, never fade away.

    “People keep falling for the same kind of things over and over again,” Mr. Mikkelson said. Some readers always seem to think, for instance, that the government is trying to poison them: Mrs. Mikkelson said rumors about AIDS have been recycled into rumors about swine flu vaccines.

    For the Mikkelsons, the site affirms what cultural critics have bemoaned for years: the rejection of nuance and facts that run contrary to one’s point of view.

    “Especially in politics, most everything has infinite shades of gray to it, but people just want things to be true or false,” Mr. Mikkelson said. “In the larger sense, it’s people wanting confirmation of their world view.”

    The couple say they receive grateful messages from teachers regularly, and an award from a media literacy association sits atop the TV set in Mr. Mikkelson’s home office.

    It is not just the naïveté of Web users that worries the “Snopesters,” a name for the Web site’s fans and volunteers. It is also what Mr. Mikkelson calls “a trend toward the opposite approach, hyper-skepticism.”

    “People get an e-mail or a photograph and they spot one little thing that doesn’t look right, and they declare the whole thing fake,” he said. “That’s just as bad as being gullible in a lot of senses.”

    But even though Snopes pays the bills for the couple now, through advertising revenue, they doubt they are having much of an impact.

    “It’s not like, ‘Well, we have to get out there and defend the truth,’ ” Mrs. Mikkelson added. “When you’re looking at truth versus gossip, truth doesn’t stand a chance.”

     

    Copyright. New York Times. 2010

     

  • Updated Apr 4, 2010 3:51 AM ET
    A "drunk and belligerent" 17-year-old Notre Dame football recruit was killed in a fall from a fifth-floor hotel balcony during his senior-year spring break in Florida, authorities said Saturday.

    Matt James died Friday around 6:30 p.m. at the Days Inn Motel in Panama City Beach. Police said he was dead when officers arrived.
    Matt James.

    "It appears to be a tragic accident," Panama City Beach police Maj. David Humphreys said.

    James' former teammates at St. Xavier High School gathered for a private prayer service in the school's chapel, mourning the second death of an athlete this school year. James, an all-state offensive lineman, had been the first top signing for new Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly.

    James was part of a group of about 40 St. Xavier students and a half-dozen parents on the trip.

    "Witnesses and friends indicate he had become drunk and belligerent," Humphreys said. "He had leaned over the balcony rail, was shaking his finger at the people in the next room over. He fell over."

    Humphreys said the railing at the hotel met the standards for proper height. He said police would be interested in pursuing charges if they learn who provided the underage teen with alcohol.

    Police said an autopsy on James would be done later. Toxicology results were pending.

    James' parents went to Florida on Friday night, returned to Cincinnati and released a statement Saturday evening asking for privacy while they make funeral arrangements and grieve.

    "We would like to thank everyone for their prayers and support during this tragic time, particularly the family at St. X," Jerry and Peggy James said. "Matt was a very special young man, and it is gratifying to us that you all could see that as well. We are touched by this outpouring of love."

    The 6-foot-6, 290-pound offensive lineman also was on St. Xavier's varsity basketball team.

    "This is just such a tragedy because he was just a wonderful, wonderful kid," said Mary Massa, the mother of St. Xavier quarterback Luke Massa, who also has committed to Notre Dame. "When he first came to St. X, he was pretty quiet. He was tall and kind of awkward. He just blossomed while he was there. He was just a good, wonderful kid. It's heartbreaking."

    Word of his death spread quickly through social-networking sites on Friday night. Students gathered at the football field next to the school for an impromptu vigil.

    On Saturday, James' former football and basketball teammates held a private prayer service led by the school's chaplain, Paul Rieselman.

    "His message was that we have to take care of one another," school spokesman Mark Motz said.

    James was the second St. Xavier athlete to die during the school year. Junior wrestler Kevin Le was struck by a car and killed in September. The football team - including James - wore his initials on their helmet for the next home football game.

    Grief counselors will be available when classes resume on April 12 after spring break.

    James originally planned to go to the University of Cincinnati, where Kelly coached the last three years. When he left for Notre Dame, James reconsidered and chose the Fighting Irish over Cincinnati and Ohio State.

    "The Notre Dame football program is in a state of disbelief and incredible sadness with the news of this tragic event," Kelly said in a statement. "Matt was an extremely talented person who was very bright and possessed a great dry sense of humor. He could not wait to join the Notre Dame family."

    Luke Massa's father, Gary, said his son and James had "big dreams together" about their careers at Notre Dame.

    "One of the visions I have in my mind is after football games at St. X he was like the Pied Piper. All the little kids, everybody's little brothers and sisters would follow him around," Gary Massa said. "He was just a gentle giant, that's the best way to describe him."

    James isn't the first spring breaker to die from a balcony fall this year. Brandon Kohler, a 19-year-old from Winder, Ga., died March 24 when he fell from a fifth-floor balcony at the Holiday Terrace Motel in Panama City Beach.

    Copyright Associated Press. 2010

April 5, 2010

  • At Least 7 Die in West Virginia Coal Mine Explosion

    Jon C. Hancock/Associated Press

    Families and friends waited alongside emergency personnel after a mine explosion at the Upper Big Branch Mine in Montcoal, W.Va.

    April 5, 2010

    At Least 7 Die in West Virginia Coal Mine Explosion

    At least seven miners were killed and nearly 20 were unaccounted for after an explosion ripped through a coal mine on Monday in West Virginia, state emergency officials said.

    The explosion occurred at about 3 p.m. at the Upper Big Branch mine, 30 miles south of Charleston, in Raleigh County.

    The mine, which employs about 200, is owned by the Virginia-based Massey Energy Company and operated by Performance Coal Company.

    “All we know now is, this is an awful disaster,” Representative Nick J. Rahall II said as he arrived at the mine site, which is in his district. “This is the second major disaster at a Massey site in recent years, and something needs to be done.“

    In a statement, Massey said mine rescue teams and state and federal officials were responding to the explosion.

    Phil Smith, a spokesman for the United Mine Workers of America, said that the mine was nonunion but that the union had dispatched a team to advise on the rescue and to help the families of the trapped or dead miners.

    Michael Mayhorn, emergency dispatcher for Boone County, said that that at least 20 ambulances and three helicopters had been dispatched from nearby counties, and that the state medical examiner was heading to the scene. At least one miner was evacuated by helicopter, he said.

    Dennis O’Dell, an official with the union who was in contact with state and federal safety officials, said the current theory was that the explosion might have been caused by a buildup of methane gas in a sealed-off section of the mine. A similar type of explosion occurred in the 2006 Sago mining disaster, which left 12 miners dead after trapping them underground for nearly two days.

    Federal records indicate that the Upper Big Branch mine has recorded an injury rate worse than the national average for similar operations for at least six of the past 10 years. The records also show hat the mine had 458 violations in 2009, with a total of $897,325 in safety fines penalties assessed against it last year. It has paid $168,393 in safety penalties.

    A conveyor belt at the Aracoma Alma Mine No. 1 at Melville in Logan County, W.Va., caught fire and two miners were killed in 2006.

    Mr. O’Dell said some officials believed the ignition source for the explosion might have been a device that carries mine personnel to and from the work area. It may have been moving near the sealed section of the mine at the time of the blast, he said.

    Ellen Smith, the editor of Mine Safety and Health News, said the mine was the site of two fatalities in the previous 10 years.

    On July 19, 2003, an electrician, Rodney Alan Scurlock, 27, was fatally electrocuted while repairing a shuttle car trailing cable, she said.

    On March 29, 2001, Ms. Smith said, Herbert J. Meadows, 48, a continuous mining machine operator, was struck by falling rock on a retreat pillar mining section. He died of his injuries two days later, she said.

    Gov. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, away on vacation in Florida, was preparing to return to the state, said his spokesman Matt Turner.

    More than 100,000 coal miners have been killed in accidents in the United States since 1900, but the number of fatalities has fallen sharply in recent decades, according to the Mine Safety and Health Administration. As late as the 1940s, it was not unusual to have more than 1,000 mining deaths a year; in 2009 there were 35 mining deaths, according the agency.

    But mining remains dangerous work, as the disasters that seem to befall small Appalachian towns every few years attest. And there are persistent alarms raised about mines using antiquated safety equipment, lax enforcement and a culture that discourages safety complaints.

    In 2006, West Virginia was the site of another mining calamity when 12 miners at the Sago Mine were killed by an explosion in an abandoned section of the mine. State officials said they believed those miners could have survived the blast if the seals cordoning off the area where it occurred had been properly installed.

    In 2001, an explosion at Blue Creek Mine No. 5 in Brookwood, Ala. claimed the lives of 13 workers. And in 1984, 27 workers were killed when a faulty air compressor ignited a fire at the Wilberg mine near Orangeville, Utah.

    Federal regulations passed after the Sago disaster increased the monitoring of air quality in active and sealed sections of the mines to avoid methane build up. The new regulations also required mine operators to install stronger barriers between active and non-active sections of mines.

    Mr. O’Dell said federal and state regulators would be immediately checking to see how well the mine complied with those and other new safety regulations.

    Michael Cooper contributed reporting.

March 30, 2010

  • Quake Accentuated Chasm That Has Defined Haiti

    Lynsey Addario for The New York Times

    The Pétionville Club tent camp in a prosperous area of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, sprang up after the Jan. 12 earthquake. Hundreds of displaced families languish near boutiques, restaurants and clubs.

    March 27, 2010

    Quake Accentuated Chasm That Has Defined Haiti

    PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The lights of the casino above this wrecked city beckoned as gamblers in freshly pressed clothes streamed to the roulette table and slot machines. In a restaurant nearby, diners quaffed Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin Champagne and ate New Zealand lamb chops at prices rivaling those in Manhattan.

    A few yards away, hundreds of families displaced by the earthquake languished under tents and tarps, bathing themselves from buckets and relieving themselves in the street as barefoot children frolicked on pavement strewn with garbage.

    This is the Pétionville district of Port-au-Prince, a hillside bastion of Haiti’s well-heeled where a mangled sense of normalcy has taken hold after the earthquake in January. Business is bustling at the lavish boutiques, restaurants and nightclubs that have reopened in the breezy hills above the capital, while thousands of homeless and hungry people camp in the streets around them, sometimes literally on their doorstep.

    “The rich people sometimes need to step over us to get inside,” said Judith Pierre, 28, a maid who has lived for weeks in a tent with her two daughters in front of Magdoos, a chic Lebanese restaurant where diners relax in a garden and smoke flavored tobacco from hookahs. Chauffeurs for some of the customers inside lined up sport utility vehicles next to Ms. Pierre’s tent on the sidewalk near the entrance.

    Haiti has long had glaring inequality, with tiny pockets of wealth persisting amid extreme poverty, and Pétionville itself was economically mixed before the earthquake, with poor families living near the gated mansions and villas of the rich.

    But the disaster has focused new attention on this gap, making for surreal contrasts along the streets above Port-au-Prince’s central districts. People in tent camps reeking of sewage are living in areas where prosperous Haitians, foreign aid workers and diplomats come to spend their money and unwind. Often, just a gate and a private guard armed with a 12-gauge shotgun separate the newly homeless from establishments like Les Galeries Rivoli, a boutique where wealthy Haitians and foreigners shop for Raymond Weil watches and Izod shirts.

    “There’s nothing logical about what’s going on right now,” said Tatiana Wah, a Haitian planning expert at Columbia University who is living in Pétionville and working as an adviser to Haiti’s government. Ms. Wah said the revelry at some nightclubs near her home, which are frequented by rich Haitians and foreigners, was now as loud — or louder — than before the earthquake.

    The nongovernmental organizations “are flooding the local economy with their spending,” she said, “but it’s not clear if much of it is trickling down.”

    Aleksandr Dobrianskiy, the Ukrainian owner of the Bagheera casino here in the hills, smiled as customers flowed in one recent Saturday evening, drinking Cuba Libres and plunking tokens into slot machines.

    He said business had never been better, attributing the uptick at his casino to the money coming into Haiti for relief projects. That spending is percolating through select areas of the economy, as some educated Haitians get jobs working with relief agencies and foreigners bring in cash from abroad, using it on housing, security, transportation and entertainment.

    “Haiti’s like a submarine that just hit the bottom of the sea,” said Mr. Dobrianskiy, 39, who moved here a year ago and carries a semiautomatic Glock handgun for protection. “It’s got nowhere to go but up.”

    Sometimes the worlds of haves and have-nots collide. Violent crime and kidnappings have been relatively low since the earthquake. But when two European relief workers from Doctors Without Borders were abducted outside the exclusive Plantation restaurant this month and held for five days, the episode served as a reminder of how Haiti’s poverty could give rise to resentment and crime.

    The breadth of Haiti’s economic misery seemed incomprehensible to many before the quake, with almost 80 percent of the population living on less than $2 a day. A small elite in gated mansions here in Pétionville and other hillside districts wields vast economic power.

    But with parts of Port-au-Prince now in ruins, tens of thousands of people displaced by the quake are camping directly in the bulwarks once associated with power and wealth, like Place St.-Pierre (across from the elegant Kinam Hotel) and the grounds of Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive’s office.

    The city’s biggest tent camp, with more than 40,000 displaced people, sprawls over the hills of the Pétionville Club, a country club with a golf course that before the quake had its own Facebook page for former members. (“Had the best Citronade; I bet I drank thousands of them, no exaggeration,” one reminiscence said.)

    Pétionville’s boutiques and restaurants stand in stark contrast to the parallel economic reality in the camp now at the Pétionville Club. Throughout its maze of tents, merchants sell dried fish and yams for a fraction of what the French cuisine costs in exclusive restaurants nearby like Quartier Latin or La Souvenance.

    Manicurists in the camp do nails. A stylist in a hovel applies hair extensions. The camp even has its own Paradis Ciné, set up in a tent with space for as many as 30 people. It charges admission of about $1.50 for screenings of “2012,” the end-of-times disaster movie known here as “Apocalypse.”

    “The people in the camp need their diversion, too,” said Cined Milien, 22, the operator of Paradis Ciné.

    Still, a ticket to see “Apocalypse” is a luxury out of the grasp of most people who lost their homes in the earthquake. Some of the well-off in Pétionville who have reopened their businesses have done so cautiously, aware of the misfortune that persists on their doorstep.

    “It’s kind of hard for people to dance and have fun,” said Anastasia Chassagne, 27, the Florida-educated owner of a trendy bar in Pétionville. “I put music, but really low, so like the people walking outside the street don’t hear, like, ‘Hey, these people are having fun.’ ”

    Not everyone in Pétionville has such qualms. Mr. Dobrianskiy, the casino entrepreneur, said he was pleased that Haiti’s currency, the gourde, had recently strengthened against the dollar to a value higher than before the quake, in part because of the influx of money from abroad.

    And on the floor above Mr. Dobrianskiy’s casino, a nightclub called Barak, with blaring music and Miami-priced cocktails, caters to a different elite here: United Nations employees and foreigners working for aid groups. They mingle with dozens of suggestively clad Haitian women and a few moneyed Haitian men taking in the scene.

    As hundreds of displaced families gathered under tents a few yards away, the music of Barak continued into the night. A bartender could not keep up with orders for Presidente beers.

    “Those who are gone are gone and buried, and we can’t do anything about that,” said Michel Sejoure, 21, a Haitian enjoying a drink at Barak. Asked about the displaced-persons camp down the street, he said, “I would want to help but I don’t have enough, and the government should be the ones that are actually helping these people out.”

    “But,” he said over the booming music, “they’re not.”

    Grant Fuller contributed reporting

March 28, 2010

  • Teenage sailor Abby Sunderland approaching treacherous Cape Horn

    Saturday, March 27, 2010 8:23am PDT

    Teenage sailor Abby Sunderland approaching treacherous Cape Horn

    By: Pete Thomas, GrindTV.com

    Abby Sunderland, 16, who cannot legally drive a car but is two months into a quest to become the youngest person to sail around the world alone, on Tuesday will face by far her most daunting challenge yet: the rounding of Cape Horn.

    While her friends back home in Southern California are savoring the pleasures of spring, Sunderland is pondering the treacherous passage between South America and Antarctica. With its mountainous, heaving seas and gale-force winds, Cape Horn is a mariners' graveyard, regarded as the Mt. Everest of the yachting universe.

    Reached this week via email the budding adventurer from Thousand Oaks claimed she was not afraid.

    "I understand very well how dangerous the ocean is, and especially where I am, and I sail carefully and never forget how fast things can turn bad out here," she responded, from a position west of southern Argentina and 700 miles from Cape Horn. "But fear would just get in the way. When things are going on, you don't have time to be scared about it; you have to just get your head around everything and deal with it."

    If Sunderland is successful it will mark her first major milestone and the beginning of a long, easterly Southern Ocean traverse aboard a 40-foot yacht named Wild Eyes. Her voyage is controversial because of her age, but also because she'll be entering this notoriously inhospitable stretch as the Southern Hemisphere summer fades to autumn and savagely cold and stormy weather begins to set in.

    "My biggest hope is that she has he maturity to wait out any nasty weather rather than push too hard for a record and risk getting into trouble," says Charlie Nobles, executive director of the American Sailing Assn.

    Sunderland, who lives in Thousand Oaks, Calif., and embarked Jan. 23 from Marina del Rey, Calif., is one of two 16-year-old girls attempting nonstop, unassisted solo-circumnavigations, subsiding on freeze-dried food and desalinated water, while accepting only verbal or online guidance from home-based teams.

    Australia's Jessica Watson began her odyssey from Sydney last October and rounded Cape Horn on Jan. 13. Soon afterward she endured 70-knot winds that threatened to capsize her 34-foot pink sloop.

    Watson, now more than 18,000 miles along and crossing the Indian Ocean, is five months older than Sunderland, so Sunderland will become the youngest if she completes her trip within five months of Watson's ending date. (Abby's brother Zac, who completed his voyage at 17, briefly held the distinction as being the youngest sailor to solo-circumnavigate the planet but he made several stops. England's Mike Perham, who is slightly younger, stole that honor weeks later.)

    Abby Sunderland's trip was delayed by about two months because of boat issues. Her parents assure, however, that she'll listen closely to weather experts and scurry to the nearest port if conditions become too harsh.

    Meanwhile, the intrepid mariner is faring reasonably well. "I miss my family, and my dog, and my friends," she wrote, adding that thoughts often turn to her 5-year-old sister, Katherine. They share a bedroom and Katherine idolizes Abby, and has not slept in the room alone since Abby's departure.

    Aside from bouts of loneliness, the eldest Sunderland daughter--one of seven children, with an eighth on the way--insists she's relishing the experience of a lifetime. "Everything around me is so amazing, just standing out on deck is exhilarating," she explained. "Every day there are new experiences, and they always seem better than the last; everything from squalls to gales, to just racing along."

    Her parents, on the other hand, are besieged by the same type of angst as when Zac was braving gales and encountering ghost ships carrying suspected pirates.

    "I have definitely been recruiting the people in my life who pray," said the mother, Marianne, in reference to a recent convergence of severe weather fronts that were falsely predicted to slam Wild Eyes. "But I am super-impressed with how Abby has handled everything, from the boat and its workings to the loneliness and monotony of everyday life at sea. But I'll be glad when she has rounded the Horn and can get back up into some calmer waters."

    Abby might get to see her father before she rounds Cape Horn. Laurence Sunderland has flown to Argentina and hired a captain to take him out to try to photograph Wild Eyes before his daughter attempts the passage, but that might prove difficult as 20- to 25-knot winds and large swells are in the forecast through Tuesday.

    After she gets around South America's tip, Abby will turn to the north and attempt to outrun a building Antarctic storm. Ultimately, she'll cross the southern Atlantic and the Indian Ocean, pass between Australia and New Zealand and cross the Pacific on a northeast course toward home.

    That's a lot of water to cover and, given her late start, perhaps a lot of icebergs to dodge as well.

    -- Photo of Abby Sunderland aboard her vessel, Wild Eyes, courtesy of Gizara Arts

March 14, 2010

  • Ferrari finishes with Alonso and Massa first and second.

    Alonso takes victory on Ferrari debut


    Fernando Alonso got his Ferrari career off to a glorious start by leading team-mate Felipe Massa to a comfortable one-two in the Bahrain Grand Prix - but only after Sebastian Vettel's Red Bull lost power while leading.

    The German still managed to limp to the flag in fourth, with Lewis Hamilton benefiting from his problem to get on the podium for McLaren. The Mercedes of Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher completed the top six.

    Vettel had looked comfortable in the lead for most of the race, pulling out a five second advantage prior to the leaders' sole pitstops on laps 17 to 19.

    Alonso had taken second from Massa through the first corners at the start, and then closed a little on Vettel by taking fresh tyres one lap sooner. He continued to chip away at the gap in the second half of the race, getting to within 1.5s and bringing Massa along with him, but Vettel seemed to have enough in hand to keep the Ferraris at bay.

    That suddenly changed at the start of lap 34 though, as Vettel abruptly slowed on the pits straight, reporting a loss of power that the team later diagnosed as an exhaust problem.

    Alonso was soon all over the back of the hobbled Red Bull, blasting past and into the lead on the run into the final corner, with Massa followed him on the next straight to take second.

    Just in case Massa had any thoughts of mounting a challenge for the lead, Alonso then fired off a string of new fastest race laps to build a 5s margin and set himself up to take his first victory since the 2008 Japanese GP. He continued to set fastest laps in the closing stages to keep himself amused, eventually extending his lead over Massa into double figures.

    Hamilton ran behind Rosberg at first, but jumped the Mercedes in the first pitstops. He picked up third from the slowing Vettel with 11 laps to go.

    After that Vettel managed to get a little more speed from his car and held on to fourth, finishing just ahead of Rosberg.

    Schumacher ran a few seconds behind his team-mate throughout his comeback race, fending off world champion Jenson Button (McLaren) and Mark Webber (Red Bull), who swapped places when they pitted in unison on lap 19.

    Webber had a trouble-free run despite his Red Bull emitting huge plumes of white smoke on the opening lap. Unsighted in this cloud, Renault's Robert Kubica and Force India's Adrian Sutil touched and spun, although they recovered to 11th and 12th.

    An early pitstop allowed Kubica to set some rapid times and vault a few midfield cars, but in the end he could not get close enough to 10th placed Rubens Barrichello's Williams. Force India had the consolation of ninth position for Sutil's team-mate Tonio Liuzzi.

    Rookies Vitaly Petrov and Nico Hulkenberg had tough races, with the Williams spinning in the fast downhill corners following the new loop early on, and Petrov having to park in the pits with a suspension problem - which he felt he may have caused by hitting a kerb too hard. Prior to that the Renault had run 11th thanks to a fast start.

    Lotus managed to get both cars to the flag, with Heikki Kovalainen and Jarno Trulli within 3s of the pace at times on their way to 15th and 16th, although Trulli had to nurse a mechanical problem in the final laps.

    The other two new teams did not last long. Karun Chandhok crashed his Hispania on lap two, and team-mate Bruno Senna had a suspected hydraulic problem 16 laps later. Virgin also posted two early retirements, with hydraulic issues stopping Lucas di Grassi after two laps and Timo Glock hitting gearbox trouble just after passing Kovalainen for the lead of the unofficial newcomers' class.

    Sauber was the other team forced to retire both cars, as Pedro de la Rosa and Kamui Kobayashi suffered hydraulic gremlins mid-race.

    PROVISIONAL RACE RESULTSThe Bahrain Grand PrixBahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain;49 laps; 308.405km;Weather: Sunny.Classified:Pos  Driver        Team                       Time 1.  Alonso        Ferrari                    1h39:20.396 2.  Massa         Ferrari                    +    16.099 3.  Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes           +    23.182 4.  Vettel        Red Bull-Renault           +    38.713 5.  Rosberg       Mercedes                   +    40.263 6.  Schumacher    Mercedes                   +    44.180 7.  Button        McLaren-Mercedes           +    45.260 8.  Webber        Red Bull-Renault           +    46.308 9.  Liuzzi        Force India-Mercedes       +    53.08910.  Barrichello   Williams-Cosworth          +  1:02.40011.  Kubica        Renault                    +  1:09.09312.  Sutil         Force India-Mercedes       +  1:22.95813.  Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +  1:32.65614.  Hulkenberg    Williams-Cosworth          +     1 lap15.  Kovalainen    Lotus-Cosworth             +     1 lap16.  Buemi         Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +    3 laps17.  Trulli        Lotus-Cosworth             +    3 lapsFastest lap: Alonso, 1:58.287Not classified/retirements:Driver        Team                         On lapDe la Rosa    Sauber-Ferrari               30Senna         HRT-Cosworth                 18Glock         Virgin-Cosworth              17Petrov        Renault                      14Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari               12Di Grassi     Virgin-Cosworth              3Chandhok      HRT-Cosworth                 2World Championship standings, round 1:                Drivers:                    Constructors:              1.  Alonso        25        1.  Ferrari                    43 2.  Massa         18        2.  McLaren-Mercedes           21 3.  Hamilton      15        3.  Mercedes                   18 4.  Vettel        12        4.  Red Bull-Renault           16 5.  Rosberg       10        5.  Force India-Mercedes        2 6.  Schumacher     8        6.  Williams-Cosworth           1 7.  Button         6        8.  Webber         4        9.  Liuzzi         2       10.  Barrichello    1              All timing unofficial
    © 2010 AUTOSPORT.COM

March 9, 2010

  • Age and the Entertainment Industry

    March 8, 2010

    The Anxiety of Age

    The overwhelming question that arises from the 82nd Annual Academy Awards goes like this: what level of respect should we accord to an industry that finds a place onstage for Miley Cyrus, but not for Lauren Bacall? Cyrus, who wore a perfectly respectable bustier but had inadvertently forgotten to put anything over it, came on to present an award in the company of Amanda Seyfried, and, in so doing, fluffed her lines. “We’re both kinda nervous, it’s our first time.” So saying, she tried to corral Seyfried into the fluff, inviting her to share the pain, but Seyfried, wisely, was having none of it, and shied backward, as if to say, “Enough with the both, sister.” This was only one of many blips and stumbles in the presentation, as a number of presenters developed one of those halting, on-off relationships with the teleprompter that tend to bedevil the green, the flustered, the myopic, and the under-rehearsed.

    And there, meanwhile, resplendent and omniscient, sat Ms. Bacall, long since blessed with a place among the gods, on the empyrean heights of movie history, yet consigned, for the purposes of Sunday night, with a lowly place in the stalls. When her name was announced, she stood and waved, like the Queen, and was pleased to note that her subjects rose to pay appropriate homage; but she was forbidden, nonetheless, to mount the sacred stairs, where Miley had gone before. It transpired that Bacall, Roger Corman, John Calley, and Gordon Willis were being denied the chance to shine on Oscar night, having accepted their honorary statuettes at the Governors Awards, way back on November 14th. Between them, they know quite a bit about filmmaking, and the lustre that it can bestow. Perhaps it was thought impolitic, or unwise, to showcase their collective works, in case too tasty a slice of “The Big Sleep,” or too gorgeous a memory of Willis’s cinematography on “Manhattan,” might make a film like “Precious,” a noisy affair to begin with, look about as subtle as a road-drill. Or maybe the producers of the show, acutely aware of a ratings decline in recent years, and all the more desperate, therefore, not to let slip the kinds of audience for whom advertisers thirst, had issued a gentle nostrum: Don’t listen to “Up.” Skip the aged. Hold the old.

    This time-clash, among what was, what is right now, and what’s coming up fast, is always there on Oscar night, but yesterday evening it felt more pervasive than ever, and more compelling, in its way, than the face-off between James Cameron and Kathryn Bigelow, which had been thrashed into inanition over preceding weeks, and which felt definitively settled from the moment that “The Hurt Locker” picked up Best Original Screenplay. So many of the gags wielded by Steve Martin, especially, seemed designed to probe this generational discomfort: “Two young actresses who have no idea who we are,” was his description of Cyrus and Seyfried. To Zac Efron and Taylor Lautner (who looks more like a “Twilight” action figure than a verifiable human), Martin gave a specific warning: “Take a good look at us, guys: this is you in five years.” Nice, though not as devastating, in its mortal fretfulness, as the line that he fired off a few years ago, when he was the solo host. Pointing out Kate Hudson and her coevals, Martin said how refreshing it was to see so many young stars in attendance, adding, “It reminds me of my own death.”

    Is every actor blighted by the same anxiety of age? The frost of fashion will, of course, nip half the hopefuls in the bud, and yet, as one scanned the arrivals last night, it was cheering to alight on some who would, one feels, have flourished at almost any point in the long seasons of Hollywood. Cameron Diaz is one (how Billy Wilder would have hastened to hire her, for that mix of the unearthly and the downright wicked), which makes it all the more lamentable that nobody, but nobody, is able to supply her with a screenplay that doesn’t stink. George Clooney is another, of course, but so, I happen to think, is his co-star from “Up in the Air,” Vera Farmiga, whose drawling smartness would have earned her an easy spot in “Stage Door,” with Ginger Rogers and Katharine Hepburn. Last night she managed to keep that wit about her, despite losing out to Mo’nique, despite wearing something that was not so much a dress as a crimson fan-dance that had ambitions to become a dress, and despite—above all—having to stand next to other luminaries and churn out a sweet love-crush to expectant nominees. This was something I had not expected to find: a human granita machine.

    What was going on? Farmiga, Tim Robbins, Julianne Moore, Michelle Pfeiffer, Stanley Tucci, Forest Whitaker, and others, all of them asked to hold still, without so much as a podium to lean on, an envelope to finger, or a little gold man to squeeze, and hymn their respective friends. Even Oprah had to do it; needless to say, she did it with bullet-point briskness and efficacy, but still, it must the first time she has found herself in a lineup. It was like a Celebrity “Usual Suspects.” Again and again, throughout the show, the producers decided to make rich, famous people strike a pose, in tricky isolation, just long enough to bead their hairlines with imperceptible sweat. My guess is that the Academy could be hearing from a whole lot of lawyers over breakfast. Each of the ten nominees for Best Picture was touted by a lonely figure on a platform; Colin Firth did it for “An Education,” and he had already endured, poor fellow, the horror of the opening minutes, when he, Morgan Freeman, Carey Mulligan, and others had been paraded, for our delectation, under the pitiless lights. Given that Englishmen imbibe embarrassment with their mother’s milk (that, indeed, is precisely where the problem begins), and given that Firth is one of the most undilutedly English stars since Robert Donat, his aplomb, under the circumstances, was miraculous to behold.

    For a dizzying instant, I thought that all ten of that initial group—nominated for their performances in leading roles—were about to whirr, grow fuzzy, and beam themselves off the bridge of the U.S.S. Kodak Theatre. I was hoping, in short, for a “Star Trek” moment. What became apparent, however, with dispiriting speed, was that this would not be science fiction’s night. Science, yes, for those who want to know how to defuse a trunkful of bombs or power their houses with balloons, and plenty of fiction, too, for those who dream of slaughtering Nazis or getting laid on the strength of their air-miles; but not science and fiction in the same package. “Avatar” slunk away with three minor prizes, and “District 9,” an exemplary piece of low-budget inventiveness, with none. Even “Star Trek” lost its two awards, for sound mixing and editing, to “The Hurt Locker,” although at least both of those were collected, back-to-back, by a frail and splendid figure with flowing ginger-blond tresses, milky complexion, and unplaceable accent, whose very presence gave comfort to connoisseurs of the extraterrestrial. (For the record, his name is Paul N. J. Ottoson, and he claims to come from Sweden. Yeah, right.)

    And that was pretty much it, for fans of the unfathomably strange. You might have reckoned that a quick zip back through a hundred years of sci-fi, in tribute to “Avatar” and to all that it excitably portends, would have been in order, instead of which, for no known reason, we got a gaggle of clips from random horror movies, some of them so random that they weren’t even horror movies at all. (Mind you, it was prefaced by the funniest skit in the show, a neatly judged spoof of “Paranormal Activity,” starring Steve Martin and his co-presenter Alec Baldwin, which presumably cost more than the original film.) In the end, the only object on show that forced me to speculate on life beyond our solar system was the dress worn by Sarah Jessica Parker, a lemon sheath topped with what appeared to be ironwork. Label-hunters tagged it as Chanel, cynics dismissed it as a nasty collision between the world’s cleanest shower curtain and the radiator grille of a Mack truck, but to me it was clearly the lightweight battle-dress worn by Ma’ami the She-Monarch from the third planet on the left past Pandora, already colonized by James Cameron as he prepares for his next adventure.

    Will he wince at last night’s snub, and grind his teeth in his dreams, or do two and a half billion dollars sit more comfortably in the hand than a few square inches of gold plate? I think he will mind, a little, precisely because an Oscar is still, pace Harvey Weinstein, something that money can’t buy—because Hollywood itself remains stubbornly hard to conquer, with or without your dragon and your magic braid. Tom Ford dropped a hint of this, as he spoke to Ryan Seacrest on the red carpet beforehand: truly a meeting of rare species. Ford explained that the purpose of life, as dramatized in his film, “A Single Man,” was “not about money, cars, things—I mean, all of us are fortunate in this world—but it’s really about your connection to other people.” Seacrest didn’t miss a beat. “Tell me about this suit,” he said. “It’s a Tom Ford suit,” Tom Ford said. Talk about connection.

    Both men looked chilled, pert, and primed for the ordeal ahead, though surely the realization that it would last more than three and a half hours would have been enough to take the edge off that chill. Did they foresee the bad robot dance? The pause that enabled Kristen Stewart to turn aside from the microphone, though not aside enough, and cough in spluttery fear over her shoulder? The way in which Tom Hanks, a pro at this palaver, clocked the overrun, marched on, skipped the final countdown, undid the envelope, and pronounced the words “The Hurt Locker” as if slipping his wife some plain, though not unwelcome, news about the size of their grocery bill? The one thing that none of us could have predicted was that our hearts, and our film-going habits of yore, should be stirred by a montage of old John Hughes movies. All of a sudden, folded and pasted together, as if in a yearbook or a photograph album, the clippings didn’t look dated, or tacky, or constrained by their setting. They looked like an authentic portrait of American teen-age yearning, both raucous and shy: “My God, are we going to be like our parents?” Emilio Estevez asked, in a line from “The Breakfast Club.” The question reverberated around the auditorium last night more searchingly than ever, as parent and grandparents, the elders and betters of their profession, gazed kindly, and with boundless apprehension, upon the next wave of kids. It seems impossible that Kate Winslet’s hair, the most beautiful arrangement since the heyday of Veronica Lake, could ever be outgleamed, and outbrushed, by other locks; but even perfect beauty, as Yeats was sorry to inform us, will grow old and gray and full of sleep. Just look at Antonio Banderas’s beard.

    POSTED IN

  • Facing Dismal Poll Numbers, Reid Welcomes Third-Party Candidates in Senate Race

    Dec. 6: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid speaks to the media on Capitol Hill. (AP)

    - March 09, 2010Facing dismal poll numbers in his home state, Nevada Sen. Harry Reid has devised a re-election strategy: welcome third party candidates who can split the opposition in the uphill battle to hold on to his U.S. Senate seat.

    Facing dismal poll numbers in his home state, Nevada Sen. Harry Reid has devised a re-election strategy: welcome third party candidates who can split the opposition in the uphill battle to hold on to his U.S. Senate seat.

    The Nevada Democrat and Senate majority leader filed to run for election to a fifth term on Monday, and said he embraces independent contenders in the race.

    "They have a right to file," Reid reportedly said of prospective third-party candidates. "You have to understand that this election is going to mean more than Democrats and Republicans."

    "We have the third-party candidates. We have the American Independent Party. We have the Tea Party now," he said, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal.

    The embattled Democrat, whose public approval is below 40 percent in state polls, is currently trailing all three Republican candidates vying to unseat him.

    A March 5 Rasmussen survey of 500 likely voters found Reid behind Nevada businessman and Republican Danny Tarkanian by double digits -- 50 to 37 percent. Sue Lowden, ex-chairman of the Nevada Republican Party, leads Reid 51 to 38 percent, according to the poll. And former Nevada assemblywoman Sharron Angle, the weakest of the three Republican contenders, leads Reid 46 to 38 percent, the survey found.

    Nine percent of those polled in the Rasmussen survey said they would choose another candidate, while four percent indicated they are undecided.


    Third-party candidates include Jon Scott Ashjian, a successful business man running as a Nevada Tea Party candidate. Ashjian, who recently filed to run in the election, has garnered significant criticism after a report surfaced last week showing that he owed $200,000 in back taxes.

    Reid reportedly said Monday that a poll for a three-way race "shows me winning the election," the newspaper reported.

    © Associated Press. All rights reserved.


March 7, 2010

  • 36 Hours in Palm Beach, Fla.

    March 7, 2010

    36 Hours in Palm Beach, Fla.

    PALM BEACHERS may have tightened their Gucci belts in the wake of the Bernard Madoff scandal. The Ponzi scheme cleaned out some local bank accounts, and the recession curtailed the lust for Limoges and other such items. Still, judging by the perfectly clipped hedges that envelop the manicured mansions, residents may be doing with less, but not much less. The tiny island, north of Fort Lauderdale on Florida’s east coast, still boasts some of the country’s dreamiest estates, where the staff lives better than many Americans, cashmere sweaters in trademark pastel greens and pinks go for $800, and Rolls-Royces show up at Publix with regularity in a town where more is never quite enough.

    Friday

    4 p.m.
    1) THE BIG GAPE

    Big money means big house, so rent a nice convertible and stare. For envy-inducing views of these winter palaces, drive south along South Ocean Boulevard for about six miles starting at Barton Avenue. Even those obsessed with privacy relish their ocean views (why pay millions for beachfront if you can’t enjoy it?), which means the gates and hedges along these mansions are slightly lower than elsewhere in town. You can catch a glimpse of the Mar-a-Lago Club, Donald Trump’s former residence, now a private club owned by Mr. Trump.

    6:30 p.m.
    2) GRANDE DAME

    For a sunset cocktail, glide into the Breakers Hotel (1 South County Road; 561-655-6611; thebreakers.com), originally built in 1896. So central is its location that the hotel has been rebuilt twice after fires destroyed it. The Seafood Bar has delightful views of the sea. If you prefer upholstered opulence, head for the Tapestry Bar with its two Flemish tapestries and a grand bar built from a mantel from Caxton Hall in London.

    8:30 p.m.
    3) DINER’S CLUB

    Palm Beach dining runs from supremely pretentious to casually simple. Many restaurants survive over decades, and because Palm Beach is a small town, where the same cast shows up frequently, they have the feel of private clubs. The Palm Beach Grill (340 Royal Poinciana Way; 561-835-1077; palmbeachgrill.com) is a darkly wooded, dimly lighted social fixture that is a favorite of the author James Patterson and almost everyone else. If the mobbed dining room is for the island’s old guard, the bar seems to attract newcomers: snowbirds deciding whether to move South, city types longing for a slower, more glamorous life and locals who want to have fun. Don’t miss American classics like spare ribs and ice cream sundaes. Dinner for two, from $80. Book before you fly.

    Saturday

    8 a.m.
    4) EMPTY BEACHES

    Park on South Ocean Boulevard and take a long, languorous walk on the beach. The beaches here are flat, wide, clean and wonderful in the early morning when there are not many people around.

    9 a.m.
    5) EARLY SNOWBIRDS

    This may be a party town, but it wakes up early. A clutch of restaurants along Royal Poinciana Way are busy by 8:30 a.m., with diners sitting outside and savoring the sunshine and breakfast. Testa’s Palm Beach Restaurant (221 Royal Poinciana Way; 561-832-0992; testasrestaurants.com), a sprawling, relaxed space, serves blueberry, pecan and bran pancakes ($6.25). Around the corner is Green’s Pharmacy (151 North County Road; 561-832-4443), which offers breakfast at an old-fashioned lunch counter. Afterward, pick up candy buttons and other long-forgotten stuff.

    10:30 a.m.
    6) HISTORY CLASS

    For an authentic sense of Palm Beach in its early days, drop by the Flagler Museum (1 Whitehall Way; 561-655-2833; flaglermuseum.us). It was once the home of Henry Morrison Flagler, one of the founders of Standard Oil, and the man who brought the railroad to southern Florida. He spent millions in 1902 to build the 55-room house that became a hotel and finally a museum. Admission, $18.

    Noon
    7) RETAIL STRUT

    On Worth Avenue, where every brand that you’ve seen in Vogue has a storefront, the real fun is the crowd: women in green cashmere sweaters walking dogs in matching outfits; elderly gents with bow ties and blazers. But the true gems — Cartier aside — are the smaller, lesser-known stores that have survived by wit and originality. Maryanna Suzanna (313 Worth Avenue; 561-833-0204) carries colorful jewelry by Monies and the Italian designer Angela Caputi — some earrings are under $50. Across the street, Sherry Frankel’s Melangerie (256 Worth Avenue; 561-655-1996) sells amusing plastic watches for $68. And nearby is Il Sandalo (240 Worth Avenue; 561-805-8674; ilsandalo.com), where the shoemaker Hernan Garcia makes custom sandals starting at $195. For lunch, head to Ta-boo (221 Worth Avenue, 561-835-3500; taboorestaurant.com), with its British colonial décor where women swathed in white linen with enormous straw hats pick carefully at the chopped chef’s salad ($15.95).

    3:30 p.m.
    8) GILT TRIP

    It’s a challenge to fill up those sprawling estates with furniture, but there are armies of antiques merchants poised to try. Antiques enthusiasts can start at the elegant French dealer Cedric Dupont (820 South Dixie Highway; 561-835-1319; cedricdupontantiques.com) and go all the way south to Southern Boulevard to the Elephant’s Foot (3800 South Dixie Highway; 561-832-0170; theelephantsfoot.com), which has a range of English. French and Oriental antiques at varying prices. Or for a resale find, try Circa Who (531 Northwood Road; 561-655-5224; circawho.com), with funky faux bamboo, retro and Old Florida furniture.

    8 p.m.
    9) MEDITERRANEAN FLAVOR

    For a casual dinner in the heart of town, head to Cucina Dell’Arte (257 Royal Poinciana Way; 561-655-0770; cucinadellarte.com), which is popular with a younger crowd and is open until 3 a.m. It is decorated in the earth tones and mustards and peaches typical of the Mediterranean and seems to be busy all day with families, couples and groups of friends. You can eat outdoors and watch the crowds go by. Try the pollo cacciatore ($25).

    10:30 p.m.
    10) PARTY TIME

    There are plenty of big jewels in Palm Beach, but they are generally worn at private parties. The night life for visitors is casual. Stop in for a drink at the very pretty Brazilian Court Hotel (301 Australian Avenue; 561-655-7740; thebraziliancourt.com) where the chef Daniel Boulud runs the restaurants. Order a Bikini Martini, with Sagatiba cachaça and passion fruit purée. On Saturdays a small band or D.J. plays in the lobby until 1 a.m., attracting a preppy crowd. Or head across the bridge to Blue Martini (City Place; 561-835-8601; bluemartinilounge.com) in a trendy shopping mall, where you can sip a martini and hear the music pour out of B. B. King’s Blues Club next door.

    Sunday

    10 a.m.
    11) HIT THE TRAIL

    A flat and easy bike trail hugs the Intracoastal Waterway, which skirts the west side of Palm Beach, and offers fantastic views of the Marina in West Palm Beach. Rent a bike at Palm Beach Bicycle Trail Shop (223 Sunrise Avenue; 561-659-4583; palmbeachbicycle.com), which has multispeed bikes starting at $15 an hour. If bikes are not your thing, you can jog the route.

    1 p.m.
    12) STAYING COOL

    The Four Seasons, the Ritz-Carlton and others have all staked claims to the beachfront along South Ocean Boulevard. The new hot spot belongs to the Miami chef Michelle Bernstein, who recently opened two restaurants at the Omphoy Ocean Resort (2842 South Ocean Boulevard, 561-540-6450; omphoy.com). The sleekly elegant spaces are furnished in dark woods with views of the sea. Even on cool and overcast days during the winter, the lunch restaurant MB Terrace draws a diverse crowd. Try the seafood ceviche ($14). After all, this is Palm Beach, where a meal on the beach is a must.

    IF YOU GO

    There are numerous nonstop flights from the New York City area to Palm Beach International Airport. Continental flies from Newark; Delta from La Guardia; and JetBlue out of La Guardia and Kennedy Airport. A recent Web search found fares on JetBlue and Delta starting at $199 for travel in March. A rental car is recommended to get around.

    The Breakers (1 South County Road; 561-655-6611; thebreakers.com) is a 550-room stunner directly on the beach, with swimming pools, tennis and golf. It also has several restaurants, as well as a spa. Rooms start at $499 with a $100 credit toward activities at the hotel.

    The Chesterfield (363 Cocoanut Row; 561-659-5800; www.chesterfieldpb.com) is a 52-room boutique hotel within walking distance of Worth Avenue. The rooms are elegantly appointed, some with flowered print wallpaper and upholstery, and the Leopard Lounge, with its leopard print carpet, is popular at night. Rooms start at $319.

    The Marriott West Palm Beach (1001 Okeechobee Boulevard; 561-833-1234; marriott.com/westpalmbeach) is a safe choice if you want to be close to Palm Beach, with rooms starting at $229.

    Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company