Friday, August 3, 2012

Things to do in New Orleans August 3-5

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Welcome to the special hell that is August in New Orleans. The mercury doesn?t get much higher, but there are plenty of cool happenings this weekend to make you forget the heat.

Brothers of the Sun Tour at the Superdome

It?ll take all 9,000 tons of available air conditioning to keep the Superdome cool on Friday as the ballyhooed Brothers of the Sun Tour featuring country superstars Kenny Chesney and Tim McGraw comes to town. The tour began June 2 and is winding its way through 19 American stadiums until it closes with a two-night stand in Foxboro, Massachusetts. It is sure to be the moneymaking tour of the summer. Clocking in at six+ hours and 65+ songs, this is sure to leave country music fans supremely satisfied. Grace Potter opens the show and is followed by up-and-comer Jake Owen. McGraw and Chesney each deliver a solo set and wrap the gig with a joint encore.

Details: Tickets range from $28 to $209. Show starts at 4:30 p.m. Friday, August 3 at Mercedes-Benz Superdome (1500 Poydras St, 504-587-3663).

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White Linen Night in the Warehouse / Arts District

If you must be out in the heat on Saturday, don your best whites and head to Julia Street around 6 p.m. for White Linen Night. Twenty-one galleries will participate in this block party, with plenty of food and drink around every turn by Salu, Nirvana, GW Fins, and Pinkberry, plus music on three stages from veteran musicians, including singer-songwriter Jim McCormick. A Rain vodka ginger lemonade will be the featured specialty cocktail at one of the many bars and an after-party will be held at the Contemporary Arts Center featuring the Mod Dance Party, where DJs will spin classic platters from the ?50s through the ?80s.

Details: Free and open to the public. After-party $10. 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. Saturday, August 4 on the 300-700 blocks of Julia St. and at the Contemporary Arts Center (900 Camp St., 504-528-3805)

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The Revivalists at Tipitina?s Free Fridays

The Revivalists continue their meteoric progression: after spending the month of June touring the East Coast, the group recently signed with big-time booking agent Madison House and, after a short stop here, will be back on the road to tour with Warren Haynes and Gov?t Mule until they return for Voodoo Fest. Frontman David Shaw and the rest of this organic sextet will undoubtedly have the crowd worked into a frenzy?with a fine repertoire of roots rock revolution songs and plenty of improvisational fervor. Cha Wa opens the show.

Details: Free. Doors open at 9:00 p.m. Friday, August 3 at Tipitina?s (501 Napoleon Ave., 504-895-8477)

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Circus Circus Brawl Brawl at One Eyed Jacks

If you wanna watch some girls mix it up, head on over to One Eyed Jacks on Saturday for Circus Circus Brawl Brawl, held by New Orleans Ladies Arm Wrestling to benefit the Liberty House, a shelter for homeless women with children. NOLAW are a collective of fired up ladies who walk a fine line between theatrical antics and hard core athleticism. They hold rowdy performance-based competitions which feature eight contestants who have larger-than-life monikers ranging from Swamp Thang to Foxy ?Fro? Brown to Sistah Slammer. They compete in a three-round competition as attendees wager on each match and the proceeds are donated to charity.

Details: Tickets $5. Doors at 7 p.m. Saturday, August 4 at One Eyed Jacks (615 Toulouse St., 504-569-8361)

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Deacon John and the Ivories at Rock ?N? Bowl

Deacon John started playing music professionally in 1957 and 55 years later he is still going strong. He brings his band the Ivories to the Rock ?n? Bowl on Saturday. A fixture on the scene both playing and recording, John can be heard on such classic New Orleans songs as ?Mother-in Law, ?Working in a Coal Mine,? ?Barefootin?,? and ?Tell It Like Is,? all of which were recorded at Cosimo Matassa?s studio in the ?50s and ?60s. Deacon John?s knowledge of rock ?n? roll, R&B and funk classics is encyclopedic and he has received numerous lifetime achievement awards.

Details: Tickets $12 Doors open at 8:00 p.m. Saturday, August 4, 2012. Rock ?n? Bowl (3000 S. Carrollton Ave, 504-861-1700)

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Big K.R.I.T. at the House of Blues

Big K.R.I.T. brings the swagga to the House of Blues on Tuesday in support of his Live From the Underground tour. The 26-year-old hip-hop artist and producer hails from Meridian, Mississippi, where he was born Justin Scott. In 2010, K.R.I.T. (King Remembered In Time) caught the attention of Def Jam senior VP of A&R Sha Money XL, and his career took off. After extensive touring with Wiz Khalifa and a Best New Music tag from Pitchfork, K.R.I.T. appeared ready to fill the shoes of fellow Southern rap stars Outkast and Scarface. His collaborations with Yelawolf and Ludacris as of late have kept him on the path to stardom and in September, he embarks upon a European tour.

Details: Tickets $20. Doors at 8 p.m. Tuesday, August 7 at House of Blues (225 Decatur St., 504-310-4999)

Source: http://www.neworleans.com/blog/2012/08/new-orleans-weekend-picks-2/

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Thursday, August 2, 2012

US-bound Cubans pour into Panama through Colombia

In this July 3, 2012 photo, Cuban migrant Mayra Reyes, sitting fourth from right, gathers with other Cubans with whom she traveled as they rest at a shelter along with another group of migrants from Bangladesh, after being found by Panamanian border police in the Darien province in Meteti, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this July 3, 2012 photo, Cuban migrant Mayra Reyes, sitting fourth from right, gathers with other Cubans with whom she traveled as they rest at a shelter along with another group of migrants from Bangladesh, after being found by Panamanian border police in the Darien province in Meteti, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 22, 2012 photo, a man bathes in a river at dawn in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, in Union Choco, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 19, 2012 photo, a Panama border police officer walks with his rifle after taking a bath in the river near a police station in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, in Union Choco, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 19, 2012 photo, Panama border police patrol by boat in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, near Yaviza, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the hemisphere-spanning Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 19, 2012 photo, people bathe in the river as the sun sets in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, in Union Choco, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

(AP) ? Led by smugglers armed with knives and machetes, Mayra Reyes and 14 other Cubans sloshed through swamps and rivers and suffered hordes of mosquitoes as they struggled across the notorious Darien Gap between Panama and Colombia, the only north-south stretch of the Americas to defy road-builders.

After walking for three days, the group reached the foot of a steep, scrubby mountain. There, the smugglers peeled away and told the Cubans they would have to press ahead alone.

"I thought I was going to have a heart attack," the 32-year-old hairdresser from Havana told The Associated Press. "What the guides did was get us to the mountain, where we had to wait for nightfall while these green and black poisonous frogs got on top of us."

Hundreds of Cubans like Reyes are taking that arduous new route toward the United States, trekking across the 85 miles (135 kilometers) of steamy tropical jungle that divides Colombia and Panama, through mountains, ravines, and muddy ground teeming with poisonous reptiles, jaguars, wild boars, guerrillas and drug traffickers,

And after that, they still face a journey across 1,700 miles (2,700 kilometers) and six countries to reach the United States.

Panamanian immigration authorities detained 800 Cubans near the border with Colombia from January through the first week in July, compared to 400 in all of 2011.

"We have detained up to 90 people in one week," said Frank Abrego, director of Panama's National Borders Service.

Thousands of islanders over the decades have used rudimentary rafts to travel the 90 miles (150 kilometers) that separate Cuba from the United States, but that journey can be deadly, and the U.S. Coast Guard has been patrolling the Florida Straits more aggressively, halting many before they can reach Florida. Most Cubans who reach U.S. soil can stay, but those intercepted at sea are usually returned to their homeland, and U.S. figures indicate that more than 1,000 have been stopped at sea so far this year.

So Cubans have turned to land routes. Nearly 90 percent of all undocumented Cubans who make it to America now come overland, usually through Mexico, rather than reaching U.S. shores by boat, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The route across the Darien Gap arose partly because many Cubans are now using the South American nation of Ecuador as the start of their path to the United States. President Rafael Correa eliminated visa requirements for Cuba in 2008, as other countries in Latin America, including Mexico, made it harder for Cubans to reach their shores.

All a Cuban needs is an exit permit from the Cuban government and a letter of invitation from a citizen of Ecuador, where some people sell such letters for $300 to $500. If Cubans have a letter of invitation and prove they can finance their travel abroad, it's relatively easy to get an exit permit if they are not doctors, scientists, military or members of other professions deemed high value by the government.

The result has been a flood of islanders traveling to the South American nation, which borders Colombia along the Pacific Ocean.

"Going to Ecuador is the easiest way right now to get out of Cuba," said Andy Gomez, a senior political fellow at the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies. "For the majority, Ecuador is a stopping point but they have to come up with the money to get to their final destination, the United States," he said.

According to Ecuadorean official figures, between 2007 and February 2012, 106,371 Cubans entered the country legally and 97,923 left legally. It is unclear what happened to the other 8,448.

In Ecuador, many Cubans work to save money to pay smugglers to take them to Mexico's border with the United States, a route shared with many Central American migrants who have to cross territory controlled by drug traffickers and who often face extortion and kidnapping.

Few, though, cross the Darien, one of the world's most rain-drenched regions. While several thousand indigenous people live along its trails and rivers, the jungle is so dense, the ground so swampy or mountainous, that the few attempts to cross it by car or motorcycle have taken weeks or months. That terrain, and fears of environmental damage to its wild ecosystem, have continued to frustrate planners trying to link South and North America with the Pan-American Highway.

Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa who had traveled to the area by boat from Brazil, said Jose Mulino, Panama's public safety minister. That has tapered off. Panamanian immigration officials have detained just 97 non-Cuban migrants in the area since the start of the year.

"That traffic of Africans and Asians has considerably decreased, and the big problem we have now is the flow of Cubans who are coming through the jungle," Mulino said.

The Cuban migrants are sharing dangerous paths used by drug traffickers and rebels of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, Mulino said, That has sometimes caused problems for local law enforcement.

Police recently had to call off a drug raid after spotting a group of Cubans near the border, Abrego said.

"We had to get them out of there and take them to Panama City," he said. "We lost the raid's effectiveness."

Authorities have yet to determine if their guides work for either group, Mulino said.

"It's not clear if the rebels, or the drug traffickers, or both, are the ones guiding the migrants," Mulino said. "Someone is helping them and those people are the ones who walk that area."

Mildred Morales, a 34-year-old Cuban nurse who was part of Reyes' group, said she paid $300 just to cross the border into Panama. She had spent about $1,000 since leaving Ecuador three days earlier.

"From the moment you leave Ecuador you have to pay people off, police and immigration officials in Ecuador and in Colombia," the Havana woman said. "This is not cheap."

After climbing the mountain, the group walked another six hours to a river. From there, Panamanian authorities detained them and took them eight hours by canoe to the town of Yaviza, where the Pan-American Highway ends in Panama. From there, they went by car to a detention shelter in the town of Meteti.

The Cubans remained in Meteti for several days until immigration authorities gave them, like most Cuban migrants, a temporary permit allowing them to be in the Central American country as long as they report to authorities every two weeks. Authorities in Meteti say it's rare to see the Cubans again.

Like everyone in the group, Morales was nursing dozens of mosquito bites and thinking about the rest of the journey north.

"We don't know what kind of problems we'll face in the rest of the countries," Morales said. "We have heard from other Cubans that it is possible to reach Mexico's borders with the Unite States."

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Associated Press writers Gonzalo Solano in Quito, Ecuador and Olga R. Rodriguez in Mexico City contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-08-02-Panama-Cuba-Crossing%20the%20Gap/id-66e5ee715fed43d5975e62e36cdd2ea1

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Nick Jonas in NYC to Support Diabetes Charity | Diet-Fitness-Health ...

Nick Jonas helped raise awareness for childhood diabetes ? a disease he was diagnosed with at age 13 ? at the Carnival for a Cure fundraiser in New York. (March 14)
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Source: http://myveryhealthy.com/todays-healthcare/nick-jonas-in-nyc-to-support-diabetes-charity.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=nick-jonas-in-nyc-to-support-diabetes-charity

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Sean Hayes to guest on "Up All Night"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "Will & Grace" star Sean Hayes has been cast on the upcoming second season of the NBC comedy "Up All Night."

The show's Facebook page has posted that Hayes will star in a multi-episode arc and will portray the "former accompanist" of talk-show host Ava Alexander, played by Maya Rudolph.

No airdate for Hayes' debut on the series has been announced.

Hayes recently starred as Larry Fine in the Farrelly Brothers' "The Three Stooges."

The second season of "Up All Night" premieres September 20 at 8:30 p.m.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sean-hayes-guest-night-010845507.html

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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

No questions: Romney spokesman tells reporters 'kiss my ?' in Poland

WARSAW, Poland - A Mitt Romney spokesman reprimanded reporters traveling with the candidate on his six-day foreign trip, telling them to "kiss my a**" after they shouted questions from behind a rope line.

As Romney left the site of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw and walked toward his motorcade parked in Pilsudski Square, reporters began shouting questions from the line where campaign staffers had told them to stay behind, prompting traveling press secretary Rick Gorka to tell a group of reporters to "kiss my a**" and "shove it."

He later apologized.

As Romney wrapped up his visit to the historical site, a CNN reporter had yelled, "Governor Romney, are you concerned about some of the mishaps of your trip."

"Governor Romney, do you have a statement for the Palestinians?" a New York Times reporter shouted.

Get more pure politics at ABC News.com/Politics and a lighter take on the news at OTUSNews.com

"What about your gaffes?" yelled a Washington Post reporter, referring to a number of missteps the candidate has made during his trip, including one in which he said there were some "disconcerting" developments leading up to the London Olympics, drawing the ire of the British media, and another suggesting that culture was to blame for the difference in economic success between Israelis and Palestinians.

The Romney campaign has called the reports on the candidate's remarks about Palestinians a "gross mischaracterization."

Gorka told reporters answering questions to "show some respect."

"This is a holy site for the Polish people," he added.

"We haven't had another chance to ask a question," one reporter noted to Gorka.

Gorka told another journalist to "shove it."

Romney last took questions - three - from the traveling press corps Thursday in London. Romney did not address the media that's flying with him on any of the three charter flights - two that lasted more than four hours - either. Romney has conducted several television interviews during the trip.

Gorka later called both reporters to apologize for his remarks, telling one that he was "inappropriate."

ABC News reached out to Gorka for an additional comment but did not immediately receive a response.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mitt-romney-spokesman-tells-reporters-kiss-polish-holy-110442318--abc-news-politics.html

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Business owners can use their retirement accounts to purchase ...

Posted on: July 31st, 2012 by admin@cpp

Business owners looking to make a building purchase for that company may be able to use their retirement funds to finance the transaction without taking on debt, Guidant Financial writes.

The process and method for doing so has actually been in place for decades, but is not significantly utilized by many business owners. While companies are typically allowed to remove half of the 401(k) plan through a loan program, it is possible to will take 100 percent out of the fund, without any taxes or penalties involved, for a commercial property purchase.

Both the Internal Revenue Service and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 allow this business capital transaction to occur. While the transaction may seem complicated, it can be a helpful way for business owners to fund their own growth.

Some companies looking at Atlanta commercial real estate properties may have an interest in opting for this instead of a traditional bank loan, as it will help them avoid all types of loan debt associated with working with a financial institution. In addition, by utilizing the help of an expert, business owners can use their own savings to help drive the success of their company.

Source: http://www.cpprofessionals.com/commercial-real-estate-news/cre-news/business-owners-can-use-their-retirement-accounts-to-purchase-properties-without-loans-13883

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Evening Star Throws Down for 15th Birthday, 8/4 | DC Beer ...

Published: July 31, 2012Posted in: Beer Events, Beers, Featured

In my experience, 15th birthday parties are all about paper hats and Fudgie the Whale cakes, but it looks like Evening Star Cafe has something a bit more lively in store for its quincea?era.

On Saturday, August 4 from noon to 5, they?re throwing a massive Del Ray block party, where you can listen to live music while chomping on barbeque ribs, half smokes, and other BBQ classics from Executive Chef Jim Jeffords.

And then there?s the beer.? Local brews from the likes of DC Brau, Lost Rhino, and Bluejacket/Devils Backbone will grace the taps. You?ll also get to sip on Port City?s Derecho Common, the power outage-induced steam beer that debuted last week.

There is no admission and food and drink tickets will be sold separately.

Tags: beer launch, evening star cafe, Port City Brewing

Source: http://dcbeer.com/2012/07/31/port-city-derecho-common-launches-at-evening-stars-15th-birthday/

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