For a Middle East Thanksgiving, Turkey and Couscous

The Media Line Staff

Baghdad, Iraq (TML) – As Americans living everywhere from Morocco to Iraq gather around their Thanksgiving tables Thursday, they will be forsaking afternoon football, nippy weather and autumn foliage. Not a few will be complementing it with couscous stuffing instead of cranberry sauce or succotash.

But when it comes to the turkey, only the Americans on the most outlying parts of the region will be forced to make do without the culinary centerpiece of America’s oldest and deepest-rooted holiday.

“In Egypt, they raise a lot of turkeys, so they’re sold at the supermarkets. Here we have almost everything you could think of as far as American food goes,” Latifa Taylor, who works in the American embassy in Cairo with her husband, told The Media Line.

Whether they are teaching English as a second language in Egypt, patrolling the streets of Baghdad, or helping to run oil installations in Saudi Arabia, Americas have substantial presence in the Middle East. For many of them, the holiday acts as a way not only to showcase a national tradition but to engage in a little table-side diplomacy in a region where America is not always the most popular of countries.

“We try to invite our friends from the host country in order to share with them what Thanksgiving is all about – sharing and giving. It’s a nice experience,” said Taylor, who was born in Morocco but lived in the United States for a number of years.

Since the family left the United States in the early 1990s, the Taylor family has kept up the tradition wherever they have gone.

Still, cooking and eating is the focal point of the Thanksgiving holiday and most Americans are careful to make sure the traditional array of food is served.

“We cook Arab dishes on a regular basis, but we would try not to include them in a Thanksgiving meal. I think a lot of the [Middle Eastern] salads would show up. I wouldn’t blink to see them as part of a Thanksgiving table in Jordan,” Sarah Harpending, assistant director of the Center for Oriental Research, an institute based in Amman, Jordan, told The Media Line.

Harpending has lived in Jordan for a decade, but has tried to keep the holiday every year and share it with local friends, mostly Arabs who lived in the U.S. for a long enough stretch to acquire a taste for the holiday and its cuisine. “I feel bad when I miss it,” she said.

She added that most everything that one needs is available in Amman, including cranberries, pumpkin pie filling and stuffing mix. She has had some trouble finding what she needs for a traditional pecan pie, but Harpending makes sure to have certain essentials brought back by acquaintances traveling from the U.S.

Taylor tries to mix a bit of local cuisine into the meal, but not at the expense of diluting the taste and look of the traditional meal. “In some cases, we even try to incorporate local flavors. For example, I will make couscous stuffing, but I also make bread stuffing as well,” she said.

Turkey is of course the essential centerpiece of any Thanksgiving table. Despite the bird being native to the forests of the Americas, it was introduced to Europe through Spain by the returning Conquistadors in 1498, and has since spread throughout the world. Frozen turkey, along with many other traditional American foods served this time of year, is readily available in many Middle East countries.

Beyond expatriate and the diplomatic community, the largest concentration of Americans in the Middle East is the American troops stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. While there numbers have fallen from a peak of 170,000 in 2007, there are currently about 48,000 stationed in Iraq and each gets to enjoy a holiday dinner in a mammoth Pentagon undertaking. Another 95,000 are in Afghanistan.

Thanksgiving preparations by the Defense Logistics Agency began last spring, long before the typical holiday host would be searching the Internet for a stuffing recipe. The Army’s turkey-meisters have arranged for 244,000 pounds of bird to be readied for the troops as well as 8,600 cans of sweet potatoes and more than 38,000 pies to be served in 225 different locations throughout Iraq and Afghanistan.

“Providing traditional holiday meals to these American heroes are one of the single most important things we do all year,” said Air Force Brig. Gen. Scott Chambers, who commands the agency’s troop operations. “It is an expression of our thanks and appreciation for what they are doing for America every day.”

Young Americans in Israel are also being provided for on the Thanksgiving holiday. The Lone Soldiers Center, a Tel Aviv-based organization that provides help for immigrant soldiers serving in the Israel Defense Forces with no nearby family, is holding a Thanksgiving dinner for 200 American-born soldiers.

“They are alone in this country, but they are still connected to their own culture. It’s a taste of back home. It gives them support and brings them together, and they get to partake in something that they grew up with,” Josh Flaster, director of the organization, told The Media Line.

Not everywhere in the region, however, can Americans comfortably gather around the table and feast on turkey.

Robert Majure, director of the American International School in Sana’a, Yemen, has watched sadly as celebrating the holiday becomes progressively more difficult during the 17 years he has been in the country.

Yemen has emerged at the center of an Al-Qaeda cell targeting Americans and other Westerners. In its latest action, it sought to bring down cargo jets on their way to America before a tip-off to intelligence services thwarted the plan. Last month, the U.S. State Department warned Americans to avoid “non-essential” travel to the country.

“I used to go to Thanksgiving dinner, but because of the security situation there aren’t many foreign people around anymore. I don’t think I’ve been to a Thanksgiving meal in two or three years,” Majure told The Media Line. “Even when you go around town you do a double-take when you see a foreigner.”

The land is not just bereft of Americans, but also turkey to eat and children to create a family atmosphere, he said.

“On Thanksgiving you need family, you need kids,” he said. “Even at the embassy everyone is on bachelor status. People don’t come to Yemen with their children anymore.”

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British Envoy: Children Safer In Afghanistan Than New York CIty

Lawrence Mijares – AHN News Contributor

Kabul, Afghanistan (AHN) – According to NATO’s top civilian envoy to Afghanistan, children are probably safer growing up in Afghanistan’s major cities, including the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, than in New York.

British envoy Mark Sedwill, speaking on a BBC television program, added that “in cities like Kabul where security has improved, the total levels of violence, including criminal violence, are comparable to those which many Western children would experience.”

“For most Afghans,” he continued,”the biggest challenges are from poverty — the absence of clean water, open sewers, malnutrition, disease — and many more children are at risk from those problems than from the insurgency.”

His statements are belied by U.N. figures that show Afghan children are victims of the U.S.-Afghan conflict, with 1,795 children killed or injured as a result of the war from September 2008 through August 2010.

A report from the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in November 2009 said Afghanistan was the most dangerous country to be born in because it has the highest infant mortality rate in the world and two-thirds of its population lack access to clean water.

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Lanvin For H&M Collection Unveiled At NY Fashion Show

Anne Lu – Celebrity News Service Contributor

New York, NY, United States (CNS) – French fashion house Lanvin and Swedish clothing company H&M have held a haute couture runway together that showcased customized pieces from the Lanvin for H&M collection. Star guests Sofia Coppola, Andie MacDowell, Anna Sui, Emma Roberts, Leelee Sobieski and Alexander Wang graced The Pierre Hotel Thursday to celebrate the launch of the collection.

Famed models Asia Chow, Pixie Geldof, Dree Hemingway, Olga and Anna Della Russo made their way down the catwalk wearing the customized women’s wear pieces by Lanvin artistic director Alber Elbaz.

H&M creative advisor Margareta van den Bosch said, “It’s such a fantastic experience to see how creatively alber Elbaz uses his designs to form a couture experience for our exclusive fashion show in New York.”

“Working with this incredibly gifted designer has been like an ongoing fashion moment, and we’re thrilled to offer his masterpieces to our customers.”

The looks from the catwalk show, along with original signed sketches from Elbaz, are currently being auctioned on www.lanvinforhm.com, which will end on November 26th. All proceeds from the sales will be donated to UNICEF as part of H&M’s All for Children project.

The Lanvin for H&M collection is set to hit around 200 stores worldwide on November 20 in the U.S. and Canada, and on November 23 in the rest of the world.

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Federal Funding For Scholarships For Mothers

The huge economic crisis which the nation suffered during the past years has set a great thinking process in the administration of the federal government. The government attributes to the crash of economy due to underemployment and unemployment. This situation has arisen due to the lack of adequate educational qualifications on the part of the citizens. The mothers are amongst the worst-hit category as most of them are relatively less educated and cannot start their education again due to lack of funds. The government considers it as their duty to help the mothers and for this reason has been started federal funding for scholarships for mothers.

The federal government under President Obama’s guidance has analyzed the situation and is deciding on how to help the mothers appropriately. For this reason, the grants have become so advanced nowadays that if the applicant’s paperwork is evaluated and then later approved, the grant covers the entire cost of the degree or course without the applicant spending any money on the education. The government has also declared that for the academic year 2010-2011, $30 billion has been donated for federal grants. Amongst the different federal grants, the Pell grants are the widely known and are awarded to the mothers of the low-income group. For this academic year 2010-2011, $17 billion has been dedicated only for Pell grants. Other federal grants available to mothers are as below:

Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (FSEOG) – This is provided to the extremely poor mothers who intend to continue with their education. The grant amount will vary from $100 to $4000.

Academic Competitiveness Grant (ACG) – The applicants eligible for ACG also qualify for Pell grants and the grant provides $750 for the first year and $1300 for the second year of undergraduates.
SMART Grant – This is offered to full-time students who also are eligible for Pell grants. The students must be majoring in life sciences, physics, mathematics, or engineering.
TEACH Grants – This aid includes a wide category of undergraduates, graduates, current or former teachers or even retirees.

All the federal grants are to be applied free and on the website centre called the FAFSA. While submitting the application, the applicant should also include his/her tax payment receipts of the previous year.

There is also the new initiative of the American Opportunity Tax Credit Program. This program intends to help the U.S citizens by offering to waive the initial $4000 fees of higher education. Also, Obama’s ‘Moms return to school’ program is catching up amongst the mothers.

The initiatives and programs started by the government are targeted for the welfare of the mothers to lead smart lives. Federal funding for scholarships for mothers would enable the mothers to add a fresh meaning to their lives and will help them to stand proudly on their feet.

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Moms can go back to school with free $10,000 Scholarships. Find out how visit: Scholarships for Moms.

Johnny Weir To Judge ABC’s “Skating With The Stars”

Anthony Jones – AHN Entertainment Reporter

Los Angeles, CA, United States (AHN) – While Johnny Weir announced over the summer he’d be taking time off from skating, the three-time U.S. skating champion and reality star is set to hit the ice next week…as judge of ABC’s “Skating with the Stars.”

26-year-old Weir, who also starred in his own reality show “Be Good Johnny Weir,” and created a fashion line, music single, and book, will use his expertise as a two-time Olympic medalist and World medalist to critique the celebrities taking the ice.

The superstar skater will be joined by Laurieann Gibson, who’s choreographed for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, and Dick Button, Emmy Award-winning broadcaster and two-time Olympic champion, known as the “Voice” of figure skating.

The three will judge celebrity contestants Bethenny Frankel, of “Real Housewives of NYC” and “Bethenny Getting Married?” fame Motley Crue frontman Vince Neil, “Blade Runner” star Sean Young, Brandon Mychal Smith of the Disney Channel hit “Sonny with a Chance,” “All My Children” star Rebecca Budig, and former Olympic skier Jonny Moseley.

“Skating with the Stars,” from the producers of the hit “Dancing with the Stars,” will pair up celebrities with world class ice skaters to compete in front of millions. Just like it’s sister show, a panel of judges will give scores, and viewers at home will as well with their votes, sending one couple off the ice each week.

“Skating with the Stars” will premiere Monday, November 22nd at 9pm ET on ABC.

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Hispanics Decry Tennessee Lawmaker’s “Rats” Comment

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Nashville, TN, United States (AHN) – Immigrant and Latino communities in Tennessee are up in arms over a remark by state Rep. Curry Todd likening immigrants to “rats” that “multiply.” The lawmaker has refused to apologize.

Latino Memphis, the Tennessee Equality Project, Workers Interfaith Network and other organizations are demanding Todd apologize for the “intolerant” comment he made during a legislative hearing with health officials. Members of the groups gathered outside the home of Todd Thursday to protest.

Early this week, Todd, a Republican who represents District 95, was discussing prenatal healthcare with state officials during a fiscal review committee hearing with other state representatives.

An official had responded to his question about citizenship checks for pregnant immigrants, “Under the guidance that was provided to states, under the previous administration, there is a technical guidance letter that states that for covering the unborn child, we are not permitted to determine citizenship, because the child, once born, is a U.S. citizen.”

Todd replied, “Well, they can go out there like rats and multiply, then, I guess.”

The comment drew fire from advocacy groups. “Such remarks are deeply troubling and offensive coming from an elected official in a public hearing. Rep. Todd’s words dehumanize immigrant children born in this country and send a message of intolerance and bigotry,” said the Tennessee Equality Project.

The 62-year-old lawmaker, however, stands by his statement.

“I’m not apologizing to anyone who may have been offended,” Todd told a Memphis television station Thursday. “Maybe my words were a little harsh on that. I probably should have used anchor babies which are what they are called in Arizona and Texas.”

“I probably shouldn’t have made that particular reference but I will not back up from the point I made with regards to — we’ve got a problem here and somebody’s got to stand up and do something about it,” he told another TV station the same day.

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Apply For Food Stamps And Other Government Agencies

If you have found yourself in the position, like millions of other households across America, to begin the task of applying for government assistance, there are many agencies that can help you. President Obama opened up an entire department on government grants to assist U.S. citizens. They are grants to help citizens start a business, pay off a mortgage, go back to college and even pay off credit card debt. And a grant does not have to be paid back, unlike a loan.

If you are a single mother, there are many organizations that can help you maintain your household with necessities like food, clothing, diapers and formula, bus passes, babysitters and tuition for going back to school for a high school diploma or even a college degree. If you simply need a pick-up couple bags of groceries to get you from one paycheck to the next, there are plenty of churches in your neighborhood that have set up food banks and offer this minimal support.

The Food Stamp Program is a federal program that is run by each state and will help families that fall below a certain income level, with food and food-cash. So many have been laid off or lost their jobs completely, that more and more people have found themselves needing to apply food stamps to their monthly budget for food. In order to get food stamps you must apply online with the necessary information including social security numbers of everyone in the household and proof of income. It is then evaluated and your application is either accepted or denied. The actual dollar amount is determined by the number of dependents that are living in your household compared to the amount of income. Your rent or mortgage, automobile – everything is considered and the more children in the family, usually the more desperate the need. If your main income is social security or social security disability then it is almost certain that you would be eligible because the income is so low.

The Food Stamp Program was established almost 65 years ago as an aid to those who had been struggling throughout the war. It was designed to be a temporary program to get people back on their feet and into steady work again. The recession and times we are in right now seem to reflect those in yesterday almost exactly. When people are in need, our government reaches out a hand to help.

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It is important for those that are in need, to learn to Apply Food Stamps, it is a very helpful and useful method of getting through rough times.

FBI Investigates Murder of U.S. Guardsman in Mexico

Tom Ramstack – AHN News Correspondent

Texas, El Paso, United States (AHN) – The FBI and U.S. military authorities are investigating the assassination Wednesday afternoon of an American National Guardsman in Juarez City, Mexico.

The Guardsman, identified as Pfc. Jose Gil Hernandez Ramirez, 22, was shot to death with a Mexican man outside a home, Mexican police reported.

Witnesses said gunmen approached the men and began firing suddenly, leaving them lying dead in the street.

“The Texas National Guard family has lost a friend and fellow soldier and he will be missed,” the Guard said in a statement.

The second murder victim was identified as Rafael Ramirez Reza, a Juarez resident.

A third unidentified companion was reportedly injured by gunshots but fled the scene.

Hernandez was stationed at Fort Bliss, outside of El Paso, Texas.

Hernandez is one of more than 50 Americans killed in Juarez since Mexico started its crackdown on drug cartels four years ago.

More than 28,000 people have been killed in the struggle. So far this year, about 2,500 people were killed in Juarez.

The city is a gateway for illegal drugs and weapons smuggling between Mexico and the United States.

Hernandez was chatting with his companions when a car and a motorcycle approached them about 3 p.m. on Wednesday, according to a police report. The motorcycle rider and occupants of the car began firing with pistols, striking all three men.

Police recovered 18 shell casings from the scene.

Hernandez was assigned to the Texas National Guard’s Headquarters Battery Third Battalion at Fort Bliss since 2007, his father told Mexican police.

The Texas National Guard warns active duty Guardsmen from entering Juarez because of the violence.

Hernandez was a reservist and student. He worked as a fire direction sensor specialist for the Texas National Guard.

An FBI spokesman said he apparently was in Mexico on personal business.

The Army’s Criminal Investigation Division has joined the investigation of his death.

Hernandez is one of at least three U.S. military personnel assassinated in Juarez during Mexico’s war on drugs.

The body of a Marine Corps reservist was thrown off a cliff in Juarez after being shot in 2008.

Last year, a U.S. airman from New Mexico was killed when gunmen shot up a bar.

Juarez used to be a popular nightspot for American servicemen who would cross the border from El Paso until they were ordered to stop going to the city.

Hernandez was one of 31 people reportedly killed in fighting between drug cartels and Mexican police nationwide on Wednesday.

During the gunfights, the U.S. Consulate in the border city of Nuevo Laredo warned American citizens not to leave their homes.

Government officials in the city across the border from Laredo, Texas, said drug gangs had blocked several intersections in the city, including one near the U.S. Consulate.

Parents rushed to schools to retrieve their children.

In Reynosa, across the border from McAllen, Texas, local government officials issued a warning through Internet messaging telling residents to stay indoors during a gun battle.

The gunmen reportedly used stolen cars and buses to create roadblocks during the fight with soldiers.

Police said gunmen forced people out of their cars in the Nuevo Laredo gunfight to use their vehicles for blockades.

Northeastern Mexico is reportedly a hotbed for a struggle between the Gulf and Zeta cartels to control drug smuggling into the United States.

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Stage Coaches, Horses Not Thing Of Past For Wells Fargo

Birmingham, AL, United States (AHN) – Stage coaches and horses are not a thing of the past when it comes to Wells Fargo & Co.

The San Francisco-based banking giant is still one of the country’s top employers of coach drivers and horse handlers.

That is because attendees of charity events and parades around the country can’t seem to get enough of seeing carriages pulled by horses, with drivers and wranglers along for the ride provided by the company.

From Tuesday’s visit to a children’s hospital in Birmingham, Alabama to last week’s stop for a history celebration in Redwood City, California, the familiar stagecoach and horses bring goodwill and representation of the company across the U.S.

“When people see it, you can tell they are seeing something for the first time,” driver Dave Helmuth told alabama.com. “We face nonstop waiting times for rides everywhere we go; everyone wants to be part of it when they see it.”

Twenty-one coach teams make about 1000 appearances a year for Wells Fargo, reportedly the nation’s fourth-largest bank.

To borrow another company’s slogan, Wells Fargo’s marketing approach is ‘priceless’ when it comes to branding.

“This isn’t a little bumper sticker or a banner,” Helmuth told the paper. “We bring it. This is an iconic image of America, and of strength, and of heritage.”

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Survey Shows U.S. Teens More Conscious of Safe-Sex

Lawrence Mijares – AHN News Contributor

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Sexually-active American teenagers were found to be more “safe-sex” conscious than baby boomers according to the largest, most comprehensive national survey of Americans’ sexual behavior since 1994.

The survey, filling 130 pages of a special issue of the Journal of Sexual Medicine , offers detailed findings on how often Americans have sex, with whom, and how they respond.

Dr. Dennis Fortenberry, a pediatrics professor who was lead author of the study’s section about teen sex, was encouraged by the new findings stating that, “There’s been a major shift among young people in the role condoms have in their sexual lives. Condoms have become normative.”

The survey also found that black and Hispanic men used condoms more than white males, suggesting to researchers that the HIV-AIDS awareness programs were now gaining ground in these communities afflicted with the disease.

It was also found that men over 50 seldom used condoms which worried researchers as this raised the risk for transmission of the disease considering that an increasing number of older adults had multiple sexual partners.

Other notable findings of the survey were that men are more likely to experience orgasm when vaginal intercourse is involved, while women are more likely to reach orgasm when they engage in variety of acts, including oral sex.

It was also observed that there was a gap in perceptions between men and women in that 85 percent of the men surveyed said their latest sexual partner had an orgasm, while only 64 percent of the women thought otherwise.

The survey also found that one-third of women experienced genital pain during their most recent sex, compared to 5 percent of men which fact deserved further research and study.

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