Thursday, July 9, 2009

EMBRY-RIDDLE AERONAUTICAL UNIVERSITY: Scholarships for International Students

Ace! NewsFlash

You can obtain a Bachelor of Science in Applied Meteorology!

Come to Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in sunny Arizona and
learn about the exciting physics and dynamics of the atmosphere in
preparation for a rewarding career as a meteorologist.

Students use a state-of-the-art Weather Center to understand and
forecast complex atmospheric phenomena ranging from severe
thunderstorms and tornadoes to cyclones, fronts and jet streams, to
global climate and how it is changing. Emphasis is placed on applying
theory to operational weather forecasting and decision making.
Students can choose from four areas of concentration: Research,
Meteorology with Flying, Meteorology for Aviation Operations, and
Military Meteorologist.

To watch a video, visit:
www.erau.edu/pr/degrees/b-appliedmeteorology.html

This program prepares meteorologists for careers with the government,
military, television or the private sector, or for graduate studies
toward a career in atmospheric research. The program meets all the
requirements for undergraduate study in meteorology recommended by the
American Meteorological Society and the Federal Government.
Scholarships are available.

Financial Aid: The average scholarship amount granted to international
students is $11,000.

Source: The College Board's International Student Handbook 2009.

To apply, visit:
www.erau.edu/pr/admissions

*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OFFERS SCHOLARSHIPS TO INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS

Ace! NewsFlash

As a global university, American University (AU) has a long tradition
of welcoming students from across the United States and the world to
our campus. At AU, "access" and "engagement" are not merely
catchphrases; the spirit of these words permeates the campus
environment. Students who share a desire to understand and shape
tomorrow's world are attracted to AU because of its culture of
engagement and service.

Discover American University:

- AU offers a broad choice of majors and minors and preprofessional
advising programs in law and medicine. You may also double major. You
have the option to construct your own interdisciplinary major. You can
have your major in one AU school and a minor in another AU school or
college. We understand that tomorrow's careers require an
understanding of a wide variety of fields, and we encourage students
to transcend the traditional boundaries of academic disciplines.
- A short distance from Washington, D.C.'s centers of government,
business, research, commerce and art, AU's 84-acre (34-hectare)
traditional campus is located in one of the most attractive and safest
residential areas of the city. Originally planned by Frederick Law
Olmsted, the noted architect of New York City's Central Park, AU's
campus was designated an arboretum and garden in 2003.

Of its 100 international students (non US citizens), 41 are receiving
AU Merit Awards ranging from $5,000 to $32,000 per year. Two will
receive AU endowment scholarships (Turkey and Cyprus). A total of ten
international freshmen have been admitted to our most prestigious
Honors Program. We are honored to welcome one CASP undergraduate
awardee from Fulbright Cyprus, one Trinidadian government supported
open scholarship grantee, one IIE StudyAmerica student from India, and
many more talented students from around the world.

www.american.edu/admissions/international

International Admissions
American University
Washington, DC, USA
Tel: +1-202-885-6000

*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Teens Bond by Jailbreaking the iPhone

Ace! NewsFlash

Teens Bond by Jailbreaking the Mobile; 'A Trust Issue' for MuscleNerd

Like many teenagers, Ari Weinstein spends his summers riding his bike and swimming. This year, the 15-year-old had another item on his to-do list: Foil Apple Inc.'s brightest engineers and annoy chief executive Steve Jobs. Ari is part of a loose-knit group of hackers that has made it a mission to "jailbreak" Apple's iPhone and iPod touch. The term refers to installing unapproved software that lets people download a range of programs, including those not sanctioned by Apple.

Friends Bond by Hacking Into iPhones
Ari Weinstein, 15, in the computer lab of Germantown Friends School, where he just finished 9th grade.

Since Apple began selling its latest iPhone 3GS on June 19, Ari and six online cohorts spent hours a day probing the new product for security holes. This weekend, one of the members of the group, dubbed the Chronic Dev Team, released the jailbreaking software they've been working on. Ari says the program is a test version with some bugs, but that users have successfully downloaded it. A quarter-million people have visited the site, he says. "Coding and testing things that may or may not work, and figuring things out, is a really rewarding experience," says Ari, a Philadelphia resident who began hacking when he was 11.

Ari's hobby has ruffled the feathers of famously secretive Apple, which exerts tight control over its gadgets and sells programs for its iPhones exclusively through its App Store site. "The vast majority of customers do not jailbreak their iPhones, and for good reason," an Apple spokeswoman says. "These modifications not only violate the warranty, they also cause the iPhone to become unstable and not work reliably." Mr. Jobs, in the past, has called dueling with hackers a "cat-and-mouse game" and has said it is Apple's "job to stop them from breaking in."

[iphone]

So far, Apple hasn't stopped them. A year ago, when the Cupertino, Calif., company launched its iPhone 3G, a team of hackers released jailbreaking software for the device less than a week later. The software, which can be downloaded from a Web site, gives users access to a store that sells programs that Apple doesn't. These include applications that block ads on the iPhone's mobile Internet browser, for example, or let the phone double as a laptop-computer modem (a common feature in Windows Mobile, so one wonders about Apple's motives for excluding it from iPhones).

In February, Apple filed a 27-page statement to the U.S. Copyright office arguing that modifying phones violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Digital-rights advocates say they believe it isn't illegal because people own their phones outright. The copyright office is expected to rule in the fall. Ari says he takes ethics seriously and says he has researched the Millennium Copyright law online. But he has concluded his actions aren't wrong. He also has a lawyer, who he says volunteered his services after Ari created iJailbreak, a piece of free software that worked on the original iPhone, two years ago.

"Apple doesn't have the right to tell me what I can put on my phone," says Ari, who uses non-Apple-sanctioned programs that let him change the look of his home screen and administer Web sites from his phone. "I only do hacking that helps people." Ari became interested in technology as a preschooler, when he would flip through the manual for a cable set-top box and change the settings on the family computer. "I remember it being a big relief when he went to kindergarten," says his mother, Judy Weinstein, 43, a social worker.

At age 7, Ari teamed up with two other boys to create playing cards, decorated with hand-drawn characters, to sell online. The business never took off. But Ari says he learned to build Web sites, among other things: The site he created wasn't on the child-approved list of his AOL Internet service, he says, so to access it, he had to figure out how to get around AOL's parental controls. "That's when we knew we should start teaching him ethics," says his dad, Ken Weinstein, 45, a real-estate developer.

Ari started hacking in sixth grade after looking for a way to download free games on his iPod mini. Two years ago, he received an iPod touch for his bar mitzvah and says he jailbroke the device in an evening. He later simplified the process into the iJailbreak software. He says the program has been downloaded a million times. Some users donated cash, a standard way of showing appreciation for free software, and Ari says he received "several thousand dollars" in all.

Ari attracted the attention of Will Strafach, a Connecticut teen who created an online chat room for people interested in reverse engineering the iPhone. That eventually morphed into a team named after Mr. Strafach's Internet name, Chronic. "When I get out" of school, Mr. Strafach says, "I want to work for Apple." Ari, who goes by AriX online, soon began to work with the Chronic Dev Team's half-dozen teenagers and twentysomethings. The group communicates almost exclusively via a private online chat room, where they can talk and send files. Team members say they don't know all the others' real-life identities. One of them, Mr. Strafach says, lives in Austria.

Earlier this year, Ari and his team tried to hack more efficiently by working with another group -- iPhone Dev Team, an invitation-only bunch in their 20s and 30s who have typically been the first to roll out iPhone hacks. Members of the iPhone Dev Team worried about working in a large group. In part, they were concerned that if information leaked out about the security holes they were probing, others could exploit them first. Or, Apple could plug the holes. In March, the two groups stopped communicating. "It just came down to a trust issue," says Eric McDonald, an iPhone Dev Team member known as MuscleNerd.

In June, Apple announced its 32-gigabyte iPhone, with added layers of security and encryption. Ari bought one immediately, in part with the $20 an hour he earned helping family friends with computer problems. "I'm happy to contribute," says Michael Cohen, a real-estate investor who recently hired Ari to help set up his wife's new computer. "He obviously has a future in this stuff."

Mr. Strafach's group also sought help from George Hotz, a 19-year-old Cambridge, Mass., hacker who had worked before with Chronic Dev. Known as geohot, Mr. Hotz is widely acknowledged as the first person to "unlock" the iPhone nearly two years ago, so people could use the phone with any wireless carrier. Mr. Hotz, who took a paid internship with Google Inc. in April, joined the hackers in early June. In emails, he says he has done the project on his own time and was happy to help "a bunch of cool guys with a good attitude." Google declined to comment on Mr. Hotz's work with Chronic Dev.

More than a week ago, both Chronic Dev and iPhone Dev said they figured out how to jailbreak Apple's new phone. The iPhone Dev Team wanted to wait to release its software so Apple can't plug the security hole in the device immediately. But Chronic Dev and Mr. Hotz released theirs as soon as it was ready. "A lot of people bought their phones expecting to jailbreak their phones, and now that we have the capability to do it, we should let them," Ari says. "A lot of people have thanked us."


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Sticker shock over college textbooks? Try renting instead!

Ace! NewsFlash for Pre-Departure Orientation

We Rent Movies, So Why Not Textbooks?

SUCCESS in Silicon Valley often emerges through trial and error. Willingness to buck popular trends can help, too. Just ask Osman Rashid and Aayush Phumbhra, the co-founders of Chegg.com, a company that rents textbooks to college students.

When the two entrepreneurs started Chegg, then called CheggPost, in 2003, they envisioned a sort of Craigslist for college campuses, a network of university-based Web sites where students would buy and sell everything from used mattresses to textbooks. Like most Internet start-ups of that time, the plan was to make money from advertising.

It didn’t turn out that way. CheggPost gained some traction on a handful of campuses but didn’t take off. Still, the experience offered a few valuable lessons. Mr. Rashid noticed that a majority of the traffic on the site was from students looking for used textbooks. With textbooks being the largest expense for students, after tuition and room and board, and with their cost soaring, that wasn’t surprising.

Yet the Craigslist model didn’t work. When classes ended in the spring, sellers couldn’t find many buyers online and sold their used books to the college store, often for pennies on the dollar. By the time students migrated back to campus in the fall, willing online sellers were few and far between. So, in 2007, Mr. Rashid and Mr. Phumbhra went back to the drawing board and came up with the idea of renting books. At the time, Silicon Valley venture capitalists were focused on content, social networks and other businesses that could be supported by advertising, so finding investors wasn’t easy. “People thought we were crazy,” Mr. Rashid said.

Now, as Chegg prepares for its third academic year in the textbook rental business, the business is growing rapidly. Jim Safka, a former chief executive of Match.com and Ask.com who was recently recruited to run Chegg, said the company’s revenue in 2008 was more than $10 million. This year, Chegg surpassed that in January alone, Mr. Safka said.

Based on that kind of growth, the company was able to raise $25 million in December from some of Silicon Valley’s top venture capitalists, including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. “The textbook business was wildly inefficient,” said Mike Maples Jr., managing partner at Maples Investments, a fund that invests in young start-ups; it was one of Chegg’s first outside investors.

With demand for good deals on textbooks running high, Chegg’s success comes in large part from being able to address those inefficiencies. While Chegg primarily rents books, it is also essentially acting as a kind of “market maker,” gathering books from sellers at the end of a semester and renting — or sometimes selling — them to other students at the start of a new one. That provides liquidity to the market, said Yannis Bakos, associate professor of management at the Stern School of Business at New York University. “The model is clever,” Professor Bakos said. “If they execute well, it will be an accomplishment.”

E-commerce was all the rage with investors during the Internet boom of the late 1990s. Of course, many start-ups failed. In recent years, most of the successful ideas in e-commerce have been refinements or variations of models that had been tried before. In the case of Chegg and some budding competitors, the inspiration was Netflix. “We benefit from the comfort zone that people have with renting things online from Netflix,” said Colin Barceloux, the co-founder of BookRenter.com, a Chegg rival that is also based in Silicon Valley.

Alan Bradford, a senior at Arizona State University, read about Chegg in a campus newspaper in 2008 and calculated that his bill for books that semester would have been $334 with Chegg, far less than the $657 he paid. Since then, he has ordered about a dozen textbooks from Chegg. “Nobody likes paying for textbooks,” he said.

CHEGG is shorthand for “chicken and egg,” a reference to what Mr. Rashid called students’ quandary after graduation: they need experience to get a job, but can’t get experience without having a job. Before the company grew relatively flush from investors’ cash and hundreds of thousands of customers on more than 5,000 campuses, it had to resort to creative bootstrapping.

Chegg began renting books before it owned any, so when an order came in, its employees would surf the Web to find a cheap copy. They would buy the book using Mr. Rashid’s American Express card and have it shipped to the student. Eventually, Chegg automated the system. But as the orders multiplied, Mr. Rashid said, so did the traffic on his credit card, leading American Express to suspect fraud and threaten to suspend the account. He said he persuaded American Express not only to keep the card active, but also to issue a couple of dozen more so Chegg could spread out the orders.

There is plenty of secret sauce to Chegg’s business, including logistics and software to determine the pricing and sourcing of books, as well as how many times a given book can be rented. The savings can vary from book to book. A macroeconomics textbook that retails for $122 was available on Chegg for $65 for one semester; an organic chemistry title retailing for $123 was offered for $33. (Round-trip shipping can add $4 to a book.)

Those kinds of savings are turning students into fans, Mr. Safka said. “Word of mouth,” he said, “has put wind in the company’s sails.”


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Think it's safe to go back into a bank? Beware new fees!

Ace! NewsFlash for Pre-Departure Orientation

10 Ways Banks Take Your Money

Consumers need to keep their guard up as financial institutions increasingly impose new fees and charges.

Banks and credit-card companies have gone on the offensive in advance of new consumer protections the Obama administration is asking Congress to enact. For many consumers, that could mean an unexpected financial sting. "The fee income is becoming increasingly more important as interest income is falling as a percentage of total revenues," says Bob Hammer, chief executive of bank-card advisory firm R.K. Hammer.

[marketwatch]

Late fees, loan-origination fees, over-the-limit and overdraft charges helped generate 53% of banking-industry income in 2008, according to R.K. Hammer, up from 35% of income in 1995. The average bounced-check fee is $28.95, up about $1 from last year, says Greg McBride, senior analyst at Bankrate.com. And it's a charge that rises every year. At $19 billion, credit-card penalties for late payments and over-limit charges were up 80% between 2003 and 2008.

Fees aren't necessarily bad, consumer advocates say, as long as they are reasonable. There's a lot more involved in a loan origination, for example, than there is in using an ATM. But Adam Levine, chairman of Credit.com, says banks are drawing wide margins around what's considered "reasonable."

One thing to keep in mind: It's worth the time to ask for a pass on fees. No bank is going to advertise that it waives fees on a regular basis, but many will do so when asked.

Here are 10 fees you should keep a close eye on:

1. Checking account

This is the privilege-of-using-your-own-money charge that many banks did away with years ago. But such fees are starting to creep back into the system, experts warn. Consumers shouldn't assume their checking accounts are fee-free or, if they are, that they will always continue to be so. Charges vary from a flat monthly fee to one that is dependent on how many transactions you have or on a minimum account balance.

"The type of checking account to now look for is one that does not have a monthly service charge, minimum balance requirement or limit on the number of transactions you can make," says Bankrate's Mr. McBride.

2. ATM

If you use an ATM that doesn't belong to your bank or doesn't have an agreement with your bank, you could get whacked twice -- once by your bank and once by the bank whose ATM you're using. Fees typically range between $2 and $4. And the bite is getting bigger.

3. Overdraft

Charges can add up when you unknowingly bounce a check or go over your account balance. Many consumers argue that banks should deny them cash at the ATM if the withdrawal is going to overdraw the account. But most banks don't do so because allowing the transaction to go through and charging the subsequent penalty brings in money.

4. Deposit returned

If a check deposited in your account bounces, you're charged a fee just as if you had bounced the check yourself.

5. Tellers

Banks drew fire from consumers in the 1990s when they tried charging a fee if human interaction occurred when depositing or withdrawing money. There are scattered reports of these fees popping up again, mostly for "excessive" use of tellers. Some banks give you two free teller visits per month, but charge you after that -- say, $2 or $4 for each extra visit.

6. Inquiries

This is the phone version of teller fees. Make a call to ask about your account balance, a charge or to order new checks and you could get hit with a service fee ranging from 50 cents to $5.

7. Closing accounts

Many banks will charge you a fee if you close an account within 90 days -- and sometimes within six months -- of opening it. Bankrate has seen fees between $5 and $25.

8. Currency conversions

Fees to convert currency are on the rise -- both what you're charged when withdrawing local currency from a foreign ATM and what you pay to convert any unspent money back to dollars at your local bank.

9. Credit cards

Legislation going into effect next year will put caps on some credit-card late and over-limit fees and on how they're charged against old and new balances. Until then, expect to see them grow. Grace periods also are expected to end or be severely restricted.

10. Annual membership

In the early days of credit cards, issuers charged consumers a yearly fee for the right to use the card. Competition drove most annual fees away, but it looks like they may make a comeback. An annual fee could cost you $29 or more.


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Monday, July 6, 2009

Savings Glut Caused Financial Crisis? Get Real!

Ace! NewsFlash

Asian officials and scholars are pushing back against the notion that their countries' high savings helped cause the financial crisis by flooding the world with cash and driving down interest rates, arguing that lax U.S. financial regulation should bear most of the blame. The comments at a weekend conference in Beijing came just before Chinese President Hu Jintao left for Italy, where he and the leaders of other major emerging economies this week hold a summit with the Group of Eight advanced nations. Mr. Hu, who arrived in Italy Sunday, is expected to argue that improving regulation in rich Western countries should be a bigger international priority than criticizing emerging economies that save and invest a lot.

[Asia Savings Glut]

"Asians financed cheap consumption in the rest of the world, this is what they say. This is something I just cannot understand," Supachai Panitchpakdi, the head of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, and a former Thai government official, told the Global Think Tank Summit in Beijing on Friday. "This is another theory we have to debunk. Asians have not been oversaving and underconsuming." The idea of a "savings glut" -- an excess of cash in Asian countries and oil exporters that pushed down global interest rates and encouraged riskier investments -- was first popularized by Ben Bernanke in 2005, before he was chairman of the Federal Reserve. Economic officials in the Bush administration later endorsed the idea that it contributed to the financial crisis. [Note from Ace! ... What are Paul Krugman's views on this issue?]

Critics of the savings-glut thesis have often argued that it simply pushes responsibility for U.S. policy mistakes onto other countries. Supporters reply that China's huge trade surpluses -- a reflection of its large savings -- clearly had real effects on the global economy. "It is just as silly to deny any role for Asian savings in funding the U.S. savings shortfall, as it would be to blame the imbalance entirely on an Asian savings glut. It takes two to tango," said David Cohen of Action Economics in Singapore. Mr. Supachai argued that the real difference between Asians and Americans is that U.S. consumers borrowed heavily to finance their spending while those in Asian nations mostly didn't. He said that consumption levels in Asia are "normal," averaging about 40% of gross domestic product. He acknowledged that household consumption in China is relatively low, around 36% of GDP. But he said that's because growth in investment and exports have been very strong, not because consumption has been weak.

Chinese central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, speaking to the same conference, said that China's savings ratio does need to fall and its consumption needs to increase. But he argued that focusing too much on "macro" issues like savings imbalances risks diverting needed attention from "micro" factors such as financial regulation. "The crisis originated from Wall Street and many indisputable facts have established that micro factors had played an overwhelmingly important role in causing this crisis," he said, naming issues such as accounting rules, credit-rating agencies, securitized lending and lax standards at banks.

"People outside China need a better insight into the high savings rate in China," Mr. Zhou said. The increase in the nation's overall savings rate in recent years hasn't actually come from households, but mostly from corporate savings in the form of retained profits, he said. Still, household savings rates do tend to be higher in China and other Asian countries, said the head of China's statistics bureau, Ma Jiantang. "In East Asia we tend to be frugal and thrifty. This contributes to the high savings rate in the region," he told the conference Saturday.

Lawrence Lau, an economist and vice-chancellor of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, argued that China's trade surplus couldn't have contributed to the U.S. housing bubble. He said China didn't have a large trade surplus until 2005, when , after hovering around 2% of GDP for several years, it jumped to about 5% of GDP. But U.S. housing prices peaked in 2006 and declined after that, even as China's trade surplus continued to expand dramatically. The rise and subsequent collapse of American house prices, he said, "has nothing to do with the difference in savings rates between the U.S. and China."


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Sunday, July 5, 2009

U.S. Travel & Life Profile: Madison, Wisconsin

Ace! NewsFlash

36 Hours in Madison, Wis.


Schoolchildren test the turf at Camp Randall Stadium at the University of Wisconsin.

MADISON, a liberal college town that doubles as the capital of a politically complicated state, pulls its disparate elements together into a spirited reality all its own, a funky amalgam of hard-partying students, socially conscious activists, sports fans, outdoor warriors, politicos from both sides of the aisle, artists, foodies and more. Long pigeonholed as a hotbed for frat parties and activism, Madison has a vibrant but much more tempered side brimming with arts, culture and food. In a city with so many types to keep happy, it’s impossible not to find something that suits your fancy.

Friday

3 p.m.
1) GLIMPSE OF GRIDIRON

University of Wisconsin football inspires obsession in Madison, and even in much of the off-season, you can share a little of the excitement with a tour of Camp Randall Stadium (1440 Monroe Street; 608-263-5645; www.uwbadgers.com/facilities). Walk on the field, glance inside the locker rooms, check out a luxury box and pose with a statue of the former coach Barry Alvarez. The free tours are normally for groups of 10 to 75 people, but individuals can latch on with a scheduled group; check for availability at least two weeks in advance. There are no tours from mid-November through late Apirl, and dates are limited during the football season.

5 p.m.
2) BEER OR BOTANY?

Drink in views of Lake Mendota, one of the lakes that give Madison its miles of waterfront, along with your pint at the Memorial Union Terrace at the University of Wisconsin (800 Langdon Street; 608-265-3000; www.union.wisc.edu/terrace), an outdoor four-tiered space with candy-colored chairs, a lakefront path and live music in the warm months. Or for quieter outdoor relaxation, try the Allen Centennial Gardens (620 Babcock Drive; www.horticulture.wisc.edu/allencentennialgardens), 2.5 acres surrounding a Victorian building. Stroll Allen’s 29 gardens from a path lined with day lilies by the dozens to a French garden where the shrubs are trimmed in the shape of fleurs-de-lis.

7 p.m.
3) PRAIRIE PROVISIONS

Madison’s growing culinary scene pulls diners in two very different directions: far from the prairie with dozens of ethnic restaurants and right back to it with an emphasis on the bounty of Wisconsin’s farms. Harvest (21 North Pinckney Street; 608-255-6075; www.harvest-restaurant.com) offers sophisticated seasonal dishes and an extensive wine list in a soothing setting of soft lighting and buttery yellow walls. Try the porcini-salt-rub angus tenderloin with celeriac purée ($36) or the house-made tagliatelle ($18).

9:30 p.m.
4) WORLDLY REFRESHMENT

Restaurant Magnus (120 East Wilson Street, 608-258-8787; www.restaurantmagnus.com) has a cocktail menu that spans the world, from the Viking, a tincture of port, vodka and Giffard Blackberry Liquor ($7.95) that pays homage to the Caipirinha ($6.50), the national cocktail of Brazil. The cuisine is Scandinavian, and live music, mostly jazz, plays weeknights at 7 or 8, weekends at 9:30.

Saturday

9 a.m.
5) BIKING AMONG BADGERS

Centered on an isthmus between Lakes Mendota and Monona and surrounded by conservation land, Madison is a haven for outdoors types and one of the most bicycle-friendly cities in the country. For some easy exploring, join the Madison biking crowd by picking up a rental at Machinery Row Bicycles (601 Williamson Street; 608-442-5974; www.machineryrowbicycles.com; $20 a day), which sits on the bike path around Monona. Ride around the lake or head over to the 1,260-acre University of Wisconsin Arboretum (1207 Seminole Highway; 608-263-7888; www.uwarboretum.org).

1 p.m.

6) THE ARCHITECT

These days Wisconsin wants you to know it was the first and favorite home of Frank Lloyd Wright, though in his lifetime the state wasn’t so sure. Wright’s vision for a sprawling civic center was rejected in 1938 by one planning-commission vote and though it later won approval, remained unbuilt. In the 1990s, Wright’s design was resurrected, and Madison built Monona Terrace (1 John Nolen Drive; 608-261-4000; www.mononaterrace.com), a community and convention center, with a terrace that curves along the lake. Its open design and tinted windows reflect the water below, and its roof garden and cafe offer the city’s best water view. One-hour tours begin daily at 1 p.m. and are $3; $2 for students. One group in Madison that did appreciate Wright in his lifetime was the congregation that hired him to design the Unitarian Meeting House (900 University Bay Drive; 608-233-9774; www.fusmadison.org), completed in 1951. It was built with native limestone, copper and glass. Tours, with a suggested donation of $5 to $10, are on weekdays and Sundays, but gawking from the outside is free anytime. It’s unmistakable, with a dramatic triangle roof. The building itself is a triangle, symbolizing hands clasped in prayer.

3 p.m.
7) MAKE MINE CHEESY

The Old Fashioned (23 North Pinckney Street; 608-310-4545; www.theoldfashioned.com), serves the food that “makes Wisconsin so Wisconsin,” so it’s no surprise that an entire section of the menu is devoted to cheese. The bar and restaurant is reminiscent of a late-19th-century saloon filled with Grandma’s antiques, but with a hipster flare. The cheese curds ($6.95) are a must for sampling, as is the spicy bloody mary ($7), which is served with at least three seasonal garnishes — one drink was festooned with a brussels sprout, a radish and an onion.

8 p.m.
8) ANDES EXPRESS

The Inka Heritage (602 South Park Street; 608-310-4282; www.inkaheritagerestaurant.com) is one of the brighter spots on the city’s culinary scene, and it’s not just because of its fluorescent walls and lively art. Diners are transported to Peru via dishes like fire-roasted beef heart ($8) and fried yuca ($6). The sweet milk jam ($6), made with cinnamon and port wine, is a sinfully sweet way to end the meal.

10:30 p.m.
9) SWING TIME

Madison is a late-night kind of town, especially for fans of live music. Check out a show at the High Noon Saloon (701A East Washington Avenue; 608-268-1122; www.high-noon.com), a large Western-tinged club with a balcony for catbird views of bands. The club opened in 2004 and is operated by the former owner of Madison’s well-known O’Cayz Corral, which was destroyed by fire in 2001.

Sunday

10 a.m.
10) DOUBLE COMFORT SCORE

Any restaurant that spells out its name in large Scrabble tiles near the front door is bound to have a funky-nerdy-vibe. Lazy Jane’s Cafe and Bakery (1358 Williamson Street; 608-257-5263) becomes crowded and loud but exudes the coziness that comes with a lazy Sunday poring over the newspaper or catching up with an old friend. The food is similarly comfortable, with scones, grilled cheese sandwiches and a seitan scramble, filled with peppers ($6.50), onions and mushrooms and good enough to impress an avowed meat eater.

11:30 a.m.
11) PADDLE OR SHOP

Lakes Monona and Mendota are usually the first choices for fun on the water in Madison, but Lake Wingra, tucked south of the university arboretum and the Henry Vilas Zoo, is also an option. Rent a canoe, kayak, rowboat or paddle boat at Wingra Boats (824 Knickerbocker Street; 608-233-5332; www.wingraboats.com; starting at $12 an hour). Or for something landbound and livelier, stay downtown and stroll State Street, which links the Capitol with the university. It’s a pedestrian thoroughfare brimming with boutiques, restaurants, museums and bars. Many shops are open by noon on Sundays. Check out Anthology (No. 218; 608-204-2644; www.anthology.typepad.com), a whimsical boutique filled with colorful crafts; the Soap Opera (No. 319; 800-251-7627; www.thesoapopera.com), a fragrant repository of soaps, lotions and potions; and B-Side Records (No. 436; 608-255-1977; www.b-sidemadison.com), a trove of vintage vinyl and CDs, and a showcase for many of the city’s bands.

THE BASICS

Delta and Continental offer nonstop service to Dane County Airport from La Guardia and Newark. Most major airports around the country link to Madison with connections. A recent search found round-trip flights from La Guardia on Delta, connecting in Detroit on the return, for $279. Nonstop flights were $363 to $391.

The Doubletree Madison (525 West Johnson Street; 608-251-5511; www.doubletreemadison.com) is between the university and Capitol Square and offers airport shuttle service. Rooms for mid-July were available starting at about $145 a night.

The Dahlmann Campus Inn (601 Langdon Street; 608-257-4391; www.thecampusinn.com) offers a touch of boutique refinement in the heart of the campus, with rich wood furniture and floral tapestries. Rooms are $150 to $180.

The Arbor House (3402 Monroe Street; 608-238-2981; www.arbor-house.com) features an environmental resource center, has energy-efficient lighting, is cleaned with nontoxic and biodegradable products and boasts a lush native garden. Rooms are $110 to $175 on weeknights, $150 to $230 on weekends and holidays.


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

The March to Democracy, 1776 to 2009

Ace! NewsFlash

Life, Liberty and Benign Monarchy?

FROM the perspective of 2009, democracy in the United States is a great success. This makes it is easy to imagine that the march to democracy was the only path — that there is a clear line from the Declaration of Independence to the presidency of Barack Obama, and that democracy is the only fair society. But republican government was a risky choice at the time of the Revolution, and democracy was almost out of the question. There were more proven alternatives for running a society fairly. A look at two other contenders for control of the continent in 1776 — American Indians and Spaniards — reveals that democracy’s supremacy in promoting human rights was far from inevitable.

There were Indians fighting on both sides of the Revolution and others who tried to stay neutral. But whatever their choice, Indians did not fight for an American republic or a British constitutional monarchy but for their own goals, especially sovereignty. While American Indians were politically diverse, by the Revolution their most common governance structure consisted of multiple chiefs with limited power, advised by councils of elders. Chiefs led by persuasion rather than force. As a Mohawk man of the day explained, “We have no forcing rules or laws amongst us.”

For the British, a signed document was what sealed a treaty; but for the Indians they dealt with, a treaty had no validity without public acclaim. At a treaty negotiation, hundreds of people would gather for weeks, discussing and debating in formal sessions and over elaborate meals. Although not always reached, consensus was the ideal.

Historians and anthropologists have hypothesized that this extreme insistence on shared power was a reaction to the fall of earlier, hierarchical Mississippian chiefdoms, which had ruled much of North America from about 700 to 1600 A.D. Mississippian chiefs could be brutal. Weapons and art depicting violence are abundant at Mississippian archaeological sites. Some chiefs were buried with not only piles of luxury goods but also people, killed to accompany their leader in death.

Later American Indians may have inherited a distrust of centralized authority from their oppressed ancestors. Did Indians build democracies? No. Did they provide liberty and justice for their people? Often, yes. Indians built consensus-style government over time, in response to the hard lessons of history.

Indians were the most populous but not the only rivals to British-American occupation of North America in the 1770s. King Charles III of Spain saw the American Revolution as an ideal opportunity to extend his empire north. Although most people forget Spanish involvement in the war, Spain won battles against the British at Baton Rouge, La., Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla. At the end of the Revolution, European maps showed Spain in possession of most of what is today the continental United States: the entire Gulf Coast and everything west of the Mississippi River.

Immigrants from the new United States were offered free land in the west if they swore an oath to the king and converted to Catholicism. Knowing what we know now about imminent United States dominance, this might look like a bad deal. But thousands of Americans took the king up on his offer as land became scarce in the east. Royalist, imperial, theocratic, bureaucratic Spanish governance was not out of the question.

Surprisingly, the Spanish empire provided some freedoms that the United States would later take away when it expanded westward. Women in the Spanish Empire were not subject to coverture, the legal doctrine under which their legal identities were subsumed under men’s, first by their fathers and then by their husbands. In the post-Revolutionary United States, married women could not own property, participate in local politics, serve on juries, write wills, sign contracts or exercise custody rights over their children. Under the Spanish system, in contrast, women kept their names, property and legal identities. They were not equal to men of their rank, certainly, but they had legal rights unavailable in Anglo-American society.

Slaves in the Spanish colonies of Louisiana and the Floridas also had some rights and opportunities that they would lose under the United States. Slaves who felt mistreated by a master (beyond the “normal” allowed violence) had the right to appeal to the local military commander — and they sometimes won. Slaves could gain freedom through wartime service; thus hundreds served as soldiers, messengers, spies and laborers for the war effort. After the American Revolution, appeals became easier to win, and more than 1,000 slaves in Spanish territory freed themselves either by buying themselves or being paid for by a family member or friend. The life of a slave in Spanish Louisiana and Florida was not easy, but it was far less dehumanizing than the plantation system of the American South.

America’s founders did not want to become Indians or Spaniards. Many of them admired Indian freedoms but believed the natives had no real government. Not knowing of the Mississippian past, Thomas Jefferson wrote in his “Notes on the State of Virginia” that Indians had “never submitted themselves to any laws, any coercive power, any shadow of government.” While he judged that “too much law, as among the civilized Europeans” was worse than “no law, as among the savage Americans,” he believed representative government was best of all.

And the founders believed the Spanish were even more despotic than the hated British. Jefferson believed that the monarchy and priesthood left Spanish subjects “immersed in the darkest ignorance, and brutalized by bigotry and superstition.” He ignored the many black slaves and impoverished white settlers who voted with their feet, moving to Spanish territory for freedom and land.

Councils of elders and monarchies are not better than democracies, and usually are worse. But North American history makes clear that the details of a political system often make more difference in people’s lives than the form does. Our past should give us pride but also humility and caution as we proceed in the world.

Kathleen DuVal, an associate professor of history at the University of North Carolina, is the author of “The Native Ground: Indians and Colonists in the Heart of the Continent” and a forthcoming book on the American Revolution on the Gulf Coast.


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Friday, July 3, 2009

Ready To Go: USA! Pre-Departure Orientation, July 18 in Chiang Mai

Ace! NewsFlash:
EVENT INVITATION


Ready To Go: USA!

educationUSA Pre-Departure Orientation












Host:
Ace! The Academy for EducationUSA
Type:
Network:
Global
Date:
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Time:
1:00pm - 4:30pm
Location:
Kantary Hills Hotel - Conference Center
Street:
44 soi 12 Nimmanhaemin Road
City/Town:
Chiang Mai, Thailand

Phone:
053.895699, 081.8212686
Email:

FREE briefings for northern Thailand residents heading to U.S. universities (graduate & undergrad).
* Speakers include students & alumni (UC San Diego, UNC, Pitzer, Loyola, SUNY, Stanford etc) & TeamAce! counselors.
* Practical tips & advice for Student Visa Applications (by U.S. Consular Officer), Pre-Departure Planning, Traveling To & Arriving In USA, Beginning Your U.S. Education (demo class), U.S. Life & Culture.

BONUS * Free advising on Admissions & Scholarships by EducationUSA counselors & U.S. alumni.

Refreshments will be served.

RSVP required as seats and materials (from EducationUSA & Ace) are limited.

















**
Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***

Thursday, July 2, 2009

The Perfect Burger: how the experts create it

Ace! Lifestyle & Cultural Insights - something interesting for those with an appreciation for U.S. lifestyle & culture.

The Perfect Burger and All Its Parts

THE simple hamburger isn’t so simple any more.

Over the last decade or so, there has hardly been a serious chef in America who hasn’t taken a shot at reinventing or improving it. They have trained their skills on every element, from the precise grind of beef to the ketchup and pickles. Some have turned their bakers loose on reformulating the bun. By most accounts, the burger’s upward journey began eight years ago, when Daniel Boulud stuffed ground sirloin with truffles, braised short ribs and foie gras at his DB Bistro Moderne in Manhattan. A few weeks ago, Mr. Boulud brought things full circle, opening a burger bar on the Bowery called DBGB Kitchen and Bar.

IT'S AN ART Hold the tomato: the Frenchie burger at DBGB includes a compote instead.

While some chefs have groused quietly about the insatiable demand for burgers, most are philosophical. “All chefs can be frustrated by the buying public sometimes,” said Clark Frasier, a chef with restaurants in Massachusetts and Maine. “In this economy I’m happy to sell anything they want to eat.”

All this high-powered attention has produced some new ways of thinking about and cooking burgers. Interviews with 30 chefs provided dozens of lessons for the home cook that aren’t terribly difficult and don’t cost much money. And it all yielded the ideal burger.

A PERFECT BURGER RECIPE There’s a lot you can learn from a man who’s griddled thousands of burgers. Michael David, executive chef at Comme Ça brasserie in Los Angeles, had already earned his burger stripes on the team that developed Mr. Boulud’s French-American DB Burger.

At Comme Ça, Mr. David finally nailed the consummate burger on the 11th try.

TECHNIQUE MATTERS. SO DOES THE BUN Michael David, right, created the Comme Ca burger. The bun is by Hidefumi Kubota.

The genius of his Comme Ça burger is that it is consistently juicy, perfectly seasoned and precisely medium-rare. The patty is charred on the outside and rosy pink from edge to edge. It is a radical improvement on what most people already do, but it’s not much more complicated. His trick is to treat the burger the way many chefs do a steak. He puts a good hard sear on both sides using his plancha, the freight train of flat tops, then transfers it to a 375-degree oven to finish cooking. After it comes out, there’s a built-in resting period while he toasts the buns and makes a last-minute lettuce salad. His method translates to an amazing amount of flexibility. Home cooks who don’t have a plancha can sear the meat either on a grill or on the stovetop in a cast-iron skillet. It works equally well for one or two people, or for a crowd, because you can sear in batches.

The final cooking works beautifully in a toaster oven as well as a regular oven. Or, if you have an outdoor grill that is as large as some people’s kitchens, you can simply move the burgers to a cooler spot once they’ve been charred. Mr. David melts Cheddar cheese over the patty and dollops iceberg lettuce salad dressed with spicy mayonnaise on top and, voilà, a reformed burger.

THE RIGHT CHOICE OF MEAT But before you get to cook the burger, you have to choose the right meat. In “Burger Bar” (Wiley, 2009), Hubert Keller writes that what you do not want is preshaped burgers or meat that is stuffed and compacted into plastic packaging. Once beef is compressed, a light texture cannot be regained.

Douglas Keane, the executive chef and an owner of Cyrus and the Healdsburg Bar & Grill in Healdsburg, Calif., advises people to lose their fear of fat. He started with 80 percent lean beef, then moved to a 70-to-30 ratio. “The day I did it,” he said, “the servers started coming in and asking, ‘What did you do to the burger? The guests are going crazy.’ ” Mark Bucher, the executive chef at the Burger Joint in Washington, said that to make a great burger at home, have your butcher grind a piece of brisket. “It’s got a 25- to 30-percent fat-to-meat ratio,” he said. “It’s gorgeous. It’s my favorite.”

Pat LaFrieda, president of LaFrieda Wholesale Meat Purveyors, which delivers custom blends to many of the top burger restaurants in New York City, recommends grinding the meat yourself with a food processor or a mixer’s grinding attachment. He prefers chuck and brisket, and said to put them in the freezer first and chill them to 30 degrees. “It’s like grating cheese at home,” he said. “Or coffee beans. It’s better, isn’t it?” He explained that preground beef is often made from the trimmings left over from steaks, roasts and stew meat.

It is important, he said, to choose select, choice or prime grade meat. “When dairy cows come of age, they give a very lean, low-grade beef,” he said. “That’s often what’s used for preground meat. That’s something the consumer wants to stay away from.”

A NICE ROUND SHAPE Next, you form the patty.

“If you do nothing else, you should handle it less,” said Suvir Saran, an owner of Dévi, an Indian restaurant in Union Square. Mr. Saran, who calls himself a vegetarian who cheats, offers burgers at his restaurant, American Masala in Jersey City. Handling the raw meat too much means you’re going to end up with a brick of meat.

Mr. David of Comme Ça thinks a lightly shaped patty holds together better if it’s refrigerated for an hour or two before cooking. Michael Mina, founder of the Mina Group, which includes the recently opened XIV in Los Angeles, rolls each patty into a ball, then presses it flat to get a nice round shape. Alternatively, jar lids are popular with chefs. Mark Richardson, the executive chef at the Four Seasons Hotel in San Francisco, swears the lid of a Hellmann’s mayonnaise jar makes the best possible burger mold.

Laurent Tourondel is completely against those chefs who use a whopping 12 ounces of meat. “It’s not too appealing to have such a thick piece of meat to bite into,” said Mr. Tourondel, the executive chef and partner at the many BLT restaurants. He thinks the patty needs to be in proportion with the tomato, the bread and whatever else you have. No matter how big the patty is, one small shaping trick will help it cook better. “The first thing you do is take your thumb and make a well in the burger,” said Bobby Flay, the owner of eight restaurants, including Bobby’s Burger Palace, and the author, most recently, of “Bobby Flay’s Burgers, Fries & Shakes” (Clarkson Potter, 2009).

Tamara Murphy, the executive chef and an owner of Brasa, in Seattle, said the air and water in burgers make them puff up when they’re cooked. “Nobody wants a ball of a burger,” she said. “Then people take their spatula and go, smash, squishing out all the liquid.” Dimpling the patty, she said, helps it cook evenly, and you won’t be tempted to smack it down and lose all the juice. All the chefs agree that salt is crucial. Whether you’re using kosher, table or sea salt, you should be pretty liberal with it. Beef can take more salt than you think. Most chefs recommended seasoning the burger just before cooking it.

HOW HOT DO YOU GO? The beauty of a burger is its seared crust, and the only way to get it is to make sure the grill, skillet or flat top is hot, hot, hot. “You have to be willing to cook over high heat,” said Andy D’Amico, the chef and a partner at Five Napkin Burger, in the theater district, and Nice Matin, on the Upper West Side.

Testing for doneness is always a challenge for the home cook. Seamus Mullen, the chef and an owner of the Boqueria restaurants in the Flatiron district and SoHo, uses a wire cake tester. (Any thin, straight piece of metal will work as well.) “We stick it in the middle through the side,” he said. “If it’s barely warm to the lips, it’s rare. If it’s like bath water, it’s medium rare. The temperature will never lie. It takes the guesswork out of everything.”

AND THE PERFECT BUN These chefs are focusing their laserlike attention on the bread around the meat, too. The buzzer went off for Hidefumi Kubota, the baker at Comme Ça, after Version 14 of the hamburger bun. The bun was too soft and fell apart. Or it was too hard and crushed the burger. It had to be big enough to hold the patty but not so big that you couldn’t get the burger into your mouth. He ended up with a light brioche bun.

Mike Plitt, the pastry chef at Arrows restaurant in Ogunquit, Me., needed about a dozen attempts before he settled on a cross between challah and a buttery dinner roll. But Ryan Skeen, who developed a following for his burgers at Resto and Irving Mill, both in Manhattan, likes Martin’s brand potato rolls, sold at supermarkets up and down the East Coast.

Every chef believes that the buns should be warm and crispy.

SWEET, SOUR BUT FRESH FIXINGS Nothing is taken for granted, not even pickles. Some chefs have adopted the buy fresh, buy local ethic. Kyle Bailey, the chef at Allen & Delancey on the Lower East Side, for instance, found his pickles around the corner at Guss’ Pickles. He especially likes the sour ones because their acidity plays off the sweetness of the ketchup, mayonnaise and bun. “You want something to cut against the richness,” he said.

Other chefs are applying the principle that everything is better if you make it yourself. At MC Perkins Cove in Ogunquit, Me., and Summer Winter in Burlington, Mass., Mr. Frasier pickles serrano chilies. Josh Eden, the chef and an owner at Shorty’s.32 in SoHo, serves quick, house-made cucumber pickles, which get their tang from rice wine vinegar. They’re extremely easy, crunchy and spiked with sweet, anise-flavored tarragon, instead of the usual dill.

DON'T FORGET THE CRUNCH Josh Eden makes his own pickles at Shorty's 32.

Cheese receives the same attention. Joey Campanaro, the chef and owner at the Little Owl in the West Village, uses American cheese. ”You have the eye appeal,” he said. “It looks like what a burger should look like. We’re not elevating it to something it isn’t.” Jim Leiken, the executive chef of DBGB, said the beauty of American cheese is the texture, but rejected it in favor of Cheddar because he prefers its flavor. He also tried blue cheese for a while, but decided it overwhelmed the beef.

Matt Jennings, a cheesemonger as well as a chef at Farmstead Cheese Shop, La Laiterie Bistro and Farmstead Lunch in Providence, R.I., is in an unusual position to pair cheeses and burgers. What matters most to him when selecting cheese? “Meltability,” he said. So if a cheese like Gruyère doesn’t melt easily, he grates it, then presses it into a disk the same size as the burger.

The chefs had some final tips for creating a memorable burger. Choose lettuce that’s crisp and serve it cold. Use only really good, ripe tomatoes; a bad tomato waters down the burger without adding any taste. At DBGB, Mr. Leiken replaces the tomato on his Frenchie burger with an intensely flavored house-made tomato-onion compote.

Ultimately, though, it’s not just the ingredients that make a burger great, said John DeLucie, the chef and a partner at the Waverly Inn in Greenwich Village. “I had a boss who wanted me to make the dish in a photo he showed me,” Mr. DeLucie said. “Behind the dish was a girl in a bikini. He always wanted to know why the dish never tasted as good when I made it.”


*** Ace! is a member of the EducationUSA global educational advising network affiliated with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. We provide free EducationUSA counseling services to students in the northern provinces of Thailand; our faculty of U.S.-trained Test Prep Experts can help you with cost-effective result-driven training programs for SAT-1, SAT-2, TOEFL, GRE, GMAT, GED, IELTS etc ***