The first parade sign is up! It is on Palm Drive heading out of town, west side of Palm just before Claire.
World record attempts at the HITS Championship in Palm Springs December 1-2, 2012
World record attempts, triathlon veterans and first-time triathletes come together
at the HITS Championship in Palm Springs, CA December 1-2, 2012
What: Roughly 1200 athletes will participate in the return of HITS Triathlon Series to Palm Springs, CA this weekend. Designed for seasoned triathletes as well as first-timers, the HITS Triathlon Series features five distances over a single weekend offering A distance for everyone!™ and will celebrate its one year anniversary in sunny California.
Story Ideas: James Lawrence, 35, of Lindon, Utah is using Palm Springs as the last stop on his 2012 world record attempt. He completed two full distance triathlons each month this year and hopes to raise $5 million for the Quiet Way Foundation (quietway.org) through his “Tri and Give a Dam” campaign (triandgiveadam.com). The Quiet Way Foundation is a nonprofit organization that helps to provide fresh water to people in Kenya by building dams.
Deborah Battaglia, 44, of Salt Lake City, Utah set a goal to do the entire 2012 HITS Triathlon Series at the Full distance, which includes 10 races across the country. She already boasts ten first female overall titles. Both as a warm-up to the Full distance and as a way to motivate new triathletes, Battaglia also races in the Open race at each venue.
Paul Amey, 39, of La Jolla, California is a celebrated professional triathlete who races for Great Britain and will be competing in the Half and Olympic distance races. He was involved in sports from an early age and gave away 2 full-time running scholarships at American Universities to pursue triathlons. In 2004, he qualified for the British Triathlon Olympic Team. Since 2008, Paul has been competing in the Ironman and Ironman 70.3 events with a personal and British Ironman record of 8hrs:01mins.
Susan Haag, 46, of Jacksonville, Florida has raced at all the HITS Triathlon Series races since last December. She has completed all the HITS Full distance races, is an Ironman, marathon runner and notorious class clown. She also competes in the HITS Open races at each venue.
Matthew Smith, 35, of Indio, California says that triathlon has become an integral part of his daily sobriety. He started participating in June of this year and will be racing the Half distance race this weekend. Smith has been sober since 2009 and has his love of running and now triathlon to thank for it.
Eric Oscarson, 36, of Provo, Utah used to weigh 365 pounds and has recently lost 175 pounds due to the sport of triathlon. He did his first in 2009 after setting a goal to one day compete in a Full. He finished his second full distance race this Fall.
Mason McNair Riley, 15, of San Antonio, Texas did his first triathlon in 2005 and has been racing in National Championships at both Ironkids and USAT since he was 10. He is currently recovering from a crash at the 2012 USAT Youth Elite National Championships and will be participating in the Sprint distance race.
More information:
Course maps and additional information about the HITS Championship is available at http://www.hitstriathlonseries.com/palm-springs-ca-2012/.
Additional information about HITS Triathlon Series in general is available at www.HitsTriathlonSeries.com.
Where:
Race Site – Lake Cahuilla Park
58075 Jefferson Street
La Quinta, California 92253
Schedule of Events:
Saturday, December 1, 2012 – Race Site
• 7 am: Half and Full races start
• 2 pm: Half distance Awards Ceremony and Press Conference
Sunday, December 2, 2012 – Race Site
• 7 am: Sprint male wave starts
• 7:03 am: Sprint female wave starts
• 7:40 am: Olympic male wave starts
• 7:43 am: Olympic female wave starts
• 9 am: Full distance Awards Ceremony and Press Conference
• 10 am: Sprint distance Awards Ceremony and Press Conference
• 11:30 am: Olympic distance Awards Ceremony and Press Conference
• 12:30 pm: HITS Open 1st wave starts (all males 18 & older)
• 12:40 pm: HITS Open 2nd wave starts (all females 18 & older)
• 12:50 pm: HITS Open 3rd wave starts (all children 17 & under and families)
• 2:00 pm: HITS Open Awards Ceremony
Letters to Santa
Yucca Valley, CA.- Santa’s elves will soon be visiting Yucca Valley to pick up children’s letters to Santa. Letters can be dropped off in the special mailbox in the Yucca Valley Community Center lobby, Monday through Friday between 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., or mailed to Santa Claus c/o Town of Yucca Valley, 57090 Twentynine Palms Hwy., Yucca Valley, CA 92284.
The elves will make sure Santa knows to write back. Please enclose a self addressed stamped envelope. Letters must be received by Monday, December 17th.
For more information please call the Community Services Department at 760 369-7211, Monday through Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
The ‘Escapade Pub’ is now in Scottish hands
There is a lot of saloon history in the white brick building on the corner of Cahuillo and Palm Drive in Desert Hot Springs. It is the home of the Escapade Pub, a watering hole, where the locals relax and cool off.
The Escapade is now in Scottish hands; Fiona Cairns and Malcolm McLean are the new owners. The Escapade is a friendly place; you can sit outside in the patio and sip your beer or play pool inside and give the jukebox a spin or watch sports on large TV monitors; NASCAR is the favorite. The drinks are good, and inexpensive.
Fiona and Malcolm are community orientated, and they are big supporters of Food Now, the local food bank. They help organize can-food drives, collect contributions, and donate money helping to feed the hungry in our town.
So, if you want a cool drink, at a safe and pleasant place, visit the Escapade Pub at 12347 Palm Drive in Desert Hot Springs and tell them Max sends you!
A dance event in the honor of the Virgin Mary
Desert Hot Springs, CA.- In 2009, members of the Saint Elisabeth Church of Hungary embarked on a dance event in the honor of the Virgin Mary. Starting with only 45 members the group grew rapidly, and is now about 80, comprised of children, teenagers and adults.
The group will be performing on Saturday December 27, 2012 at 8:00 am. You are invited, ¡Olé!
El Mercadito Meat Market
(760) 251-4555
16760 Palm Dr, Desert Hot Springs, CA 92240
Cross Streets: Between Dillon Rd and Camino Idilio
MSame-Sex Marriage Soon May Be on Supreme Court Docket
The U.S. Supreme Court is raising the stakes in the same-sex marriage debate as it considers taking up the issue for the first time, testing momentum built by advocates through electoral wins in four states this month.
The justices are scheduled to confer privately on Friday on 10 pending appeals, including clashes over the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which blocks gays from receiving federal marriage benefits, and a California ballot measure that outlawed same-sex nuptials there in 2008. The high court may say as early as that afternoon which cases it will consider.
Supreme Court involvement would come as gay marriage has seen a surge in public support since 1996, when the Defense of Marriage Act was approved 342-67 in the House of Representatives and 85-14 in the Senate and signed by President Bill Clinton. By Jan. 1, same-sex couples will be able to wed in nine states and the District of Columbia, and President Barack Obama has said he backs that right.
“Even if the court avoids ruling on the big question — whether gays and lesbians are entitled to marry — these cases will still be hugely important,” said Adam Winkler, a constitutional law professor at the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law. “They will establish standards and rules that will impact future gay-rights cases.”
Previous Supreme Court cases provide few hints as to how the court will rule. Although Justice Anthony Kennedy, who may cast the deciding vote, backed gay rights in 1996 and 2003 rulings, neither case involved marriage.
Advocates on both sides say the court is all but certain to review the Defense of Marriage Act, a law that two federal appeals courts have said is unconstitutional. Less clear is whether the justices will take up the potentially more sweeping fight over California’s Proposition 8.
The challenge to that ballot measure is being pressed by Theodore Olson and David Boies, the lawyers who faced off against each other at the Supreme Court in the Bush v. Gore case that resolved the 2000 presidential election deadlock. They filed the suit with an eye toward winning a Supreme Court ruling establishing same-sex marriage as a constitutional right.
The California case “would be an opportunity for the court to go on the record for the first time” on that issue, said Jane Schacter, a Stanford Law School professor who teaches constitutional and sexual-orientation law. The question is “whether they want to engage with the underlying issue of whether same-sex couples have a right to marry.”
Voters this month approved gay marriage in Washington, Maryland and Maine — the first states to give such consent at the polls — and rejected a bid in Minnesota to amend the state constitution to bar the practice.
The Obama administration announced last year that it would begin opposing the Defense of Marriage Act in court, leaving congressional Republicans led by House Speaker John Boehner to spearhead the defense.
Opponents say the law, known as DOMA, unconstitutionally bars legally married gay couples from getting the same federal benefits as opposite-sex spouses. Under the law, people in same- sex marriages can’t file joint federal tax returns, claim exemption from estate taxes, receive Social Security survivor benefits or obtain health insurance as the spouse of a federal employee.
“This is an arbitrary law,” said Mary Bonauto, a Boston lawyer with the Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders whose clients include seven gay Massachusetts couples and three surviving spouses challenging DOMA. “It is arbitrarily treating one group of married people as unmarried.”
Supporters of the law say it promotes traditional marriage and by extension makes it more likely that children will grow up in a nurturing environment.
“Of course, Congress has the right to define such a fundamental institution,” said Brian Brown, president of the Washington-based National Organization for Marriage, which opposes same-sex nuptials. “This is a question for the representatives of the people. Congress represents the people.”
The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and the New York-based 2nd Circuit both rejected the measure. Ruling in the Massachusetts case, the 1st Circuit pointed to “a lack of any demonstrated connection between DOMA’s treatment of same-sex couples and its asserted goal of strengthening the bonds and benefits to society of heterosexual marriage.”
The 2nd Circuit broke new legal ground by saying that laws discriminating against gays, like those targeting racial minorities and women, should get especially rigorous scrutiny from the courts. The Supreme Court has never adopted that approach.
The 2nd Circuit ruling was a victory for 83-year-old New York resident Edie Windsor in her fight against a $363,000 estate tax bill imposed after the 2009 death of her spouse, Thea Clara Spyer. Windsor and Spyer were married in Canada in 2007, a marriage the 2nd Circuit concluded would be recognized under New York law.
Although both sides in the case are asking the high court to rule on the marriage law, they disagree about which of the eight pending appeals the justices should take up.
Congressional Republicans are asking the court to review the 1st Circuit decision. That case probably would disqualify Justice Elena Kagan, who played a role in the Massachusetts litigation when she was Obama’s top courtroom lawyer.
The Obama administration, while not saying directly that it would like to have Kagan involved, has proposed alternatives for the court to consider, including the Windsor case. The administration says the court also could take up a suit pressed by same-sex couples in Vermont, Connecticut and New Hampshire or a California lawsuit by a federal court employee seeking to have her spouse enrolled on her government health-care plan.
The legal battle over DOMA doesn’t affect a separate provision in the law that says states can refuse to recognize same-sex marriages from other jurisdictions.
Supreme Court review of California’s Proposition 8 is less of a sure thing. Voters approved the initiative in 2008 as a way to reverse a decision by the California Supreme Court, which five months earlier had said the state constitution guaranteed the right to gay marriage.
Lawyers Olson and Boies, who sought constitutional protection for gay marriage, instead won a narrower ruling with limited applicability beyond California’s borders. A federal appeals court said Proposition 8 unconstitutionally stripped same-sex couples of a right that they had once enjoyed — and that heterosexual couples would continue to possess. Gay marriage is on hold in California while the litigation plays out.
Supporters of Proposition 8, led by former state Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth, are appealing to the Supreme Court. They argued that the lower court’s reasoning was a “suggestion that any experiment with the definition of marriage is irrevocable.”
Olson and Boies are urging the Supreme Court to reject the appeal, even as they said in court papers that it touches on “the defining civil rights issue of our time.”
Olson said in an interview that, should the court take up the case, he would make both California-specific arguments and broader contentions that could establish same-sex marriage rights nationwide. Marriage, Olson said, is a “fundamental right that cannot be taken away from citizens on the basis of their sex or sexual orientation.”
Some gay-rights advocates say they worry that a high court review of Proposition 8 might lead to a split decision, with the justices striking down DOMA while upholding the California initiative.
Justice Kennedy has been a champion of gay rights in past cases, writing the 2003 decision that said states can’t criminalize gay sex acts. Overturning the convictions of two men in Texas, he wrote that “the state cannot demean their existence or control their destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime.”
Kennedy, appointed by President Ronald Reagan in 1988, also wrote the court’s 1996 decision striking down a Colorado constitutional amendment that barred cities and counties from enacting anti-discrimination laws to protect gays.
Even so, he underscored in 2003 that he wasn’t passing judgment on gay marriage, saying the case “does not involve whether the government must give formal recognition to any relationship that homosexual persons seek to enter.”
He and his colleagues might decide to bide their time to see whether more states legalize gay marriage. Lawmakers in New Jersey, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois and Minnesota all plan to revisit the issue next year.
“You’ve got the political forces throughout the country very engaged in this,” Schacter said. “Things are changing very quickly. They may just continue to let this percolate.”