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The Palm Springs Tram turns 50 years

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Story and photos by Pat Krause
Story and photos by Pat Krause

The Palm Springs Tram turns 50 years old this month. They celebrated with a Cocktail and Hors D’oeuvres reception in the Mountain Station at the top of the mountain. Over 200 guests were invited to be a part of this event that showed the fantastic service the Tram has provided people from all over the world.

Guests rode the Tram to the top and were treated to Shrimp, Oysters, Crab legs, refreshments and desserts by the Tram chef. There were several other vendors that served specialties from their menus. Entertainment was provided by Byford Entertainment with a Pianist Dave Hirsch and a guitarist John Pagle. Guests went out on the platform to see the incredible scene of the Valley below. Others walked outside on the paths to see the new fallen snow and fantastic views of the mountain.

The Palm Springs Tram has seen many changes over the years from upgrades to the mountain station to new Trams. The new tram has a revolving floor so you get a different view without moving in the Tram. Maintenance of the Tram is a daily occurrence and they usually shut down in September for a complete checkup and maintenance. They closed this year in August because of the 50th celebration. Luckily they were open when the Government Shutdown occurred. People took advantage of this Shutdown to take the Tram ride as all the National parks were closed. This gave people the opportunity to see what the Tram has to offer and get a look at our beautiful Valley from atop one of the highest mountains in the area.

Multi Chamber Mixer at Sunnylands

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Story and photos by Pat Krause
Story and photos by Pat Krause

A Multi Chamber Mixer was held at Sunnylands on Oct. 15th. This is the 2nd annual event that Sunnylands Center and Gardens has hosted. The event included nine Chambers of Commerce from the Valley that were part of this cooperative effort. The event was from 4 to 6 and a limited number of tickets were available.

The garden area was outlined with vendors of food and refreshments from local area businesses. Each vendor showcased their most popular menu item. In many cases there was more that one item at the vendors site.Guests walked from vendor to vendor sampling all the delicious foods and beverages served. Items ranged from sandwiches of prime rib, sausages and meat balls, soups, tasty small appetizers, fruits and cheeses and lots of delicious dessert items. About 40 vendors showed their products to the guests.

The guests could view the Sunnylands Center and walk the garden area, many were first time visitors. Entertainment was provided by both Indio and Shadow Hills High School Bands. Local Business leaders,politicians and Chamber members were part of the guest list. White chairs and tables for guests to sit stood out among the green of the lawn area. A picture of beauty as guests entered the vendor areas.

The Sunnylands Center and Gardens is open to the public and entrance to tour the home and grounds is by reservation only.

‘Oktoberfest’ in Palm Springs

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Story and photos by Pat Krause
Story and photos by Pat Krause

Oktoberfest 2013 Palm Springs was held on October 19th at the Spa Resort Casino back parking lot. Over 40 venders under white tents filled the lot. A big VIP tent was in the middle with a DJ, Surprise entertainment, a private bar and seating for comfort.There was a stage at each end of the venue playing various types of music from polkas to hard rock. Award winning chefs held demonstrations during the day in another tent.

Over 20 of the venders were Belgium, German and micro-breweries that served a variety of beers. It was a hot day and a cool brew was so refreshing. Guests chose many types of beers from lagers, dark and light beers and beers of different flavors for the beer lover. Local cafes and sponsors poured various beers that they serve in their restaurants. There were even wine tasting booths. Vendors sold food and refreshments. Party Lab sold hats and others promoted their businesses. Guests could sign up for prizes that would be won later in the day.

Some of the customers came in Bavarian type costumes. Volunteers wore short blue pants with suspenders, high sox and little blue hats. All in the theme of the day. Bands included Bavarian Stew, Highland Way, Scott Carter and New Breed and Cougrzz Rock, an all female band. Celebrity chefs included Adam Gettler and Johannes Bacher while DJ Andy T played his music in the VIP tent.

The Beneficiary for this event is CASA, Court Appointed Special Advocate for Children, whose mission is to speak for abused neglected and abandoned Children in the courts of Riverside County. WWW. casariversidecounty.org for more information. This event was a Hocker Production.

British Farce Is Alive And Well At College Of The Desert

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Jack Lyons Theatre & Film Critic
Jack Lyons Theatre & Film Critic

Tres Dean, the director of “Will Any Gentlemen?”, currently on the boards at College of the Desert’s Theatre Too stage, and the creative engine that runs the Theatre Department, is racking up credits and points as the desert’s go to guy for British farce.

Dean has a successful track record of rounding up theatre students who get on his comedy/farce wavelength and then have a ball with one of theatre’s earliest art forms.

There’s a knack to doing British farce and when done properly it can be a hilarious, belly-laughing induced, comic romp.   French and European-style farce on the other hand are different kettles of fish.

In farce, once the curtain goes up there should be a slow build-up during the early moments allowing the audience time to absorb the exposition, that sets-up the madcap antics and action that follows.  One must be careful not to start at a point so manic that the actors have vocally nowhere to go, and we find the characters shouting at one another.  British playwright Vernon Sylvaine, is a keen observer of his fellow Brits and he gently pokes fun at their customs and societal idiosyncrasies, which overall, are nicely adapted by Dean and performed by his energetic cast.  I wish, however, that I had heard more orchestration and modulation of the actors’ voices and less volume.  Theatre Too is a relatively small house venue.

Gentleman-4-web“Will Any Gentlemen?” affords the eager and talented cast the opportunity to perform and spread their farcical and comical wings on a stage set designed by J.W. Layne, one of the desert’s finest design wizards, and lighted by journeyman lighting designer Doug Ridgeway.  Costume designer Jennifer Bennett (a pretty fair actor in her own right) provides the glitz and glamour for the ladies, and “sensible” suits, trench coats, and hats for the men; so necessary for the famous English weather.  Special kudos to Lynda Shaeps and Allyson Jeffredo for make-up and wig designs respectively.

With a large cast of fifteen performers it’s difficult to list the entire cast, however, certain performances stand out:  Miranda Hane as the saucy maid Beryl; Mason McIntosh as the pencil-thin and acrobatic lead character Henry Stirling;  Xan Raymond as the German accented Mendoza, the Music Hall hypnotist who sets all of the silliness in motion; Brian Johnson as Dr. Smith the forgetful, dithering doctor who makes house calls again and again in search of his stethoscope; Taylor Burns as Henry’s exasperated wife Florence  Stirling; and John Bolth, in a little comic gem of a performance as Detective Inspector Martin.

“Will Any Gentlemen?” performs at Theatre Too, on the campus of COD Sunday, October 20th at 2 pm, Friday, October 25th and Saturday, October 26th at 7 pm, and on Sunday, October 27th at 2 pm.  For information and ticket reservations call 760-773-2565 or go online at www.ticketleap.com

Internet Hackers Expose The World’s Government Secrets

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Jack Lyons Theatre & Film Critic
Jack Lyons Theatre & Film Critic

“The Fifth Estate” is a disappointing cyber suspense thriller based on the real life escapades of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.  Unless you’ve been living in a cave for the last five years, Australian Julian Assange is the founder of WikiLeaks, an organization responsible for leaking hundreds of thousands of secret government files and diplomatic cables received from whistle-blowers around the world.  The most damaging, and the most embarrassing, for the United States, have been the files provided by American Army private Bradley Manning to WikiLeaks.

download (1)When the story hit simultaneously on the headlines of the New York Times, The Guardian of London, and Der Speigel in Berlin (a strategy insisted upon by Assange),  the power of the internet with its ability to instantly reach millions was ratified.

WikiLeaks’ ability to provide the most private and sensitive of government communications to anyone with a computer, sets in motion a series of damage control strategies by the United States and other governments determined to track down and shut down their operations.

On the upside:  The acting is splendid.  The performances are first rate, with a possible Oscar nomination in 2014 for Benedict Cumberbatch for his eerily accurate portrayal of mysterious, conflicted, and idiosyncratic computer genius-with-an-obsession, Julian Assange.    Daniel Bruhl, a multi-lingual German actor, brings an intensity tempered with restraint to his role of Daniel, Assange’s loyal number two man in the WikiLeaks organization.  Bruhl could be in the mix for a Supporting Oscar nomination come 2014, despite the movie’s mixed reviews if the early buzz for the film continues to grow.

Solid performances also come from David Thewlis, as the ethically challenged editor of The Guardian of London newspaper.  But, Laura Linney and Stanley Tucci are wasted in cameo roles far below their true talent level.

downloadOn the downside:  “The Fifth Estate’s” creative team led by American director Bill Condon (Twilight Sagas: Breaking Dawn, Parts 1 & 2, Dreamgirls, Kinsey) and screen writer and adaptor Josh Singer, have all of the components of a story just as compelling as “All the President’s Men”, but choose to tell their story in a way that will, no doubt, appeal to a growing number of young hackers, eager and anxious to show off their ability to hack without consequences (just like the characters in the film).  The movie is constantly filled with computer screens displaying data and messages, TV images of actual foreign correspondent’s reporting their actual beats; all done with a heightened sense of urgency in “quick cuts” editing style.  It’s a total exercise and bombardment of information overload for the eyes and ears.  The result becomes “…a failure to communicate”, to quote actor Strother Martin in “Cool Hand Luke”; making it’s too easy to disconnect from the story.  Not a good sign when one is dealing with a suspense-thriller.

The irony of “The Fifth Estate”, the film about Assange’s WikiLeaks cabal, of perhaps a half a dozen people, is that it took over three hundred individuals (count the credits at the end if you can wait that long) to make the movie of his story.

“The Fifth Estate” opens nationwide on October 18, 2013.

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Game changer: Swiss banks ditch secrecy

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Switzerland, the world’s largest offshore wealth center, worth an estimated $2.2 trillion in assets, has signed an agreement to share financial information with nearly 60 other countries, which could completely change the country’s financial landscape.

The country has made a giant leap towards banking transparency after it signed a convention with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) agreeing to exchange data with 60 member countries.

Switzerland already has bilateral tax collection agreements with the UK and Austria, but the move to chip away another layer of the country’s infamous banking secrecy was prompted by international pressure from the US, Germany, and France,

The tax agreement, called the Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance on Tax Matters came into force in 2010, and includes all G20 states, and most European states. The convention requires participants to pool tax collection information, and includes automatic exchanges, in some cases.

Under the convention, the Swiss government can call on large private banks like UBS AG, Julius Baer, and Credit Suisse Group AG to turn over confidential information to international tax watchdogs.

The crackdown on the tight-lipped policy could cost the Swiss business, as the new policy may be a turn-off for foreign banks. At the beginning of 2012, 145 foreign banks had offices in Switzerland, and as of May 2013, 16 had left, according to data from the Association of Foreign Banks in Switzerland.

Between 2008 and 2012, foreign bank assets decreased by $921 billion, as tax evasion eroded and clients withdrew money.

 

A man walks in front of the entrance of the UBS headquarters in Zurich. (AFP Photo / Fabrice Coffrini)A man walks in front of the entrance of the UBS headquarters in Zurich. (AFP Photo / Fabrice Coffrini)

 

The chairman of the Swiss Bankers Association, Patrick Odier, has long been outspoken against the automatic exchange of client information, and doesn’t see it becoming a norm in the banking industry. Other politicians in favor of the changes, say the banks simply need to reinvent themselves.

“The signing of the convention confirms Switzerland’s commitment to the global fight against tax fraud,” Stefan Fluckiger, the Swiss ambassador to the OECD, said in a statement adding his country has been complying with international tax standards since 2009.

The Swiss Federal Council approved the convention on October 9, the first unilateral agreement for the nation that signals the state is prepared to play a larger role in upholding international tax rules.

Until recently, the Alpine tax haven refused steps towards banking transparency, and over the summer, the Swiss parliament struggledto pass a bill to change the banking legacy., but finally agreed to comply with the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, a bilateral client information swap with the US.

Almost all bankers in Switzerland have grown up with bank secrecy, which was written into Swiss law in 1934 after French authorities arrested, and confiscated a client list from two Swiss bankers in Paris in 1932.

Hot topic

The global recession has led many governments, who had long turned a blind-eye to banking secrecy, to go after individuals and companies who avoiding taxes with secret Swiss bank accounts.

Offshore wealth, shrouded in secrecy and often untaxed, has reached $8.5 trillion, according to a Boston Consulting report.

Tax evasion was a hot topic over the summer both at the G8 conference in Northern Ireland and the G20 summit in St. Petersburg.

The US has had a long-standing tax-evasion dispute with Switzerland, and over the summer, threatened $10 billion in claims if they didn’t come clean with their banking secrecy.

In 2009, UBS, Switzerland’s biggest bank, admitted to helping 52,000 American clients avoid paying taxes. In January 2013, Switzerland’s oldest private bank, Wegelin & Co., said it would close down after pleading guilty to helping Americans hide more than $1.2 billion from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Over a dozen Swiss banks are said to be under US investigation.