Friday, April 29, 2011

E and the iPhone

 My son knows how to unlock my iPhone. I was amazed to watch him press the home button to wake it up and then use his little thumb to slide the slider and unlock it. He knew exactly what to do with it after watching his Daddy and me checking our email. We never let him play with our phones, so when he managed to get mine without my immediate notice, we decided to just see what he would do. Nothing gets past this kid! This just goes to show how observant babies really are :-) He knew how to work the home button, the slider, and he knows that he always sees Mommy and Daddy turning it to look at stuff. He did this over and over until of course I finally decided to video it. Once the filming started, as luck goes, he wouldn't really repeat the performance. This is what I did manage to catch though...


  E cracks me up on a regular basis. Last night, while we were out to dinner, my husband and I held hands across the table to say our blessing. E reached his little hand across the table too and placed it on top of our hands while we prayed. He just makes my heart melt!




Thursday, April 28, 2011

Popping Gum

  You know how annoying it is when someone pops their gum? Yeah. Well, I never thought I would be so excited about popping gum. My husband and I were sitting with E in the floor playing and hubby began loudly popping his gum. E had been playing with his back to us and abruptly stopped and spun around looking for the sound. I told my husband, "He HEARD that!" We both spent the next few minutes popping gum and watching E for a reaction. Sure enough, he responded quite a few times before he seemed to decide that Mommy and Daddy had lost it and began to ignore us completely. This lead to downloading an iPhone app to measure the decibel level of our gum popping. Turns out that popping gum is actually much louder than I would have imagined! While this didn't indicate any better hearing for E, it did lead us to wonder what other things he hears that we have never considered before.

  This past Friday, we met up with another family in our area with a deaf child. It was a wonderful experience to meet their son and his two sisters. This little boy was five years old and had bilateral cochlear implants. We do not know if cochlear implants are going to be part of our journey, but we are heavily researching all of our options. It was a fantastic and informative experience to be able to ask questions directly to this very energetic boy and watch him play and interact with other kids. Surprisingly, the other children never even seemed to notice his CIs. It made me feel much better about E wearing his hearing aids. We made the choice not to try to hide his hearing aids, but I still worry that he will encounter stares and unwanted comments from time to time. We were able to get a lot of honest and candid information on the pros and cons of cochlear implants as well as some insight on raising a deaf child in mainstream culture.

  On another note, I really want to connect with other parents of children with hearing loss. If you are a reading this and are a parent with a deaf or HOH child or if you happen to be deaf or HOH yourself, please leave me a comment or email me because I would truly love to connect. We're still pretty new to all of this and I am looking for advice, encouragement, and insight.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Toronto Travels


Although it still feels (and looks) like winter, this weekend, we took a last minute ride out of town with our two friends (Raji and Dilshire) to visit our lovely neighbor to the north, Canada.  About an hour and a half after an 11pm boarder crossing and a few jokes from the boarder agent about Brian's model-like passport picture, we finally arrived in Toronto.  This was my first trip to the city, and what a fantastic place, especially if you take an interest in great restaurants, fabulous food markets and artisan specialty products.  Not to mention some beautiful scenery, great shopping, and museums.  


Even after a late night/early morning arrival, we slept a few hours and got up to start out on our day of sightseeing.  First stop was the St. Lawrence Market, which is a huge indoor market selling all types of food, and related items of all sorts.




There were many different freshly picked vegetables, and warm breads just out of the oven.





The pasta shop was making spinach and ricotta ravioli.


After lots of shopping and a little tasting. We grabbed a fruit smoothie and headed towards our next stop, about 1/2 a mile away...the historic Distillery District. 


After hearing some amazing recommendations from my fellow bloggers, we were headed to SOMA chocolates for some really amazing treats (perfect, just in time for lunch).  SOMA is one of the few chocolate makers in North America that makes chocolate in small batches, directly from the cacao bean (Bean to Bar).  You can watch some of their production through the glass right in the shop.  


They make an incredible assortment of chocolates, Italian cookies, hot cocoa and even some cocoa covered corn nuts! 

  

We continued the day meandering through the streets, stopping to eat and shop, and take in Toronto life for this very short trip.


Before we knew it, the sun was setting, and our legs were worn out. 


We made a last stop at Reposado tequila bar, before calling it a day.  


I am not even a big fan of tequila, but the bar was very eclectic and the drinks were fantastic. A perfect way to end the day.  If you have any favorites in Toronto, please share.  I have a feeling I will be back soon.  


Sunday, April 24, 2011

No More Baby Mullet

  Just in time for Easter, we decided it was time for E's first real haircut. We had a tiny trim just right over the ears a while back, but this was the first all out haircut. A friend from church had a reputation for being a fantastic baby stylist. We figured having someone familiar do the trim with no salon craziness would probably be the best thing for E's first experience. It went great! It was a bit hard to trim up the back though because E is VERY ticklish on the back of his neck. Every time she would touch his little neck, he would raise his shoulders toward his ears. The cut looks great and we are now rid of the baby mullet! Daddy is a little sad though because E definitely looks much more like a little boy now than a baby.






  Today was E's first Easter. I am seriously going to hate the day that he no longer lets me dress him! I LOVE his little Easter outfit! I feel like I am doing my best most days to be dressed in something that actually matches, but my little man is always stylin'! I love his tiny Sperry boat shoes so much that I really think they might have to go in a shadow box once he outgrows them :-)




Thursday, April 21, 2011

Hearing Aids

   We took E today to meet with the audiologist to discuss and order his hearing aids. The big decision of the day–what color? We thought about trying to match them to E's hair color and maybe they would blend in a bit. In the end, we decided to "Go BIG or Go Home" and we chose the translucent blue! We figured if nothing else, they'll be easier to find when he flings them across the room :-)


It will still be about another two weeks before they come in and we can take E to try them out for the first time. We are hopeful, but not certain that the hearing aids will help E.

  We also had a visit with the ENT to discuss his CT scan (which all looked great) and our continued testing to rule out any syndromes associated with hearing loss. I am honestly kind of glad to have a tiny break in the action while we wait on the aids to come in. We have made trips to one doctor or another about once a week for the past month. Now comes the REALLY fun part....dealing with insurance!

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Flour Puts Its Mark On Cleveland

  We arrived back in Cleveland in the late afternoon, after a busy past few days of travel.  We were starving.  I usually have no idea where to get a quick and delicious meal when I step off the plane knowing that my refrigerator is empty.  However, I had been wanting to try the new Flour restaurant that just opened, not far from Chagrin Falls.  Flour offers rustic Italian food, creating their own house-cured meats, and wood fired pizzas.  They source seasonally and locally.   While Flour is not anywhere near the airport, and nowhere near my home, the enticement of great food, far outweighed the few more minutes of travel that I had to endure.  
Truthfully, I am really quite picky when it comes to restaurants, as I feel that it is fairly easy to make good food at home.  That said, Flour was fantastic.  The service was quick and knowledgeable.  The atmosphere was modern and relaxed, and most importantly, the food was top notch.  Growing up Italian, in San Francisco, this is exactly the food that makes me feel at home.  
We started with the calamari   They were light, crispy and not oily or overly salted.  They were garnished with a fried basil leaf and a few tiny slices of fried lemon.


Then we had the panzanella, which was grilled bread with black olives, roasted red peppers, garlic, olive oil, white balsamic and a bit of fresh basil. Fresh, light and not the least bit soggy or heavy. 


For the main course I ordered the fungi pizza with Taleggio cheese and truffle oil.  The crust, the most difficult part of making pizza, was perfect.  It is actually the best I have tried in Cleveland so far. 
  


Brian had the Lamb Conserva, a perfect nugget of moist tender lamb with a few added vegetable for garnish.


Brian finished that one off pretty easily.


If you haven't made the trek yet, (or maybe you are lucky enough to live close by) Flour is becoming a favorite for me, and is definitely worth a trip.  With a full bar and a full menu of interesting, local, rustic Italian specialties, I will be back very soon.  Maybe they could think about moving downtown- closer to me?   

Monday, April 18, 2011

Deer!

  We had a great weekend with family. We drove down Friday night and got to my in-law's house around 10 pm. E was such a tired little boy, but he was so excited to see everyone! My father-in-law has a deer head on the wall. E spotted the deer head and looked to Daddy as if to say, "what's that?" We signed "deer" for him. To our amazement, he immediately looked up at the deer head and made the sign perfectly. What a little smarty pants! E was thrilled with the excitement and reaction of everyone and of course "deer" became his new favorite thing. Every time he would sign deer, he got smiles, clapping, and a room full of people signing "deer" back to him. Needless to say, we saw a lot of "deer" all weekend.

  Saturday, we took E to a birthday party for the daughter of some of our dear friends from SC. She turned one and had a bunny themed party. E really enjoyed flirting and laughing as always. Little Mr. Personality had a ball and enjoyed seeing others his own size. After the party, we took a trip to the Gaffney outlet mall. We let E ride in his Jeep carrier on the front of Daddy's chest. E was in hog heaven being outside and seeing all of the people. He brought smiles to everyone we passed as E giggled, waved, and of course....signed "deer"!

  After church on Sunday, we went to our local restaurant and creamery. E got his first taste of cake batter ice cream in a waffle cone. It was hilarious to watch that tiny tongue lick 90 miles and hour :-) The messy face and giant grins were the best treat for mommy!

 
  Thanks to E's nanny, we now have a mini basketball and goal. It only took a couple of demonstrations before E took right to the concept. After each basket made, E would be very excited and proud of himself. He would clap and laugh and do it again. We did this for at least 15 minutes before it occurred to me to take a quick video. When I decided to put down the hoop, E cracked me up by holding the hoop up sideways in one of his little hands and pushing the ball through with the other. He never ceases to amaze me with the way he takes to things like a duck to water. I love watching his exploration of the world :-)

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Gas Prices Rise, and Economists Look for a Tipping Point

Source: all-breaking-news.com

The question, economists agreed, is what happens if prices continue to go up and remain high.

Prices for a gallon of regular unleaded gas are topping $4 at more service stations nationwide, revisiting the bleak territory of three years ago, when the average price for a gallon of regular gas reached a peak of $4.11 on July 17, 2008, according to the Oil Price Information Service.

The survey of about 100,000 stations showed gas prices were now averaging $3.77 a gallon nationwide. The average is already more than $4 in California, Hawaii and Alaska, and analysts at the oil information service said drivers were paying more than $4 at some stations in at least three other states Illinois, Connecticut and New York.

The governments Energy Information Administration on Monday put the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline slightly higher at $3.79, up 10.7 cents from the previous week and nearly a dollar higher than the same time last year.

Even with the higher prices, economists said recent broad data had continued to be positive.

The labor market, for example has continued to strengthen, with the economy adding 216,000 jobs in March. And a survey of 25 retailers tracked by Thomson Reuters posted a 1.7 percent increase that same month, contrary to analysts forecasts.

But economists are still trying to determine the longer-term economic impact.

Once we cross the $4 threshold, the pain will become more palpable, and it is going to show up more noticeably in the reduction in future consumer spending, said Bernard Baumohl, the chief global economist for the Economic Outlook Group. He predicted that spending on discretionary goods will be diminishing as the price of gasoline keeps moving higher.

He also pointed out that the governments retail sales figures for March, a broader measure that also takes into account more sectors and categories, will be released on Wednesday. I would not be at all surprised that non-gasoline purchases are beginning to suffer, he said.

John Gamel, the director of gasoline research for MasterCard, noted the good jobs report last month. It has been a tug of war, he said, between the improved labor market and any drag of higher gas prices.

He said that a MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse report showed that gasoline consumption fell 3.6 percent in the week ending April 1, year on year, the fifth consecutive decline.

Even with the better labor market, consumers are cutting back on their driving, Mr. Gamel said. That is something we will have to watch.

That decline may also be due to Americans switch to more fuel-efficient cars since 2008.

As bad as it is to see $4 pump prices, the economy is in better shape now than it was three years ago, said James W. Paulsen, the chief investment strategist for Wells Capital Management.

The recent surge in energy prices may well slow the pace of economic recovery in the next few quarters, he wrote in a research note on Monday.However, the different position and tenure of the U.S. job market could be the reason why the contemporary energy crisis may prove more a consumer irritant at the pump than a cycle-ending recession risk.

Economists are also saying that industries that depend on travel revenue, like recreation and hotel businesses, could feel the pinch over the Memorial Day weekend and during the summer.

The rise in gasoline prices began to gain steam after political turmoil surged in the Middle East in February. Commodity prices soared amid heightened concerns over supply disruptions, especially from Libya, even though other producers offered to make up for any shortfall. Crude prices climbed to their highest level in more than two years last Thursday, closing higher than $110.

Money has been pouring into all commodities at an incredible pace for the last four months, said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst with the Oil Price Information Service.

I think we have hit the tipping point, he said of gasoline prices. The sweet spot this year for economic growth without damaging demand was probably $3.25 to $3.75.

The surge in commodity prices has been so pronounced that Federal Reserve officials have commented on gasoline prices. On Monday, in fact, Janet L. Yellen, the vice chairwoman of the board of governors of the Fed, said that rising energy and food prices were creating significant hardships for many people and that the Fed was watching the effect on inflation.

Economists said they expected that Americans would make fewer nonessential trips by car, particularly over Memorial Day or for summer vacation, or would consolidate more trips for work with errands.

People just dont have the elasticity in their budgets, said Robert Sinclair Jr., a spokesman for AAA New York.

Still, many Americans are like Jon Wood, a 49-year-old mechanic who, after the run-up in gas prices in 2008, reluctantly bought a Nissan Sentra for his 80-mile round-trip commute to his job in Greenwich, Conn.

Now, with the price for a gallon of gas at $4.19 at the station where he works, he is glad he did.

I drive something very economical, Mr. Wood said of his car, a 1993 model that gives him 30 miles to the gallon on the highway. Normally, it would not be my first choice.

Theater Review | 'How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying': Wizard of Corporate Climbing

Source: all-breaking-news.com

Instead of teaching some unlikely, nondancing celebrities to do the cha-cha, you train them to star in a big Broadway musical, with fancy sets and chorus lines. It could be called Singing, Dancing and Acting With the Stars on Broadway (With Fancy Sets and Chorus Lines).

O.K., maybe the title needs work. But if you want to see a prototype for an entry in this series, take a look at the new production of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, which opened on Sunday night at the Al Hirschfeld Theater. Its leading man is Daniel Radcliffe, the little wizard that could from the Harry Potter movies; and while Mr. Radcliffe is clearly not to the musical manner born, I would give him, oh, a 6 out of 10.

Theres little doubt that audiences will feel like rooting for Mr. Radcliffe in Rob Ashfords charm-free revival of Frank Loessers 1961 musical about corporate ladder climbing. This 21-year-old British actor, who made a creditable Broadway debut as the psycho stable boy in Equus in 2008, conscientiously hits his choreographic marks, speaks his lines quickly and distinctly (with a convincing American accent) and often sings on key.

You can almost hear an unseen coachs voice whispering to Mr. Radcliffe, telling him when to do what. And because you so feel the effort and eagerness with which Mr. Radcliffe responds to that voice, you truly want him to succeed, just as you hope a favorite athlete or hip-hop artist will avoid elimination on Dancing With the Stars.

But you dont particularly want his character in the show to succeed, and that really is a problem. He portrays the self-invented J. Pierrepont Finch, a boyish man without a discernible past who by systematically following the rules of a book that shares its title with this musical works his way ever upward at the World Wide Wicket Company in New York City.

How to Succeed, which won the 1962 Pulitzer Prize for drama, was rather refreshing for its time in that Ponty (as he asks people to call him) was just as calculating and amoral as some other top-of-the-heap businessmen in real life. And he didnt have to die or repent or even apologize for doing so well, so coldly.

But the shows book writers (Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock and Willie Gilbert) failed to give Ponty any defining traits beyond all-consuming ambition. It was left to whoever played him to provide the extras, like a personality. Robert Morse, who created the role on Broadway, endowed him with an irresistible impish energy that is evident even in the so-so 1967 movie. Matthew Broderick brought to the 1995 Broadway revival a take me Im yours passivity that verged on the robotic but won him a Tony anyway.

Mr. Radcliffes performance goes even further, purging Ponty of any individualizing quirks. Hes a tabula rasa who absorbs his professional bibles lessons on whom to stroke and how. This blank-slate aspect is unconditionally supported by the prevailing blankness of Mr. Radcliffes face.

Whenever Ponty smiles at his latest stroke of good fortune (a change in expression wittily underlined by music and lighting), its a wee bit chilling. You understand why this guys co-workers resent and fear him. Hes like some super automaton who has been thrust into their midst both to mock and eliminate them.

I suppose theres a case to be made for reconceiving How to Succeed as a variation on Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Certainly, Derek McLanes sets, color-coded visions of modernist honeycomb architecture (matched by Catherine Zubers interchangeable off-the-rack business suits and secretarial outfits), would seem to support the notion of an assembly-line world.

But generally, this production doesnt have a sensibility to call its own, unless you count the evident feeling of relief that thanks to the success of Mad Men you dont have to make excuses for enjoying the bad behavior of sexist cads in neckties from the early 60s. As both director and choreographer, Mr. Ashford, who took on the same era with similar results in last seasons revival of Promises, Promises, keeps the show moving nimbly enough. (The original book, to which this version sticks closely, is as well built as Hedy La Rue, the shows resident lust object, played here by Tammy Blanchard.)

Most of the supporting cast is passable and generic. As J. B. Biggley, the head of World Wide Wicket, John Larroquette (best known for televisions Night Court) provides some funny throwaway line readings, though he also frequently throws away clear diction. Rose Hemingway is pretty and squeaky as the secretary who sets her cap for Ponty. Christopher J. Hanke, who plays Pontys rival (and the bosss nephew), is a natural male ingnue trying to pass himself off as a character actor. Rob Bartlett is both grumpy and twinkly as two different managerial types.

Only Ellen Harvey, as Mr. Biggleys seen-it-all-secretary, and Ms. Blanchard, who gives an original comic spin to her bombshell character, have some distinctive flair. Oh, yes, the recorded voice of the newscaster Anderson Cooper is heard as the narrator, exuding an appropriate deadpan wryness.

The dancing features a lot of the dervish twirls and 90-to-180-degree kicks that Mr. Ashford favored in recent London revivals of Evita and Guys and Dolls, as well as in Promises, Promises. (High kicking and twirling are evidently common to all times and places.) Loessers songs are wonderful, of course, top-of-the-line models of tuneful wit and economy. But they arent rendered here with the conviction that might make them ring new.

That makes Mr. Radcliffe the only reason to see the show, and contrary to what the title suggests, this young actor really, really tries. (He even does a somersault and lets himself be passed through the air for a football fantasy sequence.) His effortful performance is sure to stir maternal instincts among women of all ages (and probably some men too) and comradely protectiveness among his fans.

And who knows? perhaps with time this game, engaged performer will come up with a real character to play here. Meanwhile, when he leads the shows big finale, the satirical rouser Brotherhood of Man, you can be forgiven for thinking it might better be titled Brotherhood of Manikins.

HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS

WITHOUT REALLY TRYING

Music and lyrics by Frank Loesser; book by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock and Willie Gilbert, based on the book by Shepherd Mead; directed and choreographed by Rob Ashford; music direction and arrangements by David Chase; sets by Derek McLane; costumes by Catherine Zuber; lighting by Howell Binkley; sound by Jon Weston; hair and wig design by Tom Watson; orchestrations by Doug Besterman; music coordinator, Howard Joines; production stage manager, Michael J. Passaro; associate director, Stephen Sposito; associate choreographer, Christopher Bailey; production manager, Juniper Street Productions; general managers, Alan Wasser-Allan Williams, Mark Shacket; associate producers, Stage Ventures 2010 Limited Partnership; executive producer, Beth Williams. Presented by Broadway Across America, Craig Zadan, Neil Meron, Joseph Smith, Michael McCabe, Candy Spelling, Takonkiet Viravan/Scenario Thailand, Hilary A. Williams, Jen Namoff/Fakston Productions, Two Left Feet Productions/Power Arts, Hop Theatricals LLC/Paul Chau/Daniel Frishwasser/Michael Jackowitz and Michael Speyer-Bernie Abrams/Jacki Barlia Florin-Adam Blanshay/Arlene Scanlan/TBS Service. At the Al Hirschfeld Theater, 302 West 45th Street, Manhattan; (212) 239-6200; telecharge.com. Running time: 2 hours 40 minutes.

WITH: Daniel Radcliffe (J. Pierrepont Finch), John Larroquette (J. B. Biggley), Tammy Blanchard (Hedy La Rue), Christopher J. Hanke (Bud Frump), Rob Bartlett (Mr. Twimble/Wally Womper), Mary Faber (Smitty), Ellen Harvey (Miss Jones), Michael Park (Mr. Bratt), Rose Hemingway (Rosemary Pilkington) and Anderson Cooper (the Voice of the Narrator).

House Republicans Propose $4 Trillion in Cuts Over Decade

Source: all-breaking-news.com

Appearing on the television program Fox News Sunday, Representative Paul D. Ryan, the Wisconsin Republican who heads the budget panel, also said Republicans would call for strict caps on all government spending that would require cuts to take effect whenever Congress exceeds its limit.

We are going to put out a plan that gets our debt on downward trajectory and gets us to a point of giving our next generation a debt-free nation, Mr. Ryan said, even as he predicted that the politically charged initiatives he intends to lay out in the 2012 budget beginning Tuesday would give Democrats a political weapon to go against us. But they will have to lie and demagogue to make that a political weapon.

Mr. Ryans comments came as Republicans and Democrats remained divided over how to reach an agreement that would avert a government shutdown as early as Saturday, when a budget bill now financing the government is set to expire.

While Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York, the No. 3 Democrat in the Senate, said progress toward a resolution was being made, neither he nor other top lawmakers could guarantee that government agencies would be able to stay open after Friday.

Mr. Schumer said Democrats were urging Republicans to consider adding some automatic annual spending in agriculture, treasury and justice programs to the pot to reach a target of about $33 billion in cuts rather than insisting that all spending reductions come out of what is known in budget parlance as discretionary accounts.

If you just cut from domestic discretionary, youll have to cut things like helping students go to college, youll have to cut scientific research, including cancer research, Mr. Schumer said on the ABC program This Week. These things have created millions of jobs through the years.

Another potential source of savings being eyed by Democrats is $3 billion in unspent transportation funds. Republicans have resisted including such reductions as a central element of the package of spending cuts, calling them an accounting gimmick.

We want real spending cuts, Speaker John A. Boehner told reporters on Friday. We are dealing with the discretionary part of the budget.

Despite continued jockeying in public, some lawmakers suggested a shutdown could be avoided given that both parties have said they did not want government services to be interrupted.

I think well get together, Senator Lindsey Graham said on the CBS program Face the Nation.

Appearing on the same program, Senator Harry Reid, the Nevada Democrat and majority leader, seemed to draw a line against Republican attempts to cut programs like Planned Parenthood or education initiatives for young children.

Its a question of how we do it, Mr. Reid said about the cuts. We cant do it on Head Start. We cant do it at the program for little kids. We cant do it on homeless veterans.

While the fight over a plan to finance the government through Sept. 30 could have immediate consequences with a deadline looming just days away, the conflict over the emerging Republican budget proposal for next year suggested a continued clash over fundamental questions of how the federal government delivers services.

Recognizing the political risk of moving forward with significant changes in Medicare as well as Medicaid, the health care program for poor Americans, Mr. Ryan emphasized that spending on those programs would continue to rise under the Republican budget plan, just not as sharply as it would otherwise.

He also sought to clarify that any changes in Medicare, which would include requiring more affluent Americans to pay a larger share of their own Medicare costs, would not amount to a so-called voucher program an approach that has been heavily criticized by Democrats in the past.

In the interview on the Fox program, Mr. Ryan said his plan was more equivalent to Medicares prescription drug program and would allow Medicare patients to pick from a menu of insurance plans. The federal government would direct the subsidy to the plan, not the consumer.

It doesnt go to the person, into the marketplace, Mr. Ryan said. It goes to the plan. More for the poor, more for people who get sick, and we dont give as much money to people who are wealthy.

Americans who are now 55 or older would go into the current program to prevent a sudden change in their health insurance coverage, he said.

Democrats quickly took aim at Mr. Ryans proposals, saying Republicans were trying to shrink the deficit at the expense of people who need government aid rather than wealthy business interests allied with Republicans.

Paul Ryan made clear that the Republican budget will protect big oil companies subsidies over seniors health care, said Jesse Ferguson, a spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Its already becoming clear who will be the priority in the House Republican budget special interests, not middle class families.

The Ryan budget is not binding but serves as a manifesto and a set of instructions for the other committees in the House to follow in assembling legislation to implement the new policies. It would have to be reconciled with a budget in the Democratically controlled Senate, where a bipartisan group of lawmakers had been quietly working on its own plans for long-term reductions in the federal deficit and debt.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

At Mexico Morgue, Families of Missing Seek Clues

Source: all-breaking-news.com


They just kidnapped us in San Fernando, Mr. Romn, a 21-year-old student, wrote to a friend. He warned against calling, and added, If anything happens, just tell my parents, thanks, I love them.

On Wednesday, his father, Arturo Romn Medina, answering calls on a cellphone that stores that brief note, arrived at the morgue in this border city, hoping and fearing that he would find his sons. For two weeks now, the authorities have been bringing in bodies from mass graves around San Fernando, 145 corpses at last count, and with each new grave discovered, another crowd appears, seeking news of missing loved ones, clutching photographs, holding out their arms to give blood for a DNA sample.

They are looking for closure, but as their ad hoc gathering has grown into the hundreds, it has hardened a perception that government authorities have fought desperately to dispel: Parts of northern Mexico, including most of this state, Tamaulipas, have been lost to criminal gangs, and for quite some time.

Even after government promises of more security following the discovery of a mass grave holding the remains of 72 Central and South American migrants last summer, also in San Fernando, Tamaulipas remains a state that experts describe as ungoverned or simply failed.

Open war between the Gulf Cartel and its former enforcers, the Zetas, means that the roads here are still filled with gang lookouts on motorcycles, who openly call back to cartel leaders, residents say.

Gunmen believed to be tied to the Zetas assassinated the lead candidate for governor last year and later forced a mass exodus from a small town near the Texas border. Extortion payments have become more regular than taxes, security analysts say, while many of the authorities are either terrorized or bought off: 16 municipal police officers have been arrested so far in connection with kidnappings and killings.

It is one of the places where clearly state, federal and local authorities are not in control, said Eric Olson, a security expert at the Woodrow Wilson International Center. Its tragic, its unfortunate, but its a reality.

For the Mexican government, nothing is as sensitive as an American pointing out lost territory. When Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton likened Mexicos drug trafficking last year to an insurgency, where the narco-traffickers control certain parts of the country, Mexican lawmakers responded with fierce condemnation.

The tensions only worsened after Carlos Pascual, the American ambassador, questioned Mexicos crime-fighting abilities in diplomatic cables, quoting a former high-ranking Mexican official who expressed a real concern with losing certain regions of the country to cartels. Mexicos president, Felipe Caldern, was so infuriated by that cable and others that he insisted on pushing out Mr. Pascual, who resigned last month.

And yet, despite promises of help, the families and residents here say they have seen little progress in Tamaulipas. Instead, they have witnessed squabbling between top officials Tamaulipas is controlled by a rival to the presidents party and lackluster enforcement on the ground.

Mr. Romn, the father of two missing sons, complained that government checkpoints are always in the same place and easy for criminals to avoid. Alfonso Ortega, whose brother Martn disappeared a year ago on his way to Matamoros, described a galling lack of urgency.

The government is not moving, Mr. Ortega said. Its not doing anything.

The authorities believe the Zetas are behind the murders in San Fernando, though they have only theories about the motives: kidnappings for ransom, perhaps, or attempts at forced recruitment.

Regardless, experts say the trouble in Tamaulipas stems partly from the gangs history. Its leaders started out as enforcers, so when they split with their former patrons in the Gulf Cartel a few years ago, the Zetas could not rely on historic ties with drug suppliers or traffickers. To thrive and expand, they branched out to other crimes, including extortion, migrant smuggling and the siphoning of oil and gas from pipelines in the area.

Many of the gangs early leaders served in the Mexican military, and they have used their experience to create a level of intimidation that outmatches most rivals. No local newspaper dares to print the photos the government has issued for the 17 suspects in the latest San Fernando killings.

Mr. Romn, a burly man in rubber sandals who has driven back and forth countless times from his home in Mexico City to prod the authorities into action, is just one of many here with once-hidden tales of fear, a sullen bureaucracy and overwhelmed investigators.

He said that all the official attention now focused on identifying the dead here has made his sons loss even more painful. They dont help you look for your sons when they are alive, he said.

Indeed, the morgue and the prosecutors office next door are now the areas main hubs of activity. This week, there were dozens of people shifting uncomfortably on chairs in tiled hallways, their sadness subdued as they waited to give statements.

Next door, bodies came and went. At one point, a refrigerated truck with dozens of corpses wrapped in black plastic left for Mexico City, where additional investigators would continue the process.

Those waiting here looked exhausted beyond grief or anger. I just ask God to bring him back, even if hes dead, said Ana Mara Lpez, whose husband disappeared in the border city of Reynosa on March 11.

Nicolasa Carvajal Lpez said she had come from Dallas, where she lives, because she feared the worst for her brother Bolvar Santamara Lpez. He boarded a bus in his home state, Guerrero, on March 29 along with five friends bound for Reynosa, where they planned to cross into Texas.

The men promised to call when they arrived at the border. When they did not, Mr. Santamaras wife and the other relatives forced the news out of the bus company: The bus had been stopped by gunmen in San Fernando and all the men and boys had been forced off.

We were pooling our money, said Ms. Carvajal, covering her face with her hand as she explained that all 10 of his siblings in the United States had paid for Mr. Santamaras trip. He was coming to make a living.

She pointed to several photos of her missing brother. He was 45, strong, with a sandy-colored mustache. I still have hope that he will call me and say, Hey there, Sis, here I am, she said.

The authorities have told the families to be patient, that many people are missing. And once again, they have pledged to make the area safe.

On Tuesday, Jos Francisco Blake Mora, Mexicos interior minister, promised to secure all the roads around San Fernando and to prosecute the killers.

But few of those who are arrested in Mexico are ever convicted. And Msgr. Faustino Armendriz, the bishop of Matamoros, doubted that the government was doing enough. By their fruits, you shall know what is being done, he responded with biblical flourish. Then, he ticked off the towns of his diocese. When you pass through, he said, there is a great sense of vulnerability.

He added that drug gangs had sown fear into the people of his diocese for more than a year. Now, he prays for change and demands that the government keep its promises.

We have to hope that this time they act on all their declarations, he said, referring to the state and federal governments. We have to demand that there are conditions to live in security.

Friday, April 15, 2011

On My Heart ~ A re-post


I originally wrote this post on Saturday, November 8, 2008 and I somehow stumbled upon it last night. Oh these words couldn't have come back to me at a better time! With the added resposibilities of having a new baby, and the lack of sleep, I've had to work on this extra hard lately with my older kids. I'm sure most mamas can relate! It's good for me to have a little reminder from time to time....

On my heart....



"Yes, I am in earnest. I want to see little children adorning every home as flowers adorn every meadow and every wayside. I want to see them welcomed to the homes they enter, to see their parents grow less and less selfish and more and more loving because they have come. I want to see God's precious gifts accepted, not frowned upon and refused."



This is just one little paragraph from one of my favorite books "Stepping Heavenward" by Mrs. Elizabeth Prentiss. This one paragraph has had me reflecting for days. Reflecting on my own life as the mother of five "flowers". I am sure, at first glance, that nobody would ever accuse me of not living this way....but when I look into my own heart I am convicted of not opening my heart completely. There are days when I let circumstances control my attitude toward my children. Seeing this, others would probably say "Well everybody has bad days". But is that good enough? Is it good enough to live that way and write the bad days off as just normal? Is normal what we are called to be? I want to be able to believe in these beautiful words when nobody has their shoes on and church starts in 30 minutes, or when I have not had a break in days and I just want to take a bath by myself. I want my children to be able to see a loving attitude when we are in those situations, not just when everything is going my way, because isn't that ugly attitude making them feel "frowned upon and refused"? And if I am not growing "more and more loving" I am probably not growing "less and less selfish"either. I know this will be a life-long project, I will not be able to conquer this next week, but it will be something to strive for and to be aware of on this journey Heavenward.



The book "Stepping Heavenward" is Elizabeth Prentiss' journal that she started when she turned 16 on January 15, 1831. She wrote of her walk with God and and her struggles through to motherhood. It is a beautiful testimony to her life of Godly womanhood. I love this book so much that I have finally purchased it in hard back which leaves me with an extra. I would love to give my extra copy to another woman who could learn from her beautiful walk with God. If you would like it just let me know and I will pass it on.



Edited to add: I have been told that that this story isn't true, but loosely based on the author's aunt. Just thought I would let you know too. :) I think I've probably read or listened to this book at least four more times since this post. I've also discovered it free to read HERE online, and free to listen to HERE online.

Judge: Lockout Ruling to Take 'Couple of Weeks'

Source: all-breaking-news.com

U.S. District Court Judge Susan Richard Nelson, however, urged both sides to get back to the bargaining table.

Nelson heard arguments from lawyers for the players and NFL owners Wednesday in St. Paul.

The players say their careers are being irreparably harmed by the lockout. The owners say Nelson doesn't have the jurisdiction to issue an injunction while their is a complaint before the National Labor Relations Board.

Nelson said she'd be happy to help facilitate a new bargaining session.

The lockout was imposed by owners three weeks ago after negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement broke off.

Named plaintiffs Mike Vrabel, Ben Leber, Vincent Jackson, Brian Robison and Von Miller were joined in court by veterans Tony Richardson and Charlie Batch and Hall of Famer Carl Eller. Tom Brady, Peyton Manning and Drew Brees, the three highest profile plaintiffs, did not attend.

The court appearance was the first round between the NFL and its locked-out players in their legal fight over the future of the $9 billion business including the 2011 season.

When Nelson makes her decision, she could side with the players and grant the injunction, putting pro football back in business. Or she could side with the owners and either deny the injunction or wait to decide until the NLRB rules on the league's contention that decertification was an improper bargaining ploy.

The winner would have leverage whenever talks resume on a new CBA. However, whatever Nelson decides likely will be appealed.

The players say the lockout is causing "irreparable harm" to their careers. The injunction request accompanies the antitrust lawsuit filed against the league after labor talks broke down on March 11.

"All of these players are being affected every day by being locked out," James Quinn, a lawyer for the players, argued Wednesday.

The owners say the court does not have jurisdiction to issue the injunction while the National Labor Relations Board is considering an unfair labor complaint. They characterize the players' decision to decertify the union "a sham" that compromised the collective bargaining process.

The league says it has the right to keep players from working and says the court must wait until the NLRB rules on its claim that the players didn't negotiate in good faith.

David Boies, an attorney for the NFL, argued that the players are still acting like a union, saying the NFLPA is funding the litigation and has set up other services for the players as if it were still a fully formed labor entity.

"They're financing this lawsuit," Boies said. "They're saying, 'We're no longer a collective bargaining agent, but we're going to continue to do all these things.'"

Quinn dismissed the accusation, pointing to a vote that every player took to approve decertification.

"It's not some kind of tactic. It's the law," Quinn said. "It's what we're allowed to do."

Nelson said Wednesday that decertification is fair because the union gives up certain rights as well, including the right to strike.

The fight is complicated and perhaps uninteresting to the average football fan when the scheduled start of the season is still five months away. But the fate of everyone's favorite team hangs in the balance.

"Even though football is enjoying this unprecedented popularity ... nothing is invulnerable," said David Allen Larson, a professor of labor and employment law at Hamline University School of Law in St. Paul, Minn.

It's the first work stoppage in the NFL since the 1987 strike and the first in any major U.S sports league since the NHL's lockout-lost 2004-05 season. The players balked at more financial concessions when the owners wouldn't open their books, and the owners insist the decertification of the union is a sham cooked up only to apply leverage in the fight.

Now, they don't even agree on which laws apply to the case, with the owners arguing for labor law and the players preferring antitrust rules.

Nelson pressed Boies for much of the morning, asking if the antitrust exemption the league currently enjoys applies to a lockout after the union has decertified.

"The very fact that the union planned to do this affects what they do in the collective bargaining process," Boies said.

___

AP Sports Writer Dave Campbell and Associated Press Writer Amy Forliti contributed to this report.

Dolls of Today

The progress of how dolls are actually starting to look like the diverse women of today is amazing.  We no longer have to go to the store and buy dolls that have features and hair that look nothing like us. We can now buy dolls for our young girls that actually represent us in our hair, features and cultural flavor.  I love that this is happening during our life time, and I hope to see more growth and progress.

See see more ethnically rich dolls, check Naturally Beautiful Hair album on Facebook.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Padrons Spice It Up!


 I awoke to this helicopter right outside of my bedroom window this past Sunday morning. Waking up to the very loud propeller, literally right outside of our window was not quiet like gently opening your eyes to the sweet sound of little birds chirping outside.  I jumped up onto the bed, (and stepped on Brian's arm in the process) to look outside.  All I could see at that moment was a crowd of people on the street looking up (not very settling). A few minutes of twisting my neck and smashing my face against the window later, the helicopter moved into view... and I could finally see what was actually happening.  A construction team decided that Sunday morning was the perfect time to drop a helicopter into the middle of our residential airspace, so that they could move a few large air conditioning units from one building to another.  Although a simple notice under my door mentioning the expected disturbance would have been appreciated, I was just glad that it was not a rescue expedition of some sort.  I really do not have pajamas that I would want the city of Cleveland to see me in. 
So with that sudden awakening, I moved into my office/living room to catch up on reading some of my favorite blogs.  There sure are a lot of bloggers out there... Everybody talking about something interesting (or not).  Reading through different sites, I kept getting enticed to click on their favorite blog links.  Before I knew it, not knowing how, or why, an hour later I ended up on random blogger site #45 reading about some girl's confessions of her cohabitational life.  Who could ever miss the Sunday paper, when you have the Internet? It is a never ending Sunday paper.    
Ok so, back to what is important. Cooking!  Nothing like some spicy fresh Padron peppers to add a little heat to our Cleveland overcast skies .


While we were out, we picked up these, at the local produce market. 


These are a bit larger than the Padron peppers that I have had many times before, but just as bright and beautiful. 


I washed them and tossed them in olive oil, a small handful of smashed garlic and salt and pepper.


I put them on a sheet pan and popped them under the broiler, on high, for about 5 minutes.  


When they were done, I spritzed them with a squirt of Meyer lemon juice, and ate them warm. 


Unfortunately, I could live off of these, so they do not last very long with me around. But be warned.  They may not look it, but they can be spicy! This batch was especially spicy, which I love, but they left Brian running for water a few times...and not to mention some stomach troubles the next morning.  I told him to just keep practicing.

Around the farm...













We have made some new discoveries around the farm this week! First we discovered that one of our chickens laid a giant egg. Here it is next to our normal eggs.










As a homeschooling mama I saw this as a good and exciting "science project". We got out the measuring tape and compared the huge egg to our normal ones. Our big egg was about 1" bigger than the others in length and width. Then we researched (AKA googled) what this could mean, and found some pretty amazing things! Who knew that THIS could happen? Wild! THIS was a pretty fun read too if you like that sort of thing.









We couldn't wait to see what was in our egg! And as you can see, it was a nice big double yolker. :)










When all of the research was done Molly cooked it up and they ate it. They said that it tasted extra good. They may be a little prideful when it comes to their chicken's eggs. So cute.








The next discovery was made by Maddie and I on our way up the driveway today. It was a sweet little rabbit! We often see rabbits hopping up our driveway, but this one was teeny! And you know how we are about babies (of any kind) around here. We took a video so that Molly and Tim could see and Maddie gave it the most adorable name ever. :)





What new discoveries have you made this week? xo, Sam


Eu Sou Rica (Pobreza Pega) - DJ Rafael Lelis Feat. VJ José Del Duca

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Your Money: Bargains on the First 4 Semesters

Source: all-breaking-news.com

He ended up graduating in 1981 from the University of Puget Sound, a private college in Tacoma, Wash. Nobody ever asked where I went the first two years, and I dont think anybody cares, he said. And I bet I saved myself $30,000.

When it came time for his son Bret to start college, Bret decided to take the same path, choosing smaller classes, a more flexible schedule and a price that was a fraction of what he might have paid in Washingtons state university system.

He is hardly the only one. A few weeks ago, in a Your Money special section of the newspaper, I wrote about Mino Caulton, a high school senior in Shutesbury, Mass., who was weighing the virtues of a community college versus a more prestigious private university that would have required him to take out lots of student loans.

Advice for Mr. Caulton poured in on our Bucks blog, and it became clear that there were few centralized resources for families who had made a strategic financial decision to attend community college first as a cost-saving measure.

Merely deciding to attend community college does not guarantee that you will save money. If the goal is to earn a bachelors degree in four years, anything that goes wrong along the way, like taking the wrong classes or getting a bad grade in a required class, means extra semesters and extra expenses.

So what follows are a list of six of the most important things you need to think about if youre trying to save money in this way. Please add your tips to our discussion on Bucks over the weekend.

A CULTURE OF TRANSFERRING First, pick the right community college.

The first thing you have to assess is whether or not the community college has a transfer-going culture, said Stephen Handel, who is executive director of community college initiatives for the College Board and began his undergraduate education at one himself.

Call or visit the advising office of community colleges youre considering and ask what percentage of students who complete an associates degree transfer to a four-year university. Also, which universities do they end up going to and in what numbers?

Then, call the admissions staff at your target transfer university and ask them how many transfer students they take each year. Which community colleges send them the most students? What tends to get in the way of them gaining admission and then succeeding?

Pretty quickly, youll start hearing horror stories of students who took the wrong classes at community college and couldnt get into a four-year university or ended up having to spend three or more years at the university making up credits.

Thankfully, a number of state universities and community colleges have made it easier to figure out all the rules ahead of time. The American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers has put together a state-by-state guide on its Web site, at bit.ly/h8ebPk.

Keep two crucial questions in mind here. Which credits will count toward the general education or distribution requirements at your four-year college or university? And if you have a target major, which community college classes could you take that would count toward that as well?

AN EARLY START Budget cuts are posing enormous challenges for higher education systems just as more people are trying to return to retrain and retool.

The resulting enrollment bottleneck has hit many community colleges especially hard. So if youre going to get into the classes you need and get out in two years or less, you need to be first in line come registration time. Dont wait until a few weeks ahead to sign up.

Peter Reagan, a 19-year-old student at Santa Monica College, a community college in Santa Monica, Calif., hopes to be eligible for enrolling in a University of California campus this fall after just over a year at Santa Monica.

But it wasnt easy to pile up the credits he needed. Many of the classes he had hoped to take were closed to online enrollment by the time he logged on.

So he scrambled. During the first two weeks of classes, I was going to different ones all day every day trying to add the ones I needed, taking whatever I could get, he said.

Id heard that inevitably, even if you dont get in on the first day, the worst-case scenario is that you keep showing up and hope that somebody drops the class, he said. That happens in every class. But I didnt have to do that. I got rejected from a lot of classes, but I also got into enough of the ones that I needed.

This approach requires flexibility, which will complicate matters for people who also need to work. Try to find a job ahead of time that has at least a little bit of flexibility.

SPECIALIZED ADVICE Most community colleges will have at least one adviser who knows how to work the transfer system. Your task is to hunt down those people before you enroll and pick your classes.

To transfer, you have to complete 60 transferable units, which is quite doable if you are coming to me in April of your senior year in high school, said Dan Nannini, the transfer center faculty leader at Santa Monica College, describing the path that most aspiring transfer students take. If you do what I tell you, you will transfer. Its not a mystery here in California.

And how often should you visit someone like him once you enroll? My line is that were like dentists, he said. You should see us twice a year.

THE HONORS ADVANTAGE James Fishbein, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, has seen plenty of transfer students come through his office. One thing he wonders is whether theyve surrounded themselves with peers who pushed them academically in the two years before he sees them.

At every university, there are at least some people who want to get into law or medical or business school, he said. They may know a lot of stuff that you dont.

These people are at community colleges, too, but youre more likely to find them in greater numbers in an honors program, which many community colleges maintain. Be sure to ask about this when you are applying.

A SMOOTH LANDING Mr. Fishbein said that in his experience the vast majority of students who transferred from community colleges stumbled at first. One slip-up, such as getting a low grade in a science class that is a prerequisite for other classes in your major, can make a mess of your financial plan.

Depending on the course schedule, there may be workarounds, but every one costs money say, if you need to take another semester or enroll in summer school, he said.

Jonathan Chong, 21, who is in his first year at the University of California, Los Angeles after transferring from community college, acknowledges the challenge. One thing it didnt prepare me for was the speed, he said. Thats where Ive had to step up my game. Mr. Chong has formed study groups with some fellow community college alumni to help keep up.

THE BENEFITS If community college isnt where you saw yourself beginning your quest for higher education, stop feeling sorry for yourself.

Some of our challenge is demystifying what community college is, said Irma Medina, senior coordinator of a program at Holyoke Community College in Holyoke, Mass., that has sent over 150 graduates to colleges like Mount Holyoke and Smith in recent years. This isnt 13th grade. We have great faculty here that even taught at Harvard. So you made the right choice by being here.

You might even get to meet those faculty, too. Part of the reason Bret Johnston, 21, chose community college was that it offered him more flexibility to take time off each year to pursue rock-climbing while hes still young. (His father, Rich, the University of Puget Sound graduate, owns Vertical World, a chain of climbing gyms, and Bret works there to make money.)

But when hes in class at Shoreline Community College in Washington, hes been struck by how different his experience has been from those of his peers. Ive had so many friends who have taken a 500-person English 101 lecture, and for a lot of money, he said. I took that same class in a 25-person room and got a lot out of it.

Budget Impasse Increasing Risk of U.S. Shutdown

Source: all-breaking-news.com

Senior Democratic officials involved in high-level efforts to bring House Republicans, Senate Democrats and the White House to a budget agreement said that while some progress had been made toward an accord on an overall level of spending cuts, the parties remained divided on the final figure and had to resolve the fate of ideologically charged policy provisions demanded by House conservatives.

Some senior Republicans, after relying on House Democrats to help pass the most recent short-term measure, are also uneasy about having to team up with Democrats again to pass any compromise that dips too far below the $61 billion in spending reductions endorsed by the House for the current fiscal year. Senate Democrats want to wring some of the savings out of mandatory spending programs like Medicare, an approach Republicans are resisting.

Aides said that even if myriad outstanding issues were resolved and an agreement struck late next week after lawmakers returned, it would be a challenge to write the legislation and move it through Congress before the current financing bill expires on April 8.

A deal is still possible, but it would take a real breakthrough, said one senior official, who like others knowledgeable about the confidential budget negotiations would discuss them only without being publicly identified.

The tension surrounding the talks and the potential for a shutdown boiled into public view Friday evening as House Republican leaders issued a series of harsh statements accusing Democrats of failing to make a serious offer on spending cuts. Representative Eric Cantor, a Virginia Republican and the House majority leader, labeled as completely far-fetched a claim by Charles E. Schumer of New York, the No. 3 Senate Democrat, that negotiators were making progress.

Speaker John A. Boehner joined in with a statement that accused Democrats of lacking a fiscal plan. If Democrats dont have a plan, do they intend to shut down the government because they cant agree among themselves? he asked.

Democrats fired back, suggesting that Republicans were backtracking under pressure from House conservatives allied with the Tea Party who were opposed to any compromise with Democrats in the budget debate.

After days of positive negotiations, with significant flexibility shown by the speaker, the House Republican leadership is back to agonizing over whether to give in to right-wing demands that they abandon any compromise on their extreme cuts, Mr. Schumer said. Instead of lashing out at Democrats in a knee-jerk way, we hope House Republicans will finally stand up to the Tea Party and resume the negotiations that had seemed so full of promise.

Congressional officials said the budget talks were set back significantly in a meeting Tuesday when the participants feuded over what legislation should serve as the benchmark for the talks the House-passed spending measure with $61 billion in cuts for this year or an interim budget bill approved by Congress in early March that maintained financing for most programs at their current levels.

Democrats, who believed they had an agreement to work off the stopgap plan, felt blindsided, officials said. Jacob J. Lew, the White House budget director and chief Democratic negotiator, angrily resisted the Republican push to use the House measure as the starting point. The meeting abruptly broke up, with talks resuming haltingly since then.

Ken Baer, a spokesman for Mr. Lew, said he would not discuss details of meetings that were agreed by all to be confidential. But there are ongoing discussions at many levels. He did say that Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had consulted Thursday with both Mr. Boehner and Senator Harry Reid, the majority leader.

The heated meeting on Tuesday was the first with participation by representatives of the House Appropriations Committee, which drafted the House plan and saw that bill as providing the most legitimate framework for the budget talks. But Democrats argue that using the House measure, which the president has promised to veto, puts them at a disadvantage.

Failure to reach agreement without another stopgap measure could cause a number of federal operations to be halted after April 8. Both Senate and House officials said they believed it would be difficult to advance another short-term budget bill after numerous lawmakers said the temporary measure now in place would be the last one they would support before considering a plan to finance the government through Sept. 30.

The fight over spending levels for the current fiscal year through Sept. 30 will be followed by two others that could be even more contentious. Congress will be asked this spring to increase the federal debt limit, a measure that many conservatives say they will oppose unless President Obama is willing to accede to a package of deep spending cuts. The two parties will also be at odds over a budget for next year, with House Republicans intending to introduce into that fight proposals to rein in the long-term costs of entitlement programs like Medicare and Medicaid.

The budget showdown between Democrats and the new House Republican majority is caught up in strong political currents since House conservatives are pushing for steep spending cuts in the current fiscal year and pressing the leadership to not give much ground.

But negotiations had been continuing among representatives of the White House, Mr. Boehner and Mr. Reid, with Democrats proposing spending reductions that they said would total more than $20 billion, while Republicans expressed a willingness to give some ground on their $61 billion figure.

Were getting closer on the number, Mr. Schumer said in an interview on MSNBC Friday morning.

Officials said an agreement on spending reductions in the vicinity of $30 billion to $40 billion had seemed possible before Tuesdays abbreviated negotiating session, but lawmakers and their aides seemed uncertain Friday about where the talks would head, given the tough partisan statements and persistent disputes over the makeup of any budget deal.

In another development that could influence the debate, Tea Party groups are planning to rally outside the Capitol on Thursday to encourage Republicans to hold firm on their budget cuts.