Tuesday, April 9, 2013

The Pocahontas Files: Where to Eat (and Drink) in Lincoln, UK

Last week was my birthday, so of course I had to celebrate by eating out (as though I ever need an excuse). I happened to be in Lincoln at the time, where I had joined Sasha at the 2013 Easter ASAB conference. On the day of my arrival, my taxi driver had helpfully suggested a couple of his favorite Italian restaurants (including Gino's and The Bronze Pig), but when I got online to look up contact details, I discovered another local Italian eatery that was ranked even higher on TripAdvisor: Tiamo Pizza.


Tiamo is not actually in Lincoln proper, but is a short 3 miles away (from our hotel, at least) in the suburb of North Hykeham. The menu, which I was able to browse beforehand online, offered a good mixture of pasta, pizza, and calzones--the last of which I have a particular weakness for. I made us reservations, but it turns out these weren't necessary; there were never more than 4 tables occupied at any given time, though the restaurant was small and it was a Thursday night, and I imagine that the place gets more crowded during the weekends.

When we first pulled up in our taxi, I was a bit surprised to discover that Tiamo is located in a small strip mall--the kind of place you are more likely to find in the US than in the UK. We were greeted enthusiastically by our waiter, who single-handedly served everyone in the restaurant while simultaneously acting as the host. It was a pretty impressive performance, really, though my admiration was stifled slightly by the fact that he was a bit of an oddball--simultaneously spacey and a little menacing, making unusual jokes and audibly singing along with the music piped over the loudspeakers. But, he didn't drop any of our food en route to our table, and what more can you really ask for?

As per usual when eating in an Italian restaurant, I started with an insalata Caprese. Despite the season, Tiamo had managed to find a beautiful and surprisingly tasty tomato--arguably the lynchpin of the entire salad.


Sasha ordered his favorite Italian appetizer, the minestrone soup. When we told the waiter we'd like some Parmesan cheese, we were surprised when he brought over a jar of the pre-grated stuff. I'm quite happy using that in my own home, but I would expect any authentic Italian restaurant to grate it fresh at the table. Maybe I'm just being a food snob.
For my main course, I ordered a delicious calzone con verdura, and was permitted to swap the onions and peppers (yuck!) for extra olives and corn; also included were mushrooms, mozzarella, and a tomato sauce. I'm used to having calzones with red sauce on the side, but this one included the sauce as part of the stuffing. This actually worked very well, since it kept the entire thing soft and moist. I was also impressed by the dough, which was soft and chewy and everything you want in a homemade dough. Overall, it was tasty and satisfying and the only reason I didn't finish the whole thing was that I wanted to save room for dessert.
I felt a bit guilty about how Sasha's meal turned out--not because it was bad, but because he wasn't ultimately able to order either his first or second choices. Here I'd picked an Italian restaurant because Italian menus usually cater to Sasha's culinary preferences, and he was repeatedly stymied by the inclusion of odd/unexpected ingredients; particularly unfortunate was the fact that the seafood risotto included both squid and octopus. In the end, he settled on the penne alla arrabiata, which was good but did require him to extract several large chunks of peppers as he ate.
I'm not usually much of a dessert eater, but I figured I should indulge since it was my birthday--just as a matter of principle. I ordered the very tasty crumble di mele, the fruity portion of which involved both apple and blackberry, and which was topped with vanilla ice cream. It was dense and rich and indulgent, and I really enjoyed it. If I were to put my foodie hat on, I'd probably have to tell you that the crumble-to-fruit ratio was too high; however, since the crumble was well made, I don't really think it's worth complaining about.
Sasha ordered the last remaining piece of homemade cheesecake, which had a pretty dramatic presentation. The thing I found most notable about this dish was that the strawberries were sliced horizontally, rather than vertically; not only have I never seen this done before, but I've also never even thought of doing it myself. I guess I'm easily impressed, but thumbs up to Tiamo for showing me something I've never seen before.

Our overall experience at Tiamo Pizza was quite solid, and my calzone was pretty spectacular. That said, I'm still a little surprised, that Tiamo is ranked all the way up at #7 on TripAdvisor's list of best Lincoln restaurants; I would expect a bit more variety/finesse from a restaurant ranked so highly by visitors. However, our meal was by no means bad, and it's hard to draw many conclusions without trying the other restaurants on the list or returning to Tiamo to see how consistent they are in their service and food.

---

The following day, I had a very late lunch/tea break at Pimento, one of umpteen different cafes in Lincoln's historic district. Many UK cafes stop serving food around mid-afternoon, and one of the reasons I chose Pimento was that it did not appear to have any such restrictions.

It's an unusual place in that it is one of three disparate shops joined together under one roof; it sits both behind and above shoe and fashion boutiques through which you must walk in order to reach the dining area. Both shops have quite nice items, so this is by no means a chore.

The menu at Pimento was interesting for two reasons. First, it had an extensive selection of teas--some the usual varieties that you'd expect in any British tea room, and others more novel. All of the blends are sourced from Imperial Teas, a lovely shop just down the road. Second, in addition to having all the tea accompaniments and light lunch dishes that you can find in nearly all cafes around the UK, Pimento also offered several intriguing vegetarian options on its specials board. During my visit, for example, diners could order a vegetarian chili and a lentil soup, among other things.


Because I wasn't sure what we'd be doing for dinner, I decided to have something light but comforting--a good old jacket potato. In the US, baked potatoes are primarily thought of as a side dish accompanying a meat (usually steak); I love how easy it is to make an entire meal of one here in Britain.

Despite all the tea options on offer, I again chose the boring route and asked for a pot of plain old afternoon tea--but only because I knew that I was going to head down to Imperial Tea after lunch and purchase some more exciting flavors to take back home with me.

?

If Berkeley's Far Leaves Tea is the tea-drinking shop I wish was in my town, then Lincoln's Imperial Teas is the tea-supplies shop I wish I could routinely visit (and, thanks to the power of the Internet, I can--though doing it online is not the same as doing it in person!).

When you walk in, you are surrounded by row upon row of tea canisters, filled with one interesting and unusual blend after another--green teas, black teas, white teas, fruity teas, smoky teas, woody teas...anything the heart desires. The store also has an incredible selection of tea drinking materials, including tea candles, tea pots, tea cups, tea strainers, and so on. Obviously, I could spend a fortune in this place.

Luckily, I was able to constrain myself to purchasing only 2 bags of tea. Neither of these was the incredibly intriguing "world's rarest tea" (Jun Shan Golden Needles), which costs a whopping ?30 per 100 g (for context, the Earl Grey blend I purchased was only ?5.50 for the same weight). I think we all know that one day my curiosity is going to get the better of me and force me to shell out ?30 just to see what's so special about the Golden Needles. Maybe for next year's birthday celebration.

---

After I left the tea shop, I strolled down Steep Hill (yes, that's actually what it's called) and into town, winding up in the midst of Friday afternoon shoppers frantically finishing their errands before the end of the business day. In my short walk, I passed dozens of pubs, cafes, restaurants, and carry-outs, highlighting just how many options are available to diners in Lincoln. During our brief stay in the city, Sasha and I barely even began to sample all that Lincoln has to offer; maybe we'll return one day to check a few more establishments off our list.
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Source: http://thepocahontasfiles.blogspot.com/2013/04/where-to-eat-and-drink-in-lincoln-uk.html

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Top White House aide: GOP must cooperate on budget

(AP) ? The White House on Sunday warned Republicans that a "my way or the highway" approach would spell the GOP's defeat in upcoming budget negotiations and told its Democratic allies that they, too, will have to bend on President Barack Obama's delayed spending plan set to be released this week.

White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said the White House was willing to work with rank-and-file Republicans to come up with an outline that both jump-starts the economy and reduces the nation's red ink. Yet Pfeiffer also told the GOP that stubbornness among their party's leadership would only yield public embarrassment akin to the one the GOP faced last year when voters rejected Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney's economic proposals and gave Obama a second term.

"Right now, the approach of many Republicans ? particularly the leadership in the House ? is my way or the highway. Their view is the only acceptable plan is to try to cut away prosperity, turn Medicare into a voucher program and essentially enact the Romney economic plan," Pfeiffer said. "The American people rejected that and Republicans shouldn't be doubling down on it."

But he also warned Democrats who are wary of some of the president's cuts that they will have to sacrifice.

"Look, this is compromise," Pfeiffer said. "And compromise means there are going to be some folks on both sides who are not happy."

Obama is set to formally release his budget outline Wednesday morning. Its delay from February, then to March and now to April has left lawmakers in the Republican-led House and Democratic-controlled Senate to write their own budget proposals and move ahead without a concrete plan from Obama's economic team.

Even on the eve of its release, the president's budget was seen more as a starting point for negotiations than a final proposal.

"The president is showing a little bit of leg here, this is somewhat encouraging," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, noting the Obama proposal as a whole "isn't going to make it."

"We're beginning to set the stage for the grand bargain," the South Carolina Republican added in an interview with NBC's "Meet the Press."

Such a large-scale deal has proved elusive for Obama ? first with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and now with Senate Republicans. Time and again, the White House has tried to negotiate an overarching compromise that brings down spending while protecting social safety nets for those who need them most. Each time, talks have fallen apart amid revolt among the strongest partisans in Democrats' and Republicans' caucuses.

Yet Obama is again working to find a deal, his top advisers said.

On Wednesday night, the president is scheduled to meet with Republican senators for dinner.

"What we're looking for is what the president calls a caucus of common sense, folks who are willing to compromise and who understand that in divided government, both sides aren't going to get everything they want," Pfeiffer said told "Fox News Sunday."

In a separate interview, Pfeiffer told ABC's "This Week" that the White House sees an opening to work with rank-and-file lawmakers on a deal, perhaps bypassing the party's leadership.

"Is it going to be easy? Absolutely not. But there is a possibility," Pfeiffer said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-07-US-Budget/id-8dacbcec48c44cdcb8b4d288f97926d0

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Jack Hoffman: Nebraska Let 7-Year-Old Cancer Patient Score ...

Seven-year-old Jack Hoffman befriended Rex Burkhead during his battle with brain cancer. On Saturday, Nebraska brought him on the field to run for a touchdown wearing Burkhead?s No. 22 during their Spring Game. Sports can be awful, but they can also bring moments like this.

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Source: http://www.thebiglead.com/index.php/2013/04/07/jack-hoffman-nebraska-let-7-year-old-cancer-patient-score-touchdown-in-spring-game/

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Peter 'Drunklage' steals the show on 'SNL'

NBC

Peter Dinklage and Bobby Moynihan on Weekend Update.

By Anna Chan, TODAY

Cheers! "Game of Thrones" star Peter Dinklage made an appearance on "Saturday Night Live's" Weekend Update to chat taxes alongside Drunk Uncle (played by Bobby Moynihan) and Seth Meyers.

Drunk Uncle introduced his brother-in-law, Peter "Drunklage," about halfway through the segment when he admitted to watching the hit HBO drama and poked fun at the show, saying, "So I'm not King Joffrey, OK?! ... 'I'm a little jerk king!' Pfft. That's not me."

That's when "Drunklage" boozily rolled onto the set. After mumbling about 99 tumblers of scotch in his mouth and today's kids not wearing garters, the man behind Tyrion Lannister slurred, "You know what's in my tumbler? REGRET." He then went on to talk taxes and let fly a joke that left the audience "oooooh-ing": "I wish the IRS stood for Immigration Return Services." Check it out:

In other guest appearances, former NBA star Dennis Rodman poked a little fun at his friendship with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in the show's cold open.

As Moynihan's supreme leader finished talking about how he nailed his NCAA brackets, the athlete came out to give his pal a fist bump. When asked if he had anything to add, Rodman slightly botched the show's famous intro and yelled, "Live in New York, it's 'Saturday Night'!" The line is "Live from New York, it's 'Saturday Night'!"

Actress Melissa McCarthy hosted the show once again, and this time took on the recent scandal surrounding Rutgers coach Mike Rice, a ham-cooking contest, "The Voice" and wearing high heels.

Vince Vaughn is set to host next week.?

Which was your favorite skit this week? Tell us on our Facebook page!

Related content:

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/04/07/17641519-peter-drunklage-steals-the-show-on-saturday-night-live?lite

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Sen. Bill Nelson announces NASA's plan to capture asteroid

NASA will use a robotic spaceship to capture an asteroid and bring it closer to the moon. Astronauts will then explore the asteroid in the hopes of developing technology to nudge dangerous asteroids away from Earth.

By Seth Borenstein,?AP Science Writer / April 6, 2013

The Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 crew module is seen in the Operations and Checkout building during a media tour at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. in January. Senate Science and Space subcommittee Chairman Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla. says President Barack Obama and NASA are planning for a robotic spaceship to lasso a small asteroid and park it near the moon.

John Raoux/AP

Enlarge

The US space agency is planning for a robotic spaceship to capture a small asteroid and park it near the moon for astronauts to explore, a top senator disclosed Friday.

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The plan would speed up by four years the existing mission to land astronauts on an asteroid by bringing the space rock closer to Earth, Sen. Bill Nelson said.

The robotic ship would capture the 500-ton, 25-foot (450 metric-ton, 7.6-meter) asteroid in 2019. Then using an Orion space capsule, now being developed, a crew of about four astronauts would nuzzle up next to the rock in 2021 for spacewalking exploration, according to a government document obtained by The Associated Press.

Nelson said this would help?NASA?develop the capability to nudge away a dangerous asteroid if one headed to Earth in the future. It also would be training for a future mission to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s, he said.

Nelson, chairman of the Senate science and space subcommittee, said President Barack Obama is putting $100 million in planning money for the accelerated asteroid mission in the 2014 budget that comes out next week. The money would be used to find the right small asteroid.

"It really is a clever concept," Nelson said in a news conference in Florida, the state where?NASA?launches take place. "Go find your ideal candidate for an asteroid. Go get it robotically and bring it back."

While there are thousands of asteroids that size out there, finding the right one that comes by Earth at just the right time to be captured will not be easy, said Donald Yeomans, who heads?NASA's?Near Earth Object program that monitors close-by asteroids. He said once a suitable rock is found, it would be captured with the space equivalent of "a baggie with a drawstring. You bag it. You attach the solar propulsion module to de-spin it and bring it back to where you want it."

Yeomans said an asteroid of that size is no threat to Earth because it would burn up should it inadvertently enter Earth's atmosphere. The mission as Nelson described is perfectly safe, he said.

The government document said the mission, with no price tag at the moment, would inspire because it "will send humans farther than they have ever been before."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/TJaz4FPKm5A/Sen.-Bill-Nelson-announces-NASA-s-plan-to-capture-asteroid

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Micro Gaming Console GameStick Delays Shipments Until June ...

GameStick PlayJam

The GameStick micro console by PlayJam caught our attention with its wildly popular Kickstarter campaign that netted more than six times its goal of $100,000. It?s a clever idea ? placing an entire console on something the size of a flash drive that can be easily plugged into a television?s HDMI port. The problem is that GameStick became a little too popular, and not just for gaming hipsters. The huge number of backers means GameStick has had to delay shipment of units for backers until June.

GameStick will be shipping its developer units ? about 600 ? out on time, but the units promised to early backers of the project on Kickstarter have been delayed. That?s because instead of having to produce and ship a few thousand consoles as expected, they actually have to produce and ship tens of thousands of units. That creates more problems than just the extra time needed to build the tiny game systems.

Due to the larger-than-anticipated order, the GameStick consoles will have to be shipped from the manufacturer by boat rather than by plane. In almost every case, planes are faster than boats, but they can?t carry as much weight. The system was supposed to ship to backers this month, but now it seem folks will just have to be a bit more patient as they wait for their tiny game console.

(Kickstarter via Engadget, image via PlayJam)

Relevant to your interests

Source: http://www.geekosystem.com/gamestick-delays/

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

Facebook moves to home screens of Android phones

MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) -- Facebook is bringing your friends' photos, links and observations to your phone's home screen.

If you install the new Home software on certain Android phones from HTC and Samsung, Facebook will bring content right to you, rather than require you to check apps on the device. That way, CEO Mark Zuckerberg says, you're always knowing what is going on around you.

Zuckerberg compares the change to the way Facebook had introduced news feeds years ago to bring friends' updates to a central location, instead of making you check your friends' profile pages one by one.

Central to Home is the new Cover Feed. Facebook's director of products, Adam Mosseri, notes that when people look at their phones now, they typically see a clock and perhaps the snippet of an email. With Home, you'll see photos and other posts as soon as you turn on your phone. Those items will take up the entire display screen.

Mosseri offers an example of standing in line at a store and looking down at the phone to see photos of friends and family. You can swipe from one item to the next from the home screen. If there's something you like, just double tap on it to "like" it. You can also add comments from the home screen.

Home will also have chat heads, a way to communicate with friends from that home screen, without needing to open an app. You can chat with multiple people at once that way ? and flick away the photo of anyone you don't want to chat with.

The new experience will also make notifications such as friend requests more prominent. There's also an app launcher that keeps Home running in the background while even as you check out other features on the phone.

Home will work with only a handful of Android phones at first: HTC Corp.'s One X and One X Plus and Samsung Electronics Co.'s Galaxy S III and Galaxy Note 2. The upcoming HTC One and Samsung Galaxy S IV will also be able to run Home. In addition, HTC's First will have it already installed.

If you have one of those devices, you'll be able to get Home for free by visiting Play, the online store run by Google Inc., the maker of the Android operating system. If you already have a Facebook app, you'll get a prompt when Home is ready to download on April 12. The software will be updated with new features monthly.

Eventually, Facebook plans to make it available for all Android phones running version 4.0 or later. That is the Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean versions and covers phones made or updated over the past year or so. Facebook says it focused on about a half-dozen devices first to make sure Home worked right.

Facebook will make a version for Android tablet computers, too, but that's not coming for months.

There won't be a version for Apple's iPhone and iPad. Apple's iOS and Mac operating systems include features that integrate Facebook's services, but Zuckerberg says doing something like Home would require a closer partnership.

By contrast, Google makes Android available on an open-source basis, free for anyone to modify, so it's easier to make changes. But Facebook says it's not making a new version of Android, a practice known as forking. Home is being built on top of Android.

Zuckerberg says Facebook isn't building a Facebook phone, saying a Facebook-centered device might sell 10 million to 20 million units at best. Rather, it's building on the existing Android system to bring this experience to a wider group of Android users.

But it is partnering with HTC to build a phone with Home already installed. Called First, the phone will have a screen that measures 4.3 inches diagonally and will work on AT&T Inc.'s 4G LTE cellular network. The phone will cost $100 with a two-year service agreement. It will go on sale April 12, with advance orders beginning Thursday.

The event comes amid rapid growth in the number of people who access Facebook from smartphones and tablet computers. More Android integration could help Facebook Inc. attract more mobile advertisers.

Facebook says ads will eventually come to this new service. It will be interspersed among the items displayed on the home screen, the way Facebook now injects ads into the main news feed showing friends' photos, links and other posts. But in this case, the ads will take up the entire display.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/facebook-moves-home-screens-android-174725561.html

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Friday, April 5, 2013

New guardian of French tongue is (gasp!) British

PARIS (AP) ? The newest official guardian of the French language has spoken: English, he says, is jumping the barricades and threatening the language of Moliere.

He should know. He's British ? the first from his nation to become one of the 40 esteemed "immortals" of the Academie Francaise, the institution that has watched over the French language since 1635.

Is he a fox in the hen house ? as one might think given the history of mutual disdain between England and France? "No," Michael Edwards assures. "Nor am I the Trojan Horse. I don't want to stir things up."

But he just might.

Edwards, a Cambridge-educated poet, writer and translator married to a French woman, says that while he became a French citizen a decade ago, his British identity is "essential."

"I don't stop being British. No," he said in an interview this week in his office at the august College de France, where he holds a chair in the Study of Literary Creation in the English Language. For example, he wonders why there are no French words to express certain concepts. One can descend in French, "descendre," but one cannot "ascendre," or ascend ? as Edwards has to his illustrious seat.

The British scholar, who will be 75 later this month, was voted into the Academie Francaise in February ? on his third try, with his first candidacy in 2008. Becoming an "immortal," which takes lots of real-world networking, is for him something akin to entering the celestial realm of the gods of French literature.

"When I was a student, the Academie Francaise was a kind of unreal paradise in which lived people like Racine and La Fontaine and Voltaire and Hugo and Claudel and Valery."

It's unusual in the extreme for an outsider like Edwards to be elected to the elite French club ? but not without precedent.

Another Anglo-Saxon, Julien Green, born in Paris to American parents and schooled in the French system, preceded Edwards at the Academie Francaise. But Edwards, born outside London, is the first member from Britain speaking French as an adopted language. He is not, however, the only foreign-born member of the Academie Francaise. In fact, one of them ? Chinese-born Francois Cheng ? encouraged Edwards to seek a seat. It took three tries and lots of networking to gain backers among the members ahead of this year's victory vote.

And while winning recognition from the French language elite was a battle for Edwards, there were no signs that French snobbery regarding his British origins played a role in the process.

Edwards chuckles when asked why he wanted to become a so-called immortal. "It's like asking someone, why did you want to play in the World Cup?"

Unlike owning the World Cup soccer trophy, however, becoming a member of the Academie Francaise is an honor that lasts for life. Immortals are only replaced when one of the 40 dies. The graying institution ? where more than half of its members are over 75 and only five of them women ? currently has four vacant seats.

Edwards will take Seat No. 31, replacing writer Jean Dutourd, in November. Then, he will don a gold-embroidered green suit and take up his ornamental sword in an elaborate ceremony, and deliver a lengthy speech ? to be published word-for-word in some French newspapers.

But this lover of Shakespeare already has some clear thoughts about the French language's biggest enemy: English, which has become the world's lingua franca.

"I don't think it's paranoia. I think they're right. English is a threat," he said. But it's not "real English" that threatens the French language, he quickly added.

The real problem? Bad English ? "the sort of universal lingua-anglica which is not proper English and which invades French through all sorts of expressions which are unnecessary," he said.

Edwards also spies what he says is a deeper, more insidious threat: the growing demand on the French to write in English for professional reasons. He sees that as potentially "very dangerous" to philosophers and scientists, for instance, where language can have an impact on the work itself.

"A language is a living organism. It's a way of thinking, a memory," Edwards said. "It's important that a French philosopher think in French," he said. If not, that person "might, to put it crudely, become a British philosopher."

French, once the official language of international diplomacy, has steadily lost ground to English. That's despite two laws, enacted in 1975 and 1994, to ensure the French language holds its own in the work place, in businesses and at international conferences in France.

In 2006, then-President Jacques Chirac walked out of a European Union summit to protest a particularly offensive affront to the French tongue: a French business executive addressing EU leaders in English. In a sign of the changing times, France's finance minister last month fielded questions in French at a news conference in Sweden ? and happily answered them in English to satisfy the international crowd.

Academicians, as members of the gold-domed Academie Francaise are called, don't make laws. They simply hand down judgments, which the French are expected to abide by to keep their language pure. That's a hard task in a globalized world in which foreign languages constantly intrude. Most English words are kicked out for a French equivalent, for example eco-friendly should be "respectueux de l'environnement" (respectful of the environment). That contrasts with the English who "like foreign sounds in English."

"The French believe that the French language should be controlled from above, and the Academie Francaise has a mission to do precisely that," said Edwards. He gave assurances that the Academie is not "trying to embalm French" but it does "take very seriously the beauty of the French language."

Edwards writes poetry and essays in English and French and speaks French with a slight, almost elegant English accent. He began studying French at age 11 in England and recalled that as his studies advanced, the French language opened a door into another world ? one which he has spent decades contemplating through his poetry, essays and lectures. "Le Rire de Moliere" (Moliere's Laugh) published last year, offers a new way to interpret the writings of the man whose name for many is synonymous with the French language.

Edwards hopes to get a spot on the commission that has been revising the French dictionary since the time of Cardinal Richelieu, the institution's founder.

The Academie Francaise is a rarefied society that includes not just literati but scientists and even a former French president, Valerie Giscard d'Estaing. Ironically, some great French writers never got their foot in the door ? including Moliere.

Edwards was careful not to wreck his reputation by saying anything too radical before taking his seat in November. But, he ventured, the English language might have a lesson for the French. "I do feel ... a language is alive when it changes, and English is aware of other languages and borrows from them when it is useful to do so."

Then he let go with one more, perhaps truly renegade, thought: "The language really under threat is English."

Today, he explained, two non-native English speakers will often communicate in a mangled, hybrid English.

"The language chatted around the world is poor English," Edwards said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/guardian-french-tongue-gasp-british-135014597.html

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