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Save 63% on the Veho Retro Leather Bluetooth Speaker

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This portable speaker has a sturdy brushed aluminum housing, and is finished with a snazzy leather carrying strap. It offers very good sound quality for its size, and can easily fill a small room with sound. Battery life is rated at eight hours, and it’s also got a built-in microphone so you can use it for hands-free calls.

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Keep U.S. Military Home: Washington is Bigger Threat than Iran to Mideast Stability

The Obama administration’s decision to negotiate with Tehran triggered near hysteria among U.S. politicians and pundits who advocate perpetual war in the Middle East. One complaint is that the talks were not broad enough. They did not address Iran’s malign intervention throughout the Middle East.

These critics denounced Tehran’s imperial ambitions. For instance, the ever-hawkish Foreign Policy Initiative insisted that “Iran’s drive to dominate the region has been years in the making.” The group warned of Sana’a becoming “the fourth Arab capital to fall under the sway of Tehran.” The Economist put it slightly differently, pointing to Iran’s “strong influence over Beirut, Damascus, Baghdad and Sana’a.”

However, if regional domination is a long-term priority, it is striking how little Tehran has accomplished. Most governments in the region dislike and oppose the Islamic regime. Nor is Iran much of a dominatrix, especially compared to America with its strong influence throughout the entire Persian Gulf and North Africa and in Iraq and Jordan; Saudi Arabia’s equally significant role in the Gulf and Egypt and among Syrian rebels; and Israel’s overwhelming regional military strength.

Tehran’s principal client is war-torn Syria, where the Assad regime’s, and thus Iran’s, reach barely extends to the Damascus suburbs. Tehran enjoys outsize but not overwhelming influence in small, divided Lebanon, where Hezbollah listens to but is not controlled by Iran (and does nothing to threaten America). In Yemen Tehran is loosely connected to a long-time disaffected rebel movement in what amounts to a permanent civil war.

Iran matters in Baghdad not because of calculated policy but cultural connection, facilitated by George W. Bush, who removed Iraqi secularist Saddam Hussein, Iran’s great nemesis. FPI complained that “Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Tehran has worked relentlessly to turn Iraq into a client state led by Shiite militants,” but the U.S. occupied Iraq from 2003 until 2011 and worked equally hard, though less successfully, to turn that nation into an American client hosting military bases for use against Iran. The Economist denounced Iran for sponsoring militias in Iraq–which have battled the Islamic State at Baghdad’s request. Iraq’s relationship with Iran is one of the heart; the ties with Washington were and always will be ones of convenience.

Yet the Economist magazine warned that “Iran’s belligerent behavior in the Middle East is an increasing menace.” Even without nukes, argued consultant Michael McBride, “Iran will continue to pose the greatest threat to our interests, allies, and influence in the region.” Then-Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal complained of “the nature of action and hegemonistic tendencies that Iran has taken in the region.” More specifically, wrote columnist Jonah Goldberg: “A civilized Iranian regime would presumably stop supporting Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Houthis in Yemen, Bashar Assad in Syria and Shiite militants in Iraq.”

But none of these activities have yielded much geopolitical benefit. Anyway, Iran is a populous and potentially prosperous nation that cannot be expected to supinely accept U.S. or Saudi domination. Perhaps Tehran should ask in return that more humane U.S. and Saudi Arabia governments stop backing multiple allies, friends, and proxies, including flagrant authoritarians and extremists, and warring against various enemies and adversaries, including indigenous democracy and independence movements, in the region. Who is dominating whom?

Of course, no one wants Iran to have a nuclear weapon. But given the region’s hostile security environment it’s hard to blame Tehran for proceeding with a nuclear program–which actually began under Washington’s ally the Shah. Not only did Britain and the Soviet Union occupy neutral Iran during World War II, but the U.S. and Britain ousted post-war Iran’s democratically elected prime minister in 1953. After the Shah’s fall in 1979 the U.S. backed Saddam Hussein’s savage invasion of Iran. Over the years Washington imposed regime change or dismembered territories in countries posing no threat to America, such as Haiti, Grenada, Panama, Serbia, Iraq, and Libya. The Arab world is dominated by Sunni regimes hostile to Tehran, whose Shia peoples are a decided minority within Islam. The U.S., Turkey, and the Gulf States are attempting to oust Iran’s ally in next-door Syria. Over the last decade successive American presidents have regularly threatened military action against Tehran. So has Israel. As Henry Kissinger once observed, even paranoids have enemies.

Of course, the existing Iranian regime is ugly. It oppresses its own people, limits political dissent, targets religious minorities, spews venomous rhetoric on Israel, and harms neighboring peoples, most notably the Lebanese and Syrians. However, far from being an aggressive empire-builder, the Islamist regime has been a cautious actor dedicated to its own survival. Iran is ringed by U.S. military bases and, unlike the U.S., Israel, and Saudi Arabia, has not bombed, invaded, or occupied another country in the region. Tehran has supported America in Afghanistan and indirectly collaborated with Washington against the Islamic State. Iran mimicked the U.S., Riyadh, and others when intervening in Syria, only on behalf of rather than against Syrian president Bashar Assad. In contrast to the Saudis, Iran’s involvement in Yemen is minor at most. Tehran has done nothing nearly as disastrous in humanitarian or geopolitical terms as the Bush administration’s invasion of Iran.

Moreover, by almost every measure Saudi Arabia’s monarchy is worse than Iran’s theocracy. Saudi scholar Awadh al-Badi argued: “Iranian interference in Arab States’ internal affairs on a sectarian basis is destroying the social fabric of Arab societies in certain countries.” This is the pot famously calling the kettle black. Riyadh routinely intervenes in Arab states’ internal affairs–promoting fundamentalist Islam everywhere, supporting dictatorship in Bahrain and Egypt, underwriting radical insurgents in Syria, squelching independent action by Gulf neighbors, and bombing Yemenis who oppose the Saudi royals’ latest political client. Al-Badi insisted on Iran “abandoning its destructive policies and adapting new ones that seeks peace, security and cooperation in the region.” Which would mean accepting Riyadh’s destructive policies.

Yet Saudi Arabia allows no political opposition and fails to make even a pretense of holding elections. The Saudi government last year sentenced a dissident blogger to 1000 lashes and ten years in prison–and then sent his lawyer to jail for 15 years. In Iran ballots actually matter, as Hassan Rouhani’s election as president demonstrated. Public political differences are limited but nevertheless exist in Tehran. Riyadh suppresses all non-Sunni faiths: not one church or synagogue is open in the entire Kingdom. In Iran there are religious freedoms to violate.

Saudi Arabia has promoted the intolerant Wahhabist theology around the world. The Kingdom matches the Islamic State in fondness for treating women as objects and beheading citizens. Riyadh was one of only three governments to recognize the Taliban in Afghanistan. Saudis funded al-Qaeda prior to 9/11 and provided 15 of the 19 9/11 terrorists. More recently the Saudi government underwrote the most extreme Syrian rebels, the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Nusra Front and apparently even the Islamic State. A 2009 Wikileaks document quoted Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reporting that “Donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide.” While denouncing Iran for acting to sustain its neighboring ally, Syria, Riyadh intervened militarily to buttress Bahrain’s repressive Sunni monarchy next door to Saudi Arabia. Now the latter is bombing Yemeni insurgents who challenge Riyadh’s influence.

Yet U.S. officials exhibit slavish obsequiousness when dealing with the Kingdom. At Saudi Arabia’s behest, America entered another tragic yet irrelevant Middle Eastern war. Washington is providing intelligence and logistical aid and recently accelerated arms deliveries to Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states as they kill Yemenis. The administration also is lending the U.S. Navy to Riyadh to help blockade Yemen. Explained Secretary of State John Kerry: “we’re not going to step away from our alliances and our friendships.”

Until now Yemen was a local affair. Journalist Peter Salisbury described the conflict as “driven by local issues and competition for resources rather than regional or ideological rivalries.” The country long was divided in two and unified only in 1990. Since then Yemen has faced civil war, political strife, organized kidnappings, and international terrorism, especially from the once potent al-Qaeda affiliate, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).

A decade ago President and U.S. friend Ali Abdullah Saleh used American weapons, supplied for use against AQAP, in a campaign to suppress the Houthis, northerners of a Shia-variant (Zaydi) with doctrinal Sunni characteristics as well. But after Saleh was ousted in 2012 he flipped to back the Houthi rebels, who last fall overthrew Saleh’s successor, President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi. While the Houthis have few good feelings for America, their grievances are purely domestic and they heartily dislike AQAP and the Islamic State. The Jamestown Foundation’s James Brandon explained: “the ongoing Yemeni internal conflict is better understood as a struggle for power between two diverse coalitions, both of which incorporate a wide range of both Sunni and Shia elements. Self-interest, and not sectarian affiliation, is therefore the driving force behind much of the ongoing violence.”

But Riyadh now is running a ten-nation operation against the Houthis–highlighted by Washington’s support. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter spoke of Saudi Arabia “defending its own borders” and seeking “to protect its own security,” even though the Houthis evidence no external ambitions, and attempting to “restore stability in Yemen,” which has never existed. Riyadh said it wanted to reinstate the “legitimate government” of president Hadi, but his authority shrank before his ouster and popularity disappeared after his flight to Riyadh and support for Saudi intervention. Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken claimed: “Saudi Arabia is sending a strong message to the Houthis and their allies that they cannot overrun Yemen by force.” Even as Washington and Riyadh are backing rebels in Syria dedicated to overrunning that country by force.

Ironically, the Saudi campaign left the Houthis with little choice but to seek aid from Tehran. Secretary Kerry spoke of aiding “those who feel threatened as a consequence of the choices that Iran might be making,” but Houthi dissatisfaction had nothing to do with Tehran. After Riyadh turned Yemen into a proxy war Iran stepped up its support. But apparently mostly money and oil; there is no evidence of direct Iranian military involvement. Indeed, filmmaker Safa al-Ahmad, who recently released a documentary on the Houthis, noted that they “don’t need Iranians to bring them weapons. They’re awash in weapons.” U.S. embassy personnel made the same point in 2009 according to a Wikileaks cable. Brookings’ Kenneth Pollack concluded that Iranian support is “being considerably exaggerated.” Even British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond acknowledged that “the Houthis are clearly not Iranian proxies.”

The conflict will be ugly. The Houthis have been fighting for years and know guerrilla warfare. Egypt intervened in the 1960s with ground forces–as many as 85,000 soldiers at the peak–before withdrawing in defeat. Cairo still considers that experience its “Vietnam.” Six years ago Riyadh launched a bombing campaign against and ground invasion of its southern neighbor, but eventually pulled out after achieving nothing. My Cato institute colleague Emma Ashford warned that the latest U.S.-backed war “will fuel Yemen’s internal strife, condemning it to a protracted torment that could rival Syria’s four-year-old civil war.”

Even nominal “victory” would not likely be stable, but merely the latest round in an extended fight. Saudi Arabia claimed it was killing Yemenis to protect Yemen, but Asher Orkaby of Brandeis University’s Crown Center for Middle East Studies warned: “With each falling bomb, the Yemeni population grows increasingly more sympathetic for the Houthi movement.” A reinstated President Hadi would not survive without a permanent Saudi bodyguard.

UN envoy Jamal Benomar warned of a future “Iraq-Libya-Syria” scenario. Jon Alterman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies predicted increased recruiting by radical groups. Already AQAP has taken advantage of the burgeoning conflict, causing Secretary Carter to cite that group’s “great gains.”

The situation is serious, but Washington policy is almost beyond parody. Announced Secretary Kerry, the U.S. was “not going to stand by while the region is destabilized or while people engage in overt warfare across lines, international boundaries and other countries.”

This from a government which routinely bombs, invades, and occupies other nations for any number of perceived infractions. Washington overthrew a democratic Iranian government, intervened in a Lebanese civil war, invaded Iraq, overthrew the Libyan government, worked to oust Syria’s secular regime, supported Saudi Arabia as it helped Bahrain suppress democracy protestors, and now is aiding Riyadh as it bombs indigenous rebels in Yemen.

Indeed, America’s reach for regional hegemony has had catastrophic consequences for both the U.S. and Middle East. Washington empowered Iran and created the Islamic State by invading Iraq. Washington turned a Libyan government which opposed al-Qaeda into a failed state which hosts the Islamic State. In practice if not rhetoric, Washington is the greatest threat to stability in the Middle East. Iran is a minor player in comparison.

Yet Washington officials can offer no coherent justification for joining another obscure and distant conflict. Micah Zenko of the Council on Foreign Relations noted that Gen. Lloyd Austin, in charge of Central Command, admitted that “I don’t currently know the specific goals and objectives of the Saudi campaign.” How can any good result from participating in this war?

Finally, after negotiating the nuclear agreement with Iran the administration is promising even more intensive military involvement in the Middle East. Peacefully resolving differences between Iran and the West and reducing the likelihood of an Iranian nuclear weapon should lower perceived threats against friendly countries. Yet Ilan Berman of the American Foreign Policy Council complained of “a major shift in the regional balance of power” against Washington’s allies.

In response, reported the Los Angeles Times, “Obama administration officials are promising a major strengthening of U.S. defense commitments to Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf allies, possibly including a nuclear commitment to their security.” The president was quoted saying he wanted to “formalize” the U.S. commitment to the region “a little bit more.” If reducing the potential Iranian threat actually increases Washington’s commitments and the likelihood of going to war, why bother?

Of course the Middle East would be better off without Iranian meddling in other nations’ affairs. The region would be even better off with the rise of a liberal, democratic government in Iran. But the Middle East also would be better off without U.S. and Saudi intervention and with the rise of a liberal, democratic state in Riyadh.

Unfortunately, promiscuous American military action, especially on behalf of authoritarian “allies” such as Saudi Arabia, has become a bigger problem than the ills it is supposed to solve. The U.S. should follow up the nuclear deal by proposing discussions with Tehran over its role in regional issues. But at the same time Washington should unilaterally back away from conflicts which are not America’s to solve. U.S. intervention and war-making have wreaked untold harm in the Middle East.

This article was first posted to Forbes online.

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Scarlett Johansson Dominates Jimmy Fallon In 'Box Of Lies'

The “Avengers” press tour continuesonand onand on. This time, Scarlett Johansson played “Box of Lies” with Jimmy Fallon. She tried to fake him out with Black Widow action figures, but won the game with Starbucks cups full of black beans. Anything can happen on the “Avengers” press tour.

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Nepal's Earthquake Victims Trek Miles Through The Mountains To Get Aid

BALUA, Nepal (AP) — After roughing it five nights in the rain, the 60-year-old woman finally had a plastic sheet over her head.

Sukhmaya Tamang had walked about 12 miles (20 kilometers) in flip-flops on mountain paths to get the emergency kit to help ward off the weather, and faced the same long journey back home.

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Elderly villagers start their 12 mile hike back up to their mountain home with international relief aid they received in the damaged village of Balua n the Gorkha District of Nepal, April 30, 2015. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

She and hundreds of others — many elderly and all of them poor — arrived in recent days at this village to collect the emergency shelters after their remote mountain homes shaken to a shambles by Saturday’s magnitude 7.8 earthquake that radiated from the epicenter directly below.

Tamang’s cliffside hamlet in the Gorkha district can’t be reached by vehicle, and Balua is the closest place to her home that even the toughest trucks and SUVs can get to. Helicopters are scarce during the crisis, and rainy weather has further reduced their flights.

“I walked four hours to get here, and I’ve been waiting here for two days,” Tamang said Thursday while crouching amid dozens of other now-homeless and destitute women. “I have no home, no food, nothing left. I have been sleeping under the open sky.”

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Nepalese villagers sit outside makeshift shelters as an Indian Army chopper, loaded with relief aid, prepares to land at Baluwa, in Gorkha district on May 1, 2015. (SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/Getty Images)

Five days after the massive quake, U.N. aid trucks were finally arriving — after a few false starts. Their dogged and determined drivers successfully pushed through rain-swamped and washed-out roads.

They were being joined by all manner of enthusiastic and concerned people, as local charities, foreign tourists and able-bodied village youths pitched in.

Balua village elder Shekhar Nath Neopani was stunned by the outpouring of help.

“It’s surprising to see everyone, even people who are usually divided, coming together, and all these foreign people bringing us help,” he said.

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Nepalese villagers unload relief material from an Indian Army helicopter in the village of Kulgaun, Gorkha District on May 1, 2015. (SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/Getty Images)

Nepal faces a crisis on multiple fronts in coming weeks and months.

Experts say it is crucial for the government and relief agencies to get food, medicine and shelter from unseasonal rains to some 1.4 million in the worst-affected regions. Collapsed latrines must be rebuilt and animal carcasses must be cleared away to avoid a sanitation nightmare.

In the longer term, Nepal’s vast farming community, making up two-thirds of the country’s 27 million people, will need help.

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Female villagers start their 12 mile)hike back up to their mountain home with international relief aid they received in the damaged village of Balua in the Gorkha District of Nepal, April 30, 2015. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

The U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization said the earthquake and the 73 aftershocks that have terrified the population could hamper efforts to harvest this year’s wheat crop. Many farmers have lost seed stocks for the mid-May rice sowing season, along with grains once kept dry in stone storage huts that are now reduced to rubble.

“There are so many problems. There is no place to stay. The stench of dead animals is everywhere,” Neopani said before resuming a roll call of people signed up to receive aid. “These shipments are very welcome, but we need more — much more.”

For now, the outline of an aid distribution system to Gorkha’s farthest reaches has started to take shape. Helicopters have managed some deliveries to remote regions despite erratic and stormy weather. And along the dirt road to the crumbled riverside village of Balua, a steady if somewhat motley convoy of grass-roots aid efforts has kicked into gear.

“Everyone is so happy to receive whatever they can get,” said Prabin Shrestha of the U.N.’s World Food Program, which was distributing shelters brought in by the first trucks to make it to Balua.

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Nepalese women line up to receive a daily stipend of food from the Nepalese army at a camp in Kathmandu on May 1, 2015. (ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)

Others included two white-robed priests with a banner reading “Believers Church,” an Islamic anti-corruption league, and a loose-jointed, lithe bunch of Westerners who had been in Nepal paragliding when the quake hit.

Most made it only as far as the village of Rani, about 3 kilometers (2 miles) short of Balua. Individuals including young women in designer jeans, stooped old men with walking sticks, and amateur aid workers in tattoos and khakis made the 40-kilometer (25-mile) walk from Gorkha carrying backpacks and bed rolls.

“I got a tent and some food. There is some relief. Now I can sleep under cover,” said Numaya Gurung, 25. As she collected her shelter kit, her toddler eagerly grabbed at the package they would have to carry on the hours-long walk home.

The experience also was providing some inspiration. Pashmina Ghaley, a 10-year-old who had dragged her little sister to an open field after she fainted during Saturday’s quake, was enthralled by how the post-disaster despair had been transformed into resilience by the hive of activity.

“I’m very excited to see everyone here,” Pashmina said, tugging shyly at her long braid of hair behind her back. “One day, I want to be a doctor.”

The button below indicates how much has been raised on Crowdrise’s “Nepal Earthquake Relief” page. Click to visit the site and donate.

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A Modern Family-Friendly Home Tour

Keeping his eye on the budget and the needs of his wife and child, architectural and interior designer Will Meyer built a James Bond-worthy but kid-friendly lakeside retreat for his most demanding client: himself.

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photographs by PAUL COSTELLO produced by SARA RUFFIN COSTELLO styling by LILI DIALLO text by DAVID NETTO

Can a house be a pure work of art, or does somebody have to be able to cook breakfast for the children? Modernist architects–and more so, their clients–have wrestled with this question since the legendary tussle between Edith Farnsworth and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe 50-some years ago.

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The question reared its head again recently for Will Meyer, a partner in the New York City firm Meyer/Davis Studio, which is responsible for Oscar de la Renta’s boutiques around the globe as well as many private homes, when he set out to build his upstate country house in 2005. Will is married. His wife, Kerstin, does not dress in deconstructed Comme des Garçons capes. She is an avid cook, they have a 2-year-old daughter, and friends come to stay most weekends. In other words, they lead a life of good, messy fun. Will was determined to reconcile his aesthetic requirements to his family’s needs and cost constraints.

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His guiding design idea sounds almost deceptively simple: a house on one level. “With a kid, it’s easier to watch over things and to just all end up spending time together in the same place,” he explains. When it came to construction, Will delighted in being as frugal as possible. “That was the best part. Anti-extravagance was one of the main missions of Case Study architecture, the style I thought most about in terms of what I wanted to accomplish here,” he says. “Whatever they had at Herrington’s [the local building-supply company] was what we chose, provided we could stain it the color we wanted. So they must have had Douglas fir that day! There were no special-order materials in the house, because I don’t believe design has to be expensive or complicated to have integrity.” A very low-key–and very refreshing–attitude.

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From the outside, the house looks like a cabin from the future. It’s mostly wood, with smoked horizontal fir boards stained a rich brown-gray. The color is so surprisingly sophisticated that it almost makes you look at wood as a new material. Stone and glass elements add to the wintry mysteriousness.

The copious windows are an aluminum commercial-style system, which allows for
customization at minor cost, and they are mounted in bronze metal frames–not the first thing you think of for the country. The disparate dark materials are wrapped in monumental white stuccobris de soleil, which unifies the lake facade and expresses that the life within takes place on one long, panoramic level.

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Inside, the practical advantages of Will’s single-story vision are evident. The house is basically a series of rooms strung along an internal spine that emanates from the living room in either direction and gives you perspectives from one end to the other. Besides being elegant to peer down, the vertebrae-like arrangement is functional and convivial. As Kerstin says, “I don’t have to hunt for Lilly, or Will for that matter. And when we have friends staying over, they just know where to be. If you want time to yourself, there are plenty of places for that too.”

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Because the kitchen–where Kerstin can often be found making a stew or enchiladas–is essentially a node belonging to the living space, everything is built-in and concealed, so it doesn’t distract from the view. The Valcucine range hood descends like a sleek sculpture over the island, and Kerstin has a table lamp unexpectedly on the counter to read cookbooks. It’s also not the usual kitchen fare, blurring the boundaries between kitchen and living room, which this architecture is all about.

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Throughout the house, the furniture is more informal than what’s typical of high-design projects: a mix of Scandinavian modern and eclectic, always with a cozy touch–Kerstin is, after all, Swedish, and Swedes have always known better than to be intimidated by anything modern. The Philippe Starck dining chairs have been swaddled in sheepskin pelts from IKEA. In the living room, an overscale lamp sits casually on the floor by Will’s favorite reading chair, and a zebra wood sectional sofa, designed by Meyer/Davis as a prototype for a client, has found a home at last. Upholstered in pleather, it should endure years of child’s play.

Likewise, the walls are Benjamin Moore White Dove in eggshell finish, so they can be wiped down in the wake of kids. The noir shine of the wide-plank, ebonized ash floors was accomplished with two coats each of Slate Gray stain and semigloss polyurethane–a buff and polish that can withstand plenty of wear and tear. It all looks as snappy as a black-and-white scheme, but with wood playing the role of black, you know you’re in the country.

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But then, it’s impossible to forget your surroundings here, with the epic sweep of windows providing just a thin line between the domestic and the natural worlds. “Using customizable storefront windows gives you the freedom to make Mondrian-like compositions for each glass wall, so you can subdivide the view and look at it in interesting ways,” Will says. Who needs Calgon
when the master-bathroom tub looks out on oak trees that extend as far as the eye can see?

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Lilly’s room is as modern as the rest of the house, down to the “mini me” Barcelona chair.

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And spending the day in bed is undeniably more tempting when you can gaze at the Catskill Mountains. That’s part of the reason the sleeping arrangements are so flexible at the Meyers’. There are two master bedrooms bracketing two smaller ones, and the couple sometimes spends the night in a room other than their usual one to mix things up–and because there is no “bad” room in the house. The smaller bedrooms have cozy wood walls of the same dark fir as the exterior. The big bedrooms are essentially like glass boxes suspended in a forest. Kerstin sums it up beautifully: “The part I like best about the house is how much being able to see everywhere–inside and outside–takes away the feeling of loneliness one can get in the country.”

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The Meyers are just down the road from a horse farm, which can be seen from their property.

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A cantilevered terrace effectively doubles the interior space.

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Ex-Official In New Jersey Bridge Scandal To Plead Guilty

April 29 (Reuters) – A former ally of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie is expected to plead guilty on Thursday to criminal charges related to the George Washington Bridge closure scandal, Bloomberg said on Wednesday.

David Wildstein, who was an executive with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and another Christie aide ordered bridge lanes closed over four days in September 2013, snarling traffic on the crossing to New York City, a legislative panel said in December.

Christie has denied knowing about the incident, and the joint panel of Democrats and Republicans in December found no evidence he was involved. The political fallout has hurt his brand as he considers a run for the Republican presidential nomination.

Wildstein’s attorney, Alan Zegas, was not immediately available for comment on the Bloomberg report, which cited a person with knowledge of the matter.

In emails that surfaced after the shutdown, Wildstein and Bridget Anne Kelly, then Christie’s deputy chief of staff, discussed causing “traffic problems” for a local mayor who had not supported the governor’s re-election bid in 2013.

The scandal led to the resignation of Wildstein and the departures of other officials, and prompted inquiries into whether the governor himself was involved.

Christie’s office did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

Bloomberg said Wildstein would appear in federal court in Newark, New Jersey, and it was unclear what charges he would face.

There are additional probes being conducted into the scandal.

(Reporting by Emily Stephenson in Washington and Hilary Russ in New York; Editing by Peter Cooney)

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Jeb Bush Goes After Obama On Immigration Reform

‪Jeb Bush warned Thursday that President Obama and Democrats would rather keep immigration reform as a political wedge issue than solve the problem — and that Republicans will always lose the political argument on immigration if the dynamic persists.

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A Woman-Led Law Firm That Lets Partners Be Parents

Just past 9:30 on a Wednesday morning in March, after she drove 20 minutes to drop her son, Jack, off at preschool, after she trekked back for an hour across the Washington metro area into Fairfax, Va., for work, and long, long after she answered her first email, Maria Simon sat in a windowless conference room weighing the odds that she would be able to make a party in Jack’s class two days hence.

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