Archive-name: lebanon-faq/part2
Last-modified: 1994/07/05
Version: 2.6

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20. Are there any available sources to learn Syriac ?

If you want to learn Syriac from scratch, and are not interested in all
the misty gritties of grammar, check the book of Malphono Abrohom Nuro,
Suloqo (I believe it is available in the US).

There is also a book from the Kaslik called "Le Syriac pour tout le
Monde". I do not recommend it. But if it is the Only one you can get hold
of, so why not.

I Sweden there are some school books produced: Safro Tobo, by Malphono
Johanon Kashisho. These too are good.

If you are interested in Learning Syriac grammar, then your best bet (if
you can French) is Costaz' "Grammaire Syriac", you can also buy a
dictionary.

There are also some other Grammars for Syriac. Noldeke and Brocklemann,
but these are real heavy stuff.

for those of you who know Hebrew, check S. Muroaka (sp!) Syriac for
Hebraists. A very good book.

There is a basic difference though between these set of books:

The first are to teach "Modern Literary Syriac" this means stuff that is
more for daily use, while the second set is for those who want to dig into
the huge and fascinating Syriac literature from old to the present.

----
        An arabic book can be bought in Syria, the title is al-Aramiyah 
al-muhkiyah, it teaches spoken Aramaic/Syriac.

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21. Where can I find Lebanese songs and music ?

  Town Records in Manhattan sell International records including,
sometimes, Lebanese.

  Shahin Brothers, in Brooklyn, Atlantic Avenue, sell a large collection of
Lebanese and other Arabic Music.  

  They also sell Lebanese/Arabic books.

  Interested in Arabic or French music on CD in the US/Canada ?
  Contact the following for a catalogue:

  Chaabouni World CDs Inc.
  103 Wood Street
  Westerville Ohio 43081
  (614) 523-0691
  e-mail: cmoez@valhalla.cs.wright.edu

 If you're willing to drive to Toronto, you can check out the Nasr plaza
 at the North-West corner of Lawrence and Warden. There is a Middle-Eastern
 music store with quite a large collection.

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22. Where can I find a Lebanese restaurant ?

  In Brooklyn, NY, there are a couple Lebanese Restaurants on Atlantic
Ave.  One is Tripoli Restaurant, good food, a bit expensive, good to
invite a guest, and another more popular (and affordable) Kabab and
Shawarma restaurant (a-la Abu Khudor) accross the street from Tripoli
Restaurant.  The Kabab restaurant even has an indoor water fountain,
nice touch.

  The area near NY Univ in Manhattan has quite a few M.E. restaurants.

  In Manhattan there is Cedars of Lebanon restaurant. 

Here is the Address:

  Cedars of Lebanon
  39 East 30th Street
  New York City, 10016
  Phone: (212) 213 2380

  I've been to this restaurant and it is excellent.
  They have a Lebanese band that sings Lebanese songs,
  and the food is very good.
  Excellent place for a Saturday evening. 
_______________________________________________________________________________

  There are three in the St.Louis area:

      Aladdin's - 2241 S. Brentwood, (314) 963-0090 
      Very good, reasonable price.

      Salim's   - 6501 Delmar, (314) 721-7947
      Good, but expensive.

      Mediterranean Taverna - Edwardsville IL  
      Good food & entertainment, Middle-Eastern buffet for ~$7.
_______________________________________________________________________________

Canyon Cafe, 330 N. Palm Canyon Drive, Palm  Springs CA 92262
Tel (619) 322-6777, Owner Ghassan Razzouk. 
It is a small cafe in Palm Springs that serves Lebanese dishes
The proprietor is half Lebanese half Italian, he is married to 
a Colombian and has lived most of his life in Mexico. He does 
a good falafel, the makanek are nice, Tabouleh and Baba Ghannouj 
need some work.

_______________________________________________________________________________

In Denver there is a Cedars Restaurant run by a Lebanese guy, I've
heard good things about it, but I've not been there.  Hopefully,
you can find it listed in the phone book.
_______________________________________________________________________________
In Austin, Texas: 

Longhorn Po-Boy's
2801 Guadalupe, Suite 5
Austin, TX
(512) 495-9228

Armen's Mediterranean-Armenian  [mediocre food except for
     Restaurant     mashaoui's]
2222 Rio Grande
Austin, TX
(512) 474-2068

_______________________________________________________________________________

  Here are two Lebanese restaurants I've been to in Paris - France.

Name    : Al-Dar.
Address : very close to Place Victor Hugo (?Av. Raymond Poincarre?).
Price   : relatively expensive (200-300 FF per person = medium size
           mezze + meat + dessert). 
Quality : Good to Very-Good (same quality then in Lebanon).
Remarks : Lebanese service, arabic music, grocery with lot of Lebanese
          staff (less expensive). 

Name    : Al-Diwan.
Address : Avenue Georges V (close to the Champs Elysee)
Price   : relatively expensive (250-350 FF per person = medium size
          mezze + meat + dessert). 
Quality : Good.
Remarks : Lebanese service, arabic music, grocery with lot of Lebanese
          staff (less expensive). 

There are a lot of other Lebanese restaurants in Paris. I only know
these two and I recommend Al-Dar.

_______________________________________________________________________________

  Here in London, we are well supplied with a number of Lebanese
restaurants.  I'll describe only a small selection of them.

Name: Maroush I
Location: 21, Edgware Road, W2
Telephone: 071-723 0773
Cost per Person: No music, no arak : GBP.18 (US$ 36);
                 Music and alcohol : GBP.37 (US$ 74);
Quality: The food is okay. This is the flagship of the Maroush/Ranoush
chain of three restaurants+ 1 takeway in London. On week-ends in the
winter and throughout the week in the summer, there is live music and
dancing which makes you think you are in Beirut itself ! Beware
though, minimum charge when there is music and dancing is GBP.37
(US$74) which is damn expensive, but if you don't care, then go for
it. Last time I went there with friends, we spent 4 hours eating,
singing, and generally having a good time.  Quantity of food: Well,
since they will charge you a minimum price of GBP.37, you really have
to eat a lot to make up to this price ! Say 3 starters per person,
plus main course, plus baklawa, plus fruit, plus mint tea etc. - open
'til 4:00am or so !

Name: Maroush II
Location: 38 Beauchamp Place, SW3
Telephone: 071-581 5434

Cost per Person: GBP.20 (US$ 36) + drinks (3 starters(shared) + main
course) Note: Second Maroush restaurant in London, near Knightsbridge
Quality: This place was recently refurbished in 1993. Before, it used
to be pretty bad. I must say that it has all improved ! One has the choice
to eat either at the bar (on the ground floor) or in the restaurant part.
The bar is *very* busy, but it's a cool place to meet people, in front of
the sizzling kebabs etc. The food is standard. Standard dishes in the
restaurant, and sandwiches in the bar (like Ranoush Juice).  If you're
in the Knightsbridge area, you now know where to eat !

Name: Maroush III
Location: 62 Seymour Street W1H - perpendicular to Edgware Road.
Telephone: 071-724 5024
Cost per person: GBP.18 (US$ 36) + drinks
Note: 1 minutes away from Maroush I

Quality: This one's my favorite Maroush restaurant because I have
been there so many times I know everyone. The food is good while not
too expensive. Summer is more crowded than winter because of the Gulf
population taking its quarters around the nearby Edgware Road.
Recommended starters: Arayes, Baba Ghanouj (Mouttabal), firri, Makanek
Un-recommended starters: Kibbeh (it's not the real thing), sojuk (it
is different every time I go there !)  Recommended main course: Lahem
Meshwi. Farrouj Kebab.  Recommended drink: Laban Ayran (they know how
to do it properly) Beware of the meat Shawarma, it's very greasy,
*very*.  Quantity of food: plenty. 3 starters to share plus main
course is enough.  Baklawa and/or fruit is included in the cover
price. If you can eat the whole tray of baklawa (about 40+) your meal
is on the house (that's what they told me) Additional notice:
Check-out the Maitre d'Hotel. He thinks he's Lebanese but in fact he
is Spanish, and it's funny to hear him speak Arabic ;-)

Name: Al Hamra
Location: 31/33 Shepherd Market, Mayfair, W1Y
Telephone: 071-493 1954
Cost per person: GBP.29 (US$58) + drinks
Quality: Situated in the heart of Mayfair, a very prestigious area of
town, Al Hamra is pretty expensive. But then again, it is the only
place which has someone at the entrance to park your car for you.
Since it is so hard to park in central London, it's pretty good,
especially in the evening when you don't want to walk the streets. The
food is of good quality. But then, one would really expect it. Book in
advance, because the restaurant is pretty small and very popular.
Quantity of food: less than in Maroush III, but who says that quantity
counts ?

Name: Fakhreldine
Location: 85 Piccadilly, Mayfair, W1
Telephone: 071-493 3424
Cost per person: GBP.40+ (US$80+) + drinks

Quality: Very popular, very expensive, very good. The bill seems to be
exponential with what you eat. If you have a business meal with
anybody you want to impress, take them there. Most people whom I know
and have gone there have gone only once. They are still saving for the
next time !  This is known to be the best in town. Go there, if you
can afford it.  Quantity of food: at those prices, do you bother ?
It's the people there that matter. Who knows, you could be striking
the deal of your career !

Name: Beit Eddine
Location: 8 Harriet Street, SW1X
Telephone: 071-235 3969
Cost per person: GBP.25 (US$50) including drinks

Quality: This is a small restaurant where it is advisable to book
during week-ends. The food is good, but nothing special. But a friend
of mine really likes it. I guess the atmosphere, although being
simple, is very pleasant. Shawarma is pretty good. Lahem Meshwi is a
bit dry, so be sure to order Humus to dip the meat in...  Quantity of
food: the portions are rather small. Be sure to order enough !

Take-away food:

There is a quantity of takeaway shops for Arabic food in London, especially
on the Edgware Road. After having tried nearly all of them, I can only
recommend one (in addition to Maroush II):

Name: Ranoush Juice
Location: 43 Edgware Road, W2
Telephone: 071-723 5929
Cost of sandwich: GBP.2.50 (US$5) average
Recommended sandwiches: Chicken Shawarma; Mouttabal Sandwich
Recommended drinks: freshly-made carrot juice, it's good for you !
Recommended process-to-get-served: go to the till, and order your food; pay
and use the ticket that you get to give to the cooks. If you are a pretty
girl you'll probably get served immediately ;-).
Note: refurbished in March 1994, the place is now so bright inside that
one needs to wear shades. The eating area has been expanded a bit as well.
It gets really crowded in the summer.

There is a quantity of takeaway shops for Arabic food in London, especially
on the Edgware Road. After having tried nearly all of them, I can only
recommend one:

  Editorial Note: I have used GBP for Great Britain Pound Sterling, and
the exchange rate is US$ 2 for GBP 1. -  I can't be bothered to use
the exact exchange rate.

  The PHOENICIA, 11/13 Abingdon Road (Off Kensington High Street)
London W8. Tel: 071 937 0120. The food is
consistently excellent, the quantities are more than ample, the prices are
reasonable and extremely good value, and above all the service is
friendly, courteous. They even speak Lebanese instead of the condescending
French some are prone to. It merits at least one visit every time I leave
this cold country for the nearest I can get to a good Lebanese meal
barring home cooking. Try their mezza!
----

 the folowing info might be of intresrt:
 The only authentic Lebanese restaurant that I know about is called
Byblos.  It is in San Franisco, on Lombard & Buchannan in the Marina area.

"La Mediterranee" on college avenue in Berkeley.
Not great but just ok, very Americanized...

Is Mediterranean Gardens still in business?  They were on San Pablo St in 
Albany a few years ago, and served quite fine Lebanese cuisine (authentic,of
course).  I used to live in SF, and went there frequently, but no longer
live in the area.  The proprietor was Youssef, and I recall that his mother
made some of the dishes.  I do not know the address, but recall parking near
Chemical Bank (?), and that it is on the east side of the street.
(George Ayoub)

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23. Where can I find a Lebanese grocery store?

  There are two large Arab shopping areas that I know of in NY/NJ:

Brooklyn, NY, Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn Heights.
Paterson, NJ, off Guarden State Pkwy, Hazel Street exit.
_______________________________________________________________________________

  In St.Louis:

Middle-Eastern Markets (Aswak al shark-al-awsat) on Grand Blvd.
Jay International Markets on Grand Blvd.
Al Madina Al Arabia in North County.
_______________________________________________________________________________

Phoenicia Bakery & Deli   [very good bread]
2912 S Lamar Blvd
Austin, TX
(512) 447-4444

Austin Gourmet Market
1931-G East Oltorf
Austin, TX
(512) 444-4344

_______________________________________________________________________________
These two bakeries in Michigan will ship baklava:

  Afrah Bakery
  12741  W. Warren
  Dearborn, MI 48126
  Phone: 313-582-7878

  Shatila Food Products
  8505 W. Warren
  Dearborn, MI 48126
  Tel. (313) 934-1520
  Fax. (313) 934-3232

Warren Avenue in Dearborn, Michigan: *Lots* of places where you can find
Lebanese grocery stores and restaurants, Lebanese bookstores, 
Lebanese music stores etc ...
______________________________________________________________________________
For Paris-France 
 A nice one and cheap one is " Boulangerie et patessirie du cedre"
(10 small-bread packets for 35 FF)
58 Av Dausmenil 75012 Paris (near gare de lyon) tel 43 43 14 61
 Also Traiteur Arnaout (belongs to the same person) they have some 
Lebanese products and food;
64 Av Dausmenil 75012 Paris  tel 43 43 35 20
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24. Is there a good Lebanese recipe book ?

  Fann-Al-Tabkh by Georges Al-Rayess.
*The* book on Lebanese cuisine. This book is a classic, and is 
extremely thorough. Not for the amateur cuisinard or the faint-of-heart,
though. Can be obtained from Librairie Antoine in Beirut.

  For a more practical and less complicated cookbook, see Madeleine
Farah's book 'Middle-Eastern Cuisine'

There is also "Cooking  the Lebanese  Way" by Cedar  Hashashe.

  Another alternative is a book,  that is not specifically Lebanese
but contains many Lebanese and other Middle Eastern recipes:

Claudia Roden: A New Book of Middle Eastern Food. Penguin.

Sahtayn!

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25. Are there recipes available on the net ?

  Yes! Telnet to Archie and search for recipes with the command: prog
recipes. Here you will get the address of the servers that have on-
line recipes. Choose the server closest to you and FTP the file(s).

following are addresses to Archie servers:

archie.doc.ic.ac.uk [146.169.11.3]     UK/European  Imperial, London,
                                                      UK
archie.funet.fi     [128.214.6.100]    European     FUnet, Helsinki,
                                                      Finland
archie.au           [139.130.4.6]      Australian   Deakin, Geelong,
                                                      Australia
archie.sura.net     [128.167.254.179]  World        SURAnet,
                                                      Maryland, USA
archie.rutgers.edu  [128.6.18.15]      World        Rutgers, New
                                                      Jersey, USA
archie.unl.edu      [129.93.1.14]      World        Lincoln, Nebraska,
                                                      USA
archie.ans.net      [147.225.1.2]      World        ANS, New York, US

archie.mcgill.ca    [132.206.2.3]      World        McGill, Montreal,

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26.  Is there an ftp archive site for Lebanese art works ?

  There is an effort undertaken by Barre Ludvigsen and Berthe Choueiry
to provide a multimedia server of cultural material relating to Lebanon and  
the Middle East. Material is deposited as it appears and as people contribute.
Everyone is urged to contact Barre Ludvigsen at <borrel@sigallah.dhhalden.no>
or to directly add to the collection and contribute under the cultural material
heading.
  Barre created recently a WWW home page at his site, it's name is :
MultiMedia ftp servers for the Levant, it contains four pointers to the ftp 
servers : liasun3.epfl.ch, ftp.dhhalden.no and rama.poly.edu and 
eurecom27.cica.fr, also it contains some pointers on WWW pages related to 
specific authors/Topics  here it's the 
address and the contents of this page :


http://www.ludvigsen.dhhalden.no/webdoc/levant_servers.html

MultiMedia ftp servers for the Levant

(welcome)

to the homepage for the multimedia ftp servers for the Levant

The four anonymous ftp servers liasun3.epfl.ch:/users/choueiry (128.178.155.12),

ftp.dhhalden.no:/ftp/pub/levant (158.36.33.3), rama.poly.edu (128.238.10.212)
and 
eurecom27.cica.fr:8080 contain cultural material pertaining to Lebanon in
particular
and the Levant in general. 

Here are pages with directory trees of both servers, in Halden and Lausanne.
Good
points to begin your explorations into Levantine culture on the net. 

Eurecom27.cica.fr contains the soc.culture.lebanon FAQs (frequently asked
questions).

Here's a list of recommendables. You're in Norway now, so the first two should
come as no surprise:

   The Oslo Agreement ("Gaza and Jericho first")

   The Cairo Agreement 

   The Um Kalthoum Homepage. A short biography, song texts, songs (audio),
   pictures and films.

   Elie's pictures from Lebanon. A wonderfully nostalgic collection of
   photographs from Lebanon by Elie Wardini and others.

   Elie's project "A Diachronic Lexical Typology of Lebanese Place-Names".

   Historical pictures from the Levant. (Bonfils and others) These are glass
   lantern slides about 120 years old, salvaged from the ruins of war-torn
Beirut
   by Elie Wardini's father - allah i tawil @umrhou! If you do go exploring
   history through the pictures here, try to help us by identifying the
unidentified
   ones.

   Samir's postcards from Lebanon.

   Brochures of historic sites from the Ministry of Tourism of the 1970's.

   The famous "WPI.news.release" from SCL.

   Films I've recorded three short experimental video takes related to Um
   Kalthoum. (In the Apple Macintosh QuickTime format.) 

   Slides from Agence Bleue with sights from Lebanon and war-torn Beirut.
   There's a fact-sheet and directories with both small and large versions.

   The Classics and Mediterranean Archaeology Home Page at the Department of
   Classical Studies, University of Michigan also has a wealth of information
   mostly (but not only) concerning the ancient Near East.

   Architecture & Architectural Sculpture of the Mediterranean Basin 

These are the servers:

   liasun3.epfl.ch 

      Is situated at the Artificial Intelligence Lab of the Ecole Polytechnique
      Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland and contains lots of wonderful
      pictures, texts, songs (arabic text and audio), maps, animations, etc.
      This is the original cultural multimedia server for Lebanon and the
      Levant, established in August 1992, courtesy of Berthe Choueiry. 

   ftp.dhhalden.no 

      Contains pictures, texts, tourist brochures and is a companion server to
      liasun3.epfl.ch. Its home is at the stfold Regional College in Halden,
      Norway and maintained by Barre Ludvigsen. 

   rama.poly.edu 

      The "Sounds of Lebanon" site contains audio data, the scl FAQ and
      some other things from soc.culture.lebanon, Arabic language editors
      and various other material. It's maintained by Bassem Medawar at the
      Polytechnic University of New York's Farmingdale, Long Island
      campus. 

   eurecom27.cica.fr

      Alaa Dakroub's ftp server. Contains SCL stuff, Lebanon FAQs and
      back issues of Leb-Net News.

borrel@dhhalden.no 

Barre will be happy to help anyone who feels they might have  
something to contribute.

There is another WWW home page, managed by Barre also, it contains a nice set 
of pictures from Lebanon contributed by Elie Wardini.
Address : http://www.ludvigsen.dhhalden.no/webdoc/elies_pictures.html 
  
For more details of the contents of the ftp directories please try to read the
README files and the Index files.

Disclaimer from liasun3 server 
-------------------------------------------------------
This is a purely experimental server maintained on a voluntary
basis by individuals whose contributions are made on their spare time.
Therefore, no support in the use of this server is given by the staff
of epfl. If you cannot find the help you need in the README files,
refer to the sysop of your local system for help. As for support from
contributors to this server, use them only as a last resort.

Before attempting to download or reading any of the files on this
server, we ask you *please to read the REAME files*.

File types are as follows, remember to set the correct transfer mode
and note the filesize before downloading:

.gif  - graphics image (pictures or Arabic texts)
.snd  - soundbyte
.au   - soundbyte
.uu   - uuencoded file (mostly graphics)
.msg  - message
.JPEG - graphics image
.tiff - graphics image
.anim - directory of sequential .tiff "movie" images

Files with other extensions will usually be text files where the
extension denotes the character of the file contents.
-----------------------------------------------------
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27. What is the best way to deal with multiple system TVs and VCRs and 
    how can I get my VCR tape converted to a format that works in Lebanon ?

  Three solutions :

    1. Buying a switchable television and use your video recorder.
    2. Buying a switchable video recorder (PAL / SECAM / NTSC) and
        a PAL / SECAM television.
    3. Buying a switchable video recorder (PAL / NTSC) and a
        PAL / SECAM television.

   First case : You can watch to drench and foreign broadcast,
you can use your video recorder and your tapes, but you can't record
French broadcast.

   Second case : You have still to find a French PAL / SECAM
television. That should not be that much expensive. But : in that case,
you can watch the local broadcasts, watch your tapes AND record local
broadcasts.

   I don't know how much costs a switchable television, but as
for the video recorder, it's about 300.000 yen in Japan for the only
model available. That video recorder converts any video signal to any
other.

    Some people may point out that the conversion is not perfect.
That's true. In fact, the signal conversion achieved by that video
recorder is a VERY LOW COST conversion. It converts SECAM to a pseudo
PAL, PAL to a pseudo NTSC, but that's neither a professional quality,
nor a broadcast quality.

    Just for information : a professional quality PAL/SECAM/NTSC
converter (the converter only) costs 1.800.000 yen.

    Third case : There is another video recorder (AIWA) which
converts NTSC to PAL only. That one is quite cheap (60.000 yen here
in Japan). That one with a French SECAM / PAL television would make
it, if you don't expect too much quality, and if you don't record
SECAM broadcasts.

    About the quality : There are some video recorders allowing
to make low speed records (one third of the normal speed). Up to six
hours on one tape, but of course lower quality. The quality of a low
cost converter is about the same...

    The ideal solution : you buy a switchable television AND
a switchable video recorder. In that case, you can record in any format
you want and use your tapes in any country. Since you don't need the
signal conversion, you get a broadcast quality image in any case.
_______________________________________________________________________________

  Here are some recommendations for businesses that will convert
VCR tapes from one standard to another : 

 DAKE International
 3208 Foxboro Dr.
 Richardson, TX 75082
 (214) 234-8518 1pm-9pm

  The cost is $18.50 per tape which includes a new tape and shipping.
They can convert to any TV system: PAL, SECAM to NTSC or vice versa.

  Another one is in Raleigh, NC.  It provides conversion from and to
any format (VHS, VHS-C and 8 mm types of cassettes).
This will allow playback of videotapes made overseas, here on U.S.
TV's and VCR's (NTSC System).
  The service will also convert the other way around,(i.e. from
U.S. system to any of the systems used anywhere else in the world - PAL,
SECAM, etc..)

Mailing Address:  INTERNATIONAL VIDEO CONVERSION
                  520 Harvest Lane
                  Raleigh, NC 27606-2217

Phone:            (919) 233-8689

Fees:             $24.90 + $5.00 S&H
                  (Price of a High Grade Cassette Included, 2hrs or less)

Delivery:         Mailed back the next day, express shipping at request.

Payment:          Check, Cash or Money Order mailed with tape.

Conversions from photographic pictures, slides, 8, super 8, 16 mm movies to
any of the video standards are also provided.

  A third one is:

SOMI International
50 Summer Street
Edison, NJ 08820.
Phone 908 548 3065

  Their price is good ($12.99 for a regular 2-hr tape and $17.99 for more than
2-hr tape, include $3/tape for postage and handling).
  

  Fourth recommendation :

  This information was obtained from listings in VideoMaker Magazine.
Another good company is:

        RVT
        1911 Douglas Boulevard #85
        Roseville
        CA 95661
        (916) 773-3705

  The approximate cost is around $25 for 2 hours including tape
and return shipping.
CA residents have to pay tax at 7.25%. They have a 24 hour turnaround time.

*******************************************************************************

28. What are the Arabic TV channels that can be received in Northern and 
    central America
There are currently four Arabic channels that could be received anywhere
in the US, Canada, and central America either directly through satellite, 
or through local cable companies.


These channels are:

1- ANA (Arab Network of America)
      Originates from Washington, it broadcast for about 16 hours a day,
Monday to Friday, all day Saturday and Sunday. Their broadcast includes children
programing news, movies, and a lot of Arabic music videos.
This broadcast is carried on by some local cable companies, and the only way to 
receive it if it is not carried on your local cable is by satellite:
Tune to..............................................Satcom F2 channel 1 C band

2- ED TV (Arab Emirate television) 
     This broadcast is directly from Dubia. It broadcast for approximately 16 
hours a day 7 days a week. also had children programing, news, Aerobic, Art, 
Music, religion, etc.
This program is not carried on cable, and to receive it on satellite
tune to..............................................Galaxy 7 channel 17 C band

 3- Islamic religion broadcast.
This broadcast is produced in the US. It shows Islamic and religious movies.
tune to............................................Pan Am Sat channel 9 KU band

4-SCOLA international.
This is a combination of news and shows from all over the world including
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Gordon, Kuwait etc.
It broadcast Arabic for about 3 hours a day mostly news
tune to.............................................Satcom F4 channel 23 C band

In order to receive these programs on cable, talk to your local cable carrier,
or for the same price the cable charges, you can install your own satellite, 
and receive all these channels free.

*******************************************************************************

29. What are newborn names that could be used for Lebanese children living
abroad that would work in both Lebanon and western societies.

For girls:

  If names sound alike (Homonyms) the first one mentioned will
be the Arabic spelling, then the English (or the English equivalent):

Dana            Danah     The name that got the most votes from the net
Dania
Dina
Dima
Farah           Farrah   
Faten          
Hala
Hana            Hannah    
Jihane         
Johayna
Joumana
Karima
Laura          
Leila           Leyla/Layla
Lina
Lubna
Mariam          Myriam
Marwa
May
Maya
Mona
Moniya
Nadia
Nadine
Najat
Nariman
Nour
Noura           Nora
Rania
Salam
Samar           Summer
Samia
Sawsan          Susan
Safiyya         Sofia
Sara            Sarah
Sourayya
Sukayna
Yasmin          Jasmin

For boys:

Yusef           Joseph 
Ree'an          Ryan  
Kareem  
Nabil  Bill
Waleed
Sami
Nadeem
Fadi  
Chadi  Chad
Fouad  Fred
Raji  Roger
Ya'oub  Jacob/Jake
Ree'an  Ryan
Naji
Farid
Ramzi  Ramsey
Samir  Sam
Rabih  Robbie

*******************************************************************************

30. I plan to go home soon and I have heard rumors that the draft
    will be re-instituted, do you have any additional information about it ?
    I was born in 1923 and I am afraid that I would be subject to the draft !

  The latest on the subject and the most recent decision  is that men
born during 1972 and later years will be drafted.  The same was also
confirmed recently in some of the arabic papers published in Canada.  
Originally it was thought that only those of 1975 will be drafted, but
it was later decided to go with 1972...

*******************************************************************************

31. Where can I get a copy of the English translation of
    the Lebanese Constitution ?

  A Translated copy of the Lebanese Constitution is archived on
borg.poly.edu (128.238.10.106) as /pub/scl/constitution.
To obtain a copy from ftp enabled sites the following commands should be
followed:
ftp borg.poly.edu  (or ftp 128.238.10.106)
login name:  anonymous
password  :  send id as password
cd pub/scl
get constitution 

also availble from eurecom.cica.fr:/SCL and from 
ftp.u.washington.edu:/public/scl

*******************************************************************************

32. Where can I get a copy of the English translation of
    Taef Agreement ?

A Translated copy of the Taef Agreement is also archived on
borg.poly.edu (128.238.10.106) as /pub/scl/taef
To obtain a copy follow similar procedure as the one followed in
the previous  question using at the end :
get taef (instead of get constitution)

also availble from eurecom.cica.fr:/SCL and from 
ftp.u.washington.edu:/public/scl
*******************************************************************************

33. I need to ship a car/or some merchandise to Lebanon, do you
    know of a shipping company that handles this ?


  There is a Lebanese person that handles shipping cars (among other things)
to Lebanon.
  His name is Hassan Issa, and his home phone is : (316) 636-4612 
You can mention that Hassan Hammoud referred you.  It may be very helpful.
Phoenicia Shipping in Woodridge-Monachie in NJ is another company that
deals with shipping merchandise to Lebanon.
Phoenicia's number is (201) 939-1010 but be warned, they're no longer
owned/operated by a Lebanese.  Charles Audi used to own Phoenicia.
The latest information about him is that he went back to Lebanon 
but is trying to reestablish himself again in the shipping business to
Lebanon.
Someone contacted them over the phone.  The guy who spoke is American.
He said they subdivide containers going to Lebanon.  For one cubic meter,
it costs $200 plus a $150 one-time "documentations  fee" (whatever that means).
You pick up your stuff from their office in Beirut.

>From San Francisco, CA, the following price was obtained in September 1993:
Company name: Danzas Corp.
Phone: (415) 871-0845 Ask for Hernando,
the Quote I got was about 260$/m3, plus an assortment of charges for
pick up, handling....

Here is another way to ship things to Lebanon (or anywhere else) Contact:

Abed Medawar
C/O Kerans and Daly
2414 Morris Ave.
Union, NJ 07083

Tel: 908-688-3893
Fax: 908-688-3924

*******************************************************************************

34. I suddenly developed an urge for Middle-Eastern cuisine,
    can you help me quench this horrifying thirst ?
 
  You can try to prepare any of the following recipes:


Tabbouleh

 1 cup fine bulgur
 1 bunch green onions, chopped
 1 bunch flat-leaf parsley, chopped fine
 1 small bunch mint, chopped
 3 medium tomatoes, seeded and chopped
 1/4 cup olive oil
 juice of 2 lemons
 1 to 2 ts salt
 fresh ground pepper to taste

Soak bulgur in hot water for 30 minutes or until  no longer crunchy.  Drain
in fine strainer then squeeze excess water out by hand.

Return bulgur to bowl and add the rest of the ingredients.  


Use the lemon juice to taste.  


>From "Cooking  the Lebanese  Way" by Cedar  Hashashe (inexpensive paperback
from AH & AW Reed) slightly adapted by me:

Tabbouli

225g (1c) fine cracked wheat  1 large onion
2 - 3 c   parsley   1/2 c olive oil
1 c       fresh mint   juice of 3 lemons
2         not-quite-ripe tomatoes       black pepper
                                        cinnamon (2 heaped tsp)
Soak the wheat 1 hr in cold water.

Finely chopped parsley, mint (I usually am  forced to use  dried mint which
is quite adequate), tomatoes and onion. Put in a large bowl.

Drain wheat and sqeeze out all moisture with hands.

Toss onto salad. Add spice, lemon juice and oil. Mix well.

Season to taste so that salad is distinctly lemon-tasting and highly spiced.


Hummos

Ingredients:
2 cans of cooked Garbanzos
1/2 cup of Tahini (sold at Int'l food stores-mashed sesame seed pulp)
1/2 cup of lemon juice
2 cloves of garlic (crushed)
1/4 cup of olive oil
2 T of chopped Italian flat leaf parsley
1 T of paprika (or ground red pepper-depending on whether you like it hot)
salt (to taste)

It is a good idea to boil the precooked garbanzo beans that come in the
cans for an extra 10 minutes, it helps make the garbanzo easier to mash
thus the final product will have less granularity in it.
Save some (about 15 garbanzo beans) whole to use for plate decorating
once the hummos is done.
mash the rest of the garbanzo beans all by themselves in the food processor
(you can add a bit-less than 1/4 cup- of water to help the processing along)
once they are finely ground, add the crushed garlic, the tahini, and start
adding the lemon juice then mix in the food processor every time
you add a little bit and taste-test (I usually put less than what the recipe
calls for then increase the lemon juice slowly to the mix until I attain the
level of tanginess that I like, so it would be a good idea to keep
adding the lemon juice slowly, until the amount of tanginess you like
is attained). same thing for salt, put a little bit than add as you go along
(or don't add if you don't want it in).
Once you are satisfied with the mix, put it in a plate, decorate with
chopped parsley and whole garbanzos in bunches, then sprinkle the
paprika or red pepper on top, and add the olive oil.
Eat with pita bread.

Sahtain
 

   Baba Ghanouj

   1 eggplant (about 1.25 lbs.)
   1/4 cup of olive oil
   1   clove of garlic, crushed
   1/2 cup of lemon juice
   1/4 cup of tahini
   2   T of minced parsley

 1. Cut the eggplant in half lengthwise and make several incisions in
    the flesh. Sprinkle the exposed meat with salt and let it drain for
    30 minutes.
 2. Coat a baking pan with the olive oil and place the eggplant
    face-down in the pan. Bake it in an oven preheated to 400F for
    about 20 or 30 minutes, until tender.
 3. Remove the eggplant and let it cool. Then scoop out the pulp and
    place it in a food-processor or blender. Discard the skin. 
 4. Place the garlic in the blender with the eggplant and puree. Add
    alternately the lemon juice and the tahini. Finally, blend in the
    parsley. Season to taste with salt and pepper if desired. 
 5. Chill before serving. Sprinkle with paprika to add a bit of color,
    if you like. Serve with raw vegetables and toasted pita
    triangles.


  Falafel

       1 lb. dry ful (fava beans)
       1 small onion
       1 bunch of chopped parsley
       2 cloves of garlic, crushed
       1 t. ground coriander
       1/4 t hot red pepper (optional)
       1 t. baking soda
       1/2 t. cumin
       Salt and pepper to taste
       1 T. flour

  Soak ful in cold water for a few days, changing water daily.  When ready,
peel ful and grind with onion in meat grinder.  Add all ingredients,
mixing well.  Grind mixture a second time.  Form into patties and fry.

Variation:  Soak 3/4 cup of dry homus with ful.  Then follow above directions.

  Stuffed Grape Leaves in Oil.

1 lb tender grape leaves
12 oz. rice
12 oz chopped red onions
4 bunches parsley chopped fine
12 oz ripe tomatoes chopped very fine
2 1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. spices (mixed cinnamon and sweet + hot pepper)
2 1/5 lb sliced tomatoes
1 pt. boiling water.
2 oz. lemon juice
4 oz. oil
potatoes cut in the thickness of 1 1/2 inch.

  My Lebanese mother-in-law adds garbanzo beans as well, about a cup
or so with the above proportions. Note that these are the "lentin"
variety; there are also grape leaves with meat, for those who eat
meat.

  As hinted above, rolling the leaves is the tricky part an the book
doesn't explain how to do it. Could anyone provide any hints on that?

  Nothing substitutes for experience.
When my wife and I make grape leaves, hers are always much tighter
and more consistent than mine. But I'm learning! Here's how we do it:

  Lay the leaf face down in front of you, with the stem end towards
you. (Be sure to remove the stem, by the way). Put a tablespoon
or two of the stuffing in the middle of the leaf. Fold in the
sides, then roll up the leaf starting with the end that is
closest to you. It's very much like rolling a burrito, if that's
any help.

  When cooking, be sure to put a plate on top of the grape leaves,
so that they don't expand too much. Also, we like to crush some
garlic and sprinkle it on top of the grape leaves before cooking.

Sahtain!


    Knafi (bil Jibn or Ushta):

  I have recently learned to make Knafi, and if I do say so, I think I have
become very good at it.  I use the shredded stuff, not the breadcrumb crust.

  First prepare the syrup ('ater) from twice as much sugar as water
with some lemon juice and orange-blossom water (mazaher).  Mixing in honey 
makes it taste more familiar to American palates, and putting in a tiny amount 
of Carob molasses (dibs) makes the flavour "heavier" (i.e. more like
something cooked).
The syrup goes in the fridge.

  Next I prepare the clotted cream ('ushta).
The ingredients are:

One liter milk,
1/4 litre heavy cream
and one teaspoonful rosewater (maward)

  Prefereably boiled over a light flame in a wide, shallow tray over
two burners.
After that, it needs to be left at room temperature overnight so that the
thick layer of stuff on the surface can trigger the coagulation of a greater
of the milk/cream mixture. 
Adding the rosewater after most of the boiling is done is a good thing to do.

  You may refrigerate the 'ushta now if you want to do this later.  The cheese
could be Lebanese white cheese (jinbi baidha) if you can get it or mozerella
otherwise.  The shredded dough needs to be well buttered : pouring melted 
butter over it is not enough, you have to leave some butter in solid form and 
rub it in to make sure every strand is coated.  I assume this will not be a 
problem with breadcrumbs.  Also, using clarified butter is a good thing to do 
if you have time.  (If you are still with me, you probably have time ;)
In order to clarify the butter, melt it and throw away the parts
that float or sink (unless, of course, you have some REAL samneh!).

  One layer of knafi in the tray followed by the cheese (cut into any shapes
you wnat: it'll melt anyway), covered with the 'ushta and topped off by another
layer of buttered knafi is the final configuration.
  Bake at 350 for half an hour then raise the temperature to 450 to brown it;
remove when it looks brown enough
(unless you see smoke, which is another indication it is done :>).

Baklava recipes

Syrup Ingredients:

1.5 cups sugar
 .5 cup water
1 tablespoon mazaher (orange blossom water)
squeeze of lemon

Baklava Ingredients:

1 box phillo dough
3 cups chopped walnuts
1 tablespoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons mazaher
2 sticks melted unsalted butter
honey

1. Cook syrup first so that, if you mess up the syrup, you can
   make another batch.

   Combine all syrup ingredients and cook over medium heat and
   after it has come to a boil cook for 5 minutes and remove
   from the heat. Do not let it get too thick when it's still cooking
   or it won't be absorbed by the phillo dough.
   Place syrup in the refridgerator.

2. For the walnut mix - mix walnuts, mazaher and honey. Mix honey in
   so that the walnuts stick together but are not dripping. 

3. Using a pastry brush, put a coat of butter on cookie sheet. Carefully
   place 1 sheet of phillo on top of butter.  Brush sheet with butter
   then put another sheet on top of that one. Continue until you've
   used 1/3 of the phillo.

4. Spread the walnut mixture on the phillo, leaving a tiny bit of space
   at the edges. Cover with the rest of the phillo, spreading butter
   between each sheet.

5. Make sure the top of the baklava has butter spread all over it. Then.
   cut the baklava in squares.

6. Place in oven at 350 degrees for about 15 minutes - but watch it closely.

7. When the Baklava is done cooking pour the syrup on top  - a little at
   a time using a spoon or ladle. 

   The thing to remember about the syrup is hot baklava/cold syrup or
   cold baklava/hot syrup. You want the maximum amount of syrup to be
   absorbed.



BAKLAVA

Fillo dough (pastry leaves).
1 1/4 cups butter/margarine
1/4 cup sugar
1-2 tsp cinamon (ground)
4 cups almonds, slivered and chopped.
cloves (NOT ground)

syrup:
4 cups sugar
3 cups water
1/2 cup honey
1 stick cinamon
5-6 cloves (NOT ground)


Mix sugar, cinamon, sugar, and almonds.

Lay the fillo dough out on a table.  Fillo dough will dry quickly, so
you'll need to work fast, so what spills out of the pan doesn't dry
(although it will anyway), and keep a damp towel on the rest of it (that
you had laid on the table) so it doesn't dry.
 On a medium-sized, buttered pan (you'll need to melt the butter) lay
one of the sheets of dough.  Butter it, and lay another on top of that.
Continue until you have 5-6 sheets of dough on the bottom of the pan.
Then lay another sheet, and do NOT butter it.  On that, put some of the
almond mix, enough to cover it evenly, but not making a thick layer. On
that, lay another sheet of dough, butter it, and then another,
unbuttered.  On that place some almond mix again.  Repeat until all the
mix is gone, or you have only 4-5 sheets of dough left.

Fold in the dough that hangs from the side of the pan.  Some of sthem
will be dry, so just cut them and discard them.  Make sure to butter
all of them (except, of course, if they have almonds on them).Lay down
some more sheets of dough, buttering every one, and cutting off the
edges, that hang from the sides of the pan. here, I've found it easier
if you just lay the dough down, width of dough to length of pan.  That
is to say, the width of the dough is sometimes about teh same size as
the length of the pan, and the length of the dough about twice the widht
of the pan, so lay the short side of the dough down along the length of
the pan, so that some (about half) of it will hang out the end.  Then
butter it, and fold what hangs back in the pan, buttering that.  This
way you get it to look better, and stick better.

When you're done with laying the sheets of dough down, make sure you
butter the first one VERY well, and sprinkle some water on it before you
put it in the oven.  Also, with a sharp, pointy knife, cut the top few
sheets of dough, not getting all the way through, just sort of
"scratching" the top layer and marking the pieces, in rhombus-shaped
pieces.   I find it easier to cut along lengthwise, and then sideways,
from corner to corner, and lines paralel toothat:

______________
|  /  /  /  / |
|_/__/__/__/__|      <--I HOPE you get this "drawing"..and i hope it's useful.
|/  /  /  /  /|
|__/__/__/__/_|

(you get the idea).

Then, at the center of each rhombus, stick a clove, so that it keeps the
sheets of dough together.  Bake at 350 degrees for about 1 hour, until
golden-brown, and the edges no longer touch the wall of the pan.


Syrup:

Place sugar and water in a pan and bring tooa boil  Boil for 5 minutes,
then add honey and spices and simmer until all is combined well, 
 10 minutes maybe, enough for the spices to give off flavor.
Retain the syrup hot until the baklava comes out of the oven and cools.
Pour the hot syrup over the cold baklava.  (some do it the other way, I
don't think it matters, as long as one is hot and the other cold, so
that it "boils" into the baklava and it saturates it well, whicle at the
same time keeps the top layer of filo dough crispy).

Note:  I usually put in along with the spices a piece of lemon peel.  A
friend of mine, on the other hand, uses 1-2 tbsp rosewater.  They both
work well, and I sugest one of them. 

Note2:  (on syrup/baklava hot/cold thing):  I think you can save
yourself some time if you just take the baklava out, and then start the
syrup, so that by the time you're done, the baklava will have cooled
down enough.

Note3:  You may use wallnuts or baking pistachios instead of almonds, or
any wallnut/almond or pistachio/almond combo.  I've never tried
pistachio/almond/wallnut all in one, but I don't think it would be good.
Anyway, I usually prefer not to put any wallnuts because they give off
wallnut oil, which I don't think is fitting. (I guess I could roast them
first, so they wouldn't give off the oil, but I'm not a big wallnut fan
as it is.)  Pistachios make it extra-special.   Make sure that, no
matter what you use, they're ground coarsly.

Baklava 

here's my recipe.  i'm doing this off the top of my head, so bear with me. :)

1 pkg philo dough
1 bag (the larger of the 2 kinds of bags, i think 8 oz) walnuts
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp nutmeg
almonds (optional, if i add them, i do 2 parts walnuts to 1 part almonds)
3 sticks butter (not margarine!)
3/4 cups sugar

syrup:
1/2 water
1/2 cup sugar
1 1/2 cups honey
3 or 4 lemon slices
1 cinnamon stick

make syrup:

dissolve sugar in water, bring to boil. add honey, cinn. stick and lemon 
slices, reduce heat and let simmer for about 20 minutes.  strain and leave to 
cool.

assemble baklava:

preheat oven to 325-350 (depends on how hot your oven is)

in a food processor, grind nuts, mix with sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg.  set 
aside.  melt butter.  in a large pan (i use a roasting pan that is about the
size of a sheet of philo) place 2 layers philo, butter them lightly, then 2 
more sheets, repeating this until you have about 8 or 10 layers.  add 1/3 of 
the nut mixture.  cover with 2 more layers, lightly butter, repeat until you
have about 6 layers, add another third of the nut mixture.  repeat this until
you have used all the nut mixture, then layer the remaining philo and butter on
top.

take a sharp knife and cut diagonal through the top layers of philo (not past
the top nut layer, and about 1 1/2 - 2 inches wide).  turn and do the same on
the opposite diagonal, to form diamond shapes.  bake for 1 hour, or until 
golden.  turn oven off and let baklava sit in oven for 1 more hour.  

remove, pour cooled syrup over hot baklava.  take knife and slice all the way
through the cuts you made previously.  let cool, and enjoy!

p.s. until you get very fast at assembling the baklava, you might want to cover
the sheets with a damp towel while you are putting it together.
-- 

Ragout of Green Beans (Loobyieh ou rozz)
---------------------

Ingredients:

2 lbs. 10 oz green beans strung and cut
1 lb meat cut in medium-sized pieces
7 oz. onions chopped
6 cloves of garlic cut
5 oz. butter
2 tbs salt
1/2 tbs pepper
2 pts 2oz boiling water
2 lb tomatoes cut in slices

Clean and string beans and cut them in halves. Melt butter in a pot and fry
onions, garlic and meat. when onions turn brown add tomatoes, then beans, salt 
and spices. After two minutes turn the beans with a flat ladle. Repeat this 
four times. Add boiling water and cook fast for 30 minutes. Reduce heat
and continue cooking, stirring occasionally until beans are done.
Serve with rice on the side.




 Potato kibbeh recipe from the book
_The Art Of Cooking_ or Fann al Tabkh

Potato Kibbeh


Ing.

1 kg.  of potatoes
1 cup of Burghul (soaked in water) [alternatively called Bulgur]
1/2 cup of flour
2 onions (chopped) 
3 cloves of garlic (chopped)
1 bunch of fresh cilantro (or coriander) chopped
salt (to taste)
1 gram of ground white pepper
1 gram of ground black pepper
1 pinch of cumin
1 pinch of nutmeg
150 grams of olive oil

Boil potatoes, taking extra care not to overcook them, peel potatoes.
Saute' onions, garlic and cilantro in a little bit of
olive oil.  Mash the potatoes, mix in the flour, the burghul (after
draining them and squeezing excees water out), the spices and the 
sauteed ingredients.  Form into small patties, and fry them in olive
oil over medium heat for approximately 20 minutes (until they
are golden brown color).
Eat.

Sahtain


Here is another recipe for "Potato Kibbeh". I suppose this one is a 
"jabalieh"!! Mountaineer Potato Kibbeh ;-)


3 potatoes (large)
1/2 cup of Burghul Na'em (Fine Bulgur)
1 onion
1 to 2 cloves of garlic (according to taste)
3 tablespoons of Tehini


Boil potatoes and peel.
Mash the potatoes and the onion together using either 
a hand-mill or a food processor. I have personally found that a mill usually
gives better results (maintains a solid mixture). Add the burghul and the
garlic and mix well. You may choose to pass everything
through the mill or food processor once more to get good mixing. Finally, add
the tehini and again mix well. If you find the tehini to be a little
too thick, add some water. Serve chilled on a platter and decorate with
fresh mint leaves and olive oil. Good appetite.

 
Mjadara recipe.
 
Ingredients:
 
1 cup of lentil (the orange-colored type that you can find in health stores
                 international stores and even some groceries)
4 cups of water
1/2 cup of rice
1 huge onion
pepper and salt to taste (a couple of pinches should do)
 
Chop the onion and fry with some oil until moderately brown.  Place the rice
lentil and water in a pot, add the salt and pepper and the onion and bring to
a boil.  After the mixture reaches the boiling point, reduce temperature to
low, cover the pot, and let simmer for 20-40 minutes.  I like the mjadra to
have a pudding consistency.  So uncover the pot 30 minutes after letting it
simmer to check if the pudding consistency has been reached.  If the thick
pudding consistency was not achieved, then cover the pot again and let simmer
for 10 minutes.  Keep checking until the pudding consistency has been achieved.
At this point, pour content in deep dishes and let cool in room temperature.
 
When cooled, the mjadra will become firm.  Get a small white onion, cut it in
quarters and place in saucer w/ cold water.  Heat some Lebanese bread.  And...
sahtein...
 
Hint: it takes me a couple of times before I fully achieve the desired flavor
when I cook.  My first time around is usually experimental, though I learn from
it in order to perfect the dish the second time around.  My latest experiment
was Mloukhieh.  That was rather complicated but it turned out delicious!!
 

Sambusik.


Meat Filling:
1 tablespoon butter   1/2 teaspoon allspice
1 small onion chopped   Pinch of cinnamon
.5 to 1 lb ground beef or lamb  Salt and pepper to taste
3 to 4 tablespoons of pine nuts  2 teaspoons of lemon juice

Melt butter in saucepan and add onion.  Saute' until tender and then
add meat.  Cook until just brown, then add remaining ingredients.  Cook
and stir about 2 minutes.


Spinach Filling:
1 lb spinach fresh or frozen  Juice of one squeezed lemon
1/4 cup olive oil   1/4 teaspoon sumak
1 small onion chopped   Salt and pepper to taste
1/4 crumbled feta cheese or
 cottage cheese

Rinse spinach throughly several times and trim off stems.  Chop leaves
and drain well.  If you use frozen spinach, squeeze dry after thawing
and fluff with a fork to separate.  Put it in a large bowl, and then
start heating olive oil and add onion.  Saute' about a minute and then
add this to the bowl of spinach.  Add remaining ingredients and toss/
stir gently to mix well.


Cheese Filling:
1 cup crumbled feta, ricotta,  1/2 cup fresh parsley
 or Syrian cheese   Salt and pepper to taste
1 small onion grated

Combine all ingredients in a bowl and mix well.


Prepare filling.  Preheat oven to 350F.  Using filo dough (about 20 sheets
for each recipe, or one box), cut lengthwise into thirds (making long, thin
strips).   Keep the rest covered with plastic wrap to prevent it from drying
out.  Using one strip (of the three), take one from the top and brush it with
clarified (melted) butter.  Then continue until you have a total of four, all
stacked on top of each other, each one brushed with butter (except the top
one). 

Place a heaping tablestoon in the corner of each strip, and fold it flag-
flag fashion, to make a triangle.  Place seam-side (when you are done folding
it, it looks like a seam - just turn it upside down) on a baking sheet with
as many as the baking sheet can hold, but give each a little space inbetween.
Brush each top with butter and bake about 15 or 20 minutes or until the top
is golden.

If your butter starts to get cold (hard to brush sheets with), just put it
on the stove for a few minutes until it melts.  The butter is best when it is
melted, but not too hot.  It is good to use a paint brush to brush the sheets,
and I don't know if you've ever made baklawa before, but follow the directions
of thawing the filo dough.  It is hard to make sometimes, but if you have it
at the right temperature, it will work very well.  Be sure to cover the dough
that you are not using, to make sure it doesn't dry out on you.

I think this is the best recipe (easiest), but if it's the first time you are
using it, it won't take very long before you know how to wrap each triangle.

Salam and sahteen,



Rice Bidfeen Recipe
-------------------

Ingredients:
3 lb. rump of lamb with bones (boneless beef can be substituted)
2.5 lb small onions
1.25 lb rice (soaked)
3 tsb cumin
1/2 tsp spices *
8 oz. soaked chickpeas (or Garbanzo beans)
11 oz. butter
3.5 tsp salt
3 pts water (9pts if "American" rice is used)

Cut meat into medium-sized pieces. Melt butter in a pan and fry the meat and
bones till they are a golden brown. Lift meat and bones into a pot and add
salt, pepper and water and allow to boil for about an hour. In the meantime,
fry the onions and chickpeas in the same butter in which the meat was fried,
until golden brown. Add onion, chickpeas with the butter to the boiling meat.
Add cumin and spices. After the meat is done, remove a large portion of the
meat, onions and chickpeas and put them aside. Add the rice to the water
and remaining meat. Cook rice until it's done.

When ready to serve, put rice in a platter and arrange the meat and onions that
were put aside on top of it.
Yogurt can be served on the side.


* A mixture of cinnamon and hot and sweet peppers.



Pita Bread Recipe

This recipe comes from Bernard Clayton's "New Complete Book of Breads, 
Revised and Expanded", Simon and Schuster, 1973, p 679

I have tried the recipes for pita in Moosewood and in Beard on Bread
but this one has consistently produced the best results for me.

If you have any interest in making breads, Clayton's book is a must!

     PITA    -  eight 6-inch pieces

The pieces of dough must be rolled flat before they are placed into a
hot (500F) oven.  The dough should be rolled to a thickness of no more
than 3/16 inch.  This is the thickness of a wooden yardstick, the kind
given away at country fairs, auto dealers, and paint stores.  It can
be used as a gauge.  The oven heat generates steam inside the pita which
causes the dough to puff into a ball.  Later, as it cools the dough will
collapse.  The oven must be hot.  If it is not, the piece of dough will
think it is meant to be a bun, and will rise slowly but without the all-
important pocket in the center.

While this is a yeast dough, it puffs because of the steam.  The yeast
only adds flavor and texture.  Don't overpower the dough with flour
or it will be too dry to allow sufficient steam to be generated.
Leave the dough on the soft side.  Sprinkles of flour will take care
of stickiness.

Ingredients:

2.5 cups bread flour, approx.
2 tsp salt
1 Tbs sugar
1 package dry yeast
2 Tbs oil, olive oil preferred
1 cup hot water (120-130F)

Eight 7-inch squares of aluminum foil

Into a large mixing bowl measure 1 cup flour and stir in the dry
ingredients.  Add the oil and hot water.  Mix for about 30 seconds
to blend and then beat vigorously with a wooden spoon for three
minutes.  Stir in the balance of the flour, 1/2 cup at a time.
The dough should be a rough, shaggy mass that will clean the sides
of the bowl.  If the dough is moist, add a small amount of flour.

Turn the dough onto a lightly floured work surface and knead with a
rhythmic motion of push-turn-fold.  Knead for about 6 minutes.

Preheat oven to 500F.

Divide the dough into eight pieces.  Roll into balls, cover with
wax paper or a towel, and let rest for 20 minutes.

With the palm of your hand, flatten each ball into a disk.  With
a rolling pin, flatten the dough into a disk about 6 inches in
diameter and 3/16-inch thick.  Their thinness is more important
than making perfect circles.  Irregularity adds charm!

Place each round on a prepared piece of foil.  Placing the
rounds on the foil rather than on a baking sheet or stone allows
a softer heat to surround the dough.  A direct thrust of heat
from a baking sheet or stone would form a crust difficult to puff.

Carefully place 2 or 3 of the breads (on their foil) directly on
an oven rack in the oven.   Back for about 8 minutes, or until
they are puffed.  Repeat with remaining disks.  Place the pitas
under the broiler for 2 minutes if a browner crust is desired.

Remove the breads from the oven and wrap in a large piece of
foil.  The tops will fall and there will be a pocket in the
center.  Serve warm, or let cool and freeze.   Thaw before
using.  To reheat, stack several in a pile, wrap in foil,
and place in 375F oven for 10 to 15 minutes.

*******************************************************************************
35. Where can I find information about US State Department visa regulations
    for foreigners.

     If you need any information about US visas or related subjects,
check out the new State Department BBS.
Here is a detailed description on how to access the BBS:

  In order to access the Sate Department's BBS, you need to have
  a Telecommunications software, such as Procomm, a modem, and a
  phone line (of course!).
  In the Telecommunications software, set the transmissions options
  as follows:

  Baude Rate: 9600(or 2400 if 9600 is not available)
  Parity:     None
  Data bits:  8
  Stop bits:  1
  Duplex:     Full
  Phone number: 1-(202) 647 9225
    
  Then, use the dial command to connect to the BBS. Once connected,
  online information will come up on screen, and it is easy to follow.

This procedure was tested with a 9600 baud modem, and it worked fine!

Note:  The BBS is not connected to Internet, yet! 

The U.S Embassy is to reopen in Beirut. For more details here a UPI article of
Sun, 14 Nov 93

Date: Sun, 14 Nov 93 11:40:10 EST
Subject: U.S. Embassy announces partial reopening in Lebanon

 AWKAR, Lebanon (UPI) -- The U.S. Embassy in Lebanon announced Sunday
the partial reopening of its consular section, which will resume
granting tourist visas to Lebanese with previous U.S. visas in a first
such move since the 1984 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut.
 Charge d'Affaires Vincent Battle made the announcement at the heavily
guarded hilltop embassy compound in the Christian neighborhood of Awkar,
8 miles (13 km) northeast of Beirut.
 ``The service of visitor visas will be reintroduced at the U.S.
Embassy in Beirut with immediate effect,'' Battle said.
 He said only Lebanese who can prove they previously held visas to
enter the United States will be allowed to apply in Lebanon.
 Battle said first-time applicants must continue seeking U.S. consular
services outside Lebanon.
 For nearly a decade, Lebanese have been forced by the closure of the
U.S. consular section in Beirut to travel to neighboring Syria or Cyprus
for U.S. visa services.
 The United States suspended its consular activities in Lebanon after
a suicide bomber rammed the embassy compound in Awkar on Sept. 20, 1984.
 A dozen people, including two U.S. nationals, were killed and 90
others were wounded in the attack, which was claimed by the pro-Iranian
Islamic Jihad.
 One year earlier, on April 18, 1983, a suicide truck bomber wrecked
the U.S. Embassy in then Muslim-controlled west Beirut, killing more
than 60 people. Seventeen U.S. nationals died, including the CIA's top
Middle East agent.
 The U.S. charge d'affaires described the long-awaited, although
incomplete, move to reissue non-immigrant visas to Lebanese as a ``first
but significant step toward a full establishment of the consular
services in Lebanon.''
 Battle said he expected some 50,000 to 60,000 Lebanese who previously
held visas will benefit from the reactivated consular services.

*******************************************************************************

36. How can I get the latest travel advisory for Americans wishing
    to visit Lebanon or the Middle-East ?

  A collection of all travel advisories released by the State
Department during the last 4+ months is FTPable from

          RASCAL.ICS.UTEXAS [128.83.138.20]

          file Travel-Advisories in directory misc/misc.

There is another copy of these travel advisories in,
 /pub/travel-advisories/advisories on ftp.stolaf.edu
*******************************************************************************

37. Are there available statistical and basic general information about 
    Lebanon, and what are they ?

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Several files have been added to the Lebanon archives on rama.poly.edu

Forty Six files named:

       leb01.gif
 
       ...
       lebnn.gif
       ...

       leb46.gif

consisting of 46 pages were scanned  from:


        Title:             The Middle East and North Africa
        Published by:      Europa Publications Limited
        Copyright:         Europa Publications Limited 1993
        Printed and bound: In England by "Staples Printers Limited" at the 
                           Stanhope Press, Rochester, Kent, establishment.
        Issued:            In 1993.


The chapter concerning Lebanon is  entitled :

"LEBANON: Physical and Social Geography" 
       edited by  W. B. Fisher 

The average size of each of these binary gif files is 250K.

The article treats the different aspects of the country. 
It introduces the reader to its geography and economic life.  
The article contains a somewhat detailed section about the history of 
Lebanon, starting from the ancient history going through the Ottoman 
period, and discussing the economic difficulties  and constitutional 
reforms in the early days of independence from  the French occupation.  
This particular section about the history of the country ends 
with modern day Lebanon, highlighting the most recent civil war with
its inter-alliance fightings and the several Israeli invasions.  
In addition, it deals with the circumstances and events leading up
to the Taef accord. The history section was revised  by Fida Nasrallah.  

The economic section (revised by Alan George) offers seven pages of treatment
of the subject from the early c#8Path: planet!isdnlin.mtsu.edu!darwin.sura.net!math.ohio-state.edu!jussieu.fr!univ-lyon1.fr!taloa.unice.fr!pelvoux.cica.fr!huez.cica.fr!dakroub
From: dakroub@eurecom.fr (Alaa Dakroub)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.lebanon,soc.answers,news.answers
Subject: soc.culture.lebanon FAQ, part 2/2
Summary: This article contains a list of questions asked frequently
Message-ID: <2vc2sd$kcn@pelvoux.cica.fr>
Date: 5 Jul 1994 16:48:13 GMT
Expires: Sun, 31 Jul 1994 00:00:00 GMT
Sender: dakroub@huez.cica.fr (Alaa Dakroub)
Reply-To: dakroub@eurecom.fr (Alaa Dakroub)
Followup-To: soc.culture.lebanon
Distribution: world
Organization: Eurecom Sophia Antipolis France.
Lines: 2155
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
NNTP-Posting-Host: huez.cica.fr
Freqlpful to peopleinterested in further researching the subject.These files were scanned in GIF format and are NOT uuencoded so ftp 'ingshould be done in the image or binary form (type i for image before ftp'ing).********************IMPORTANT NOTICE:****************************************** Due to the size of these files you are urged to download them at a time that would not inconvenience other users of the archive server borg.The files should thus ONLY be downloaded on weekends, or in eveningtimes between 5:00 pm and 8:00 am US Eastern Standard Time, which is GMT-5:00.******************************************************************************* Individuals interested in viewing these files can use any of the availableutilities that can handle GIF files to view the document.Note: xv, on unix, and PhotoFinish for MS windows are recommended choices      since both offer zooming in capabilities; this function does seem       to be more easily  applicable in the latter option.The screen gif document is a very legible form of the original document even when viewed on a PC using a standard VGA monitor (640x480), although the higher resolution monitors would certainly provide a better image quality ofthe scanned document.  There appeared no need for magnification (zooming in),in terms of legibility, when each of the documents was viewed on a 19" monitor using xv.Due to the volume of these documents, a better solution might be to print those documents rather than individually viewing them on the screen.  This procedure was tested on a postscript printer and the printed copy is  of fairly good quality.  Depending on the type of printer used,processing  might be time consuming.  In such a case, overnight batch jobs do offer a reasonable alternative.  A note of caution,  when using "xv" to convert the GIF files into PS files, the printed  document was illegible.  However,  using PhotoFinish to view the GIF files and selecting"Print" to send the document to a PS printer resulted in a qualityvery comparable to a photocopy of the originals.This work is a result of the collaborative effort of several individuals:    Original Material: Rached Zantout  <rzantout@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>    Coordination:      Basil Hamdan    <bh437292@longs.lance.colostate.edu>    Archiving:         Bassem Medawar  <medawar@tasha.poly.edu>    Scanning:          Samir M. Fahs   <fahs@ecf.toronto.edu>These files are available by ftp from:     borg.poly.eduin directory:     /pub/scl/giffilenames:     leb01.gif     lebnn.gif(nn here is a double digit variable integer counter from 1 to 46)     leb46.gif          lebfiles.msgThe file "lebfiles.msg" contains a description of the contents of the of the lebnn.gif files.Important Note:  This file is to accompany the digitized material, or partsthereof, at all times.   ****************************  DISCLAIMER  *************************************This material has been digitally reproduced without permission fornon-commercial use.  The intent of the archiving of this material is togive ready and convenient access to the information included in this documentto people interested in Lebanon, or for research purposes.  All otheruses of this document would be a breach of applicable copyright laws.All rights reserved to: Europa Publications Limited and Staples PrintersLimited.*******************************************************************************_______________________________________________________________________________  Here are two listings of general information about Lebanon, one is taken fromthe CIA fact book and has information dated to 1992, the other is from anotherdatabase (Kaleidoscope) and has information dated to 1990.*******   DISCLAIMER   *********These were published "as is", with no editing on my part,so if anyone wishes todisagree with the numbers or the information offered, please address your grievances to the issuing agency, not me.  By publishing these, I do not imply that what is in them is "the" truth, however, I think that the information can be of some use to someone interested in Lebanon.  As always, one has to becareful to not take everything one reads as god given or indisputable.********************************a) CIA Factbook on Lebanon listing (dated 1993):Lebanon*Lebanon, HeaderNote:  Lebanon has made progress toward rebuilding its political institutions and  regaining its national sovereignty since the end of the devastating 16-year  civil war in October 1990. Under the Ta'if accord - the blueprint for  national reconciliation - the Lebanese have established a more equitable  political system, particularly by giving Muslims a greater say in the  political process. Since December 1990, the Lebanese have formed three  cabinets and conducted the first legislative election in 20 years. Most of  the militias have been weakened or disbanded. The Lebanese Armed Forces  (LAF) has seized vast quantities of weapons used by the militias during the  war and extended central government authority over about one-half of the  country. Hizballah, the radical Sh'ia party, is the only significant group  that retains most of its weapons. Foreign forces still occupy areas of  Lebanon. Israel continues to support a proxy militia, The Army of South  Lebanon (ASL), along a narrow stretch of territory contiguous to its border.  The ASL's enclave encompasses this self-declared security zone and about 20  kilometers north to the strategic town of Jazzine. As of December 1992,  Syria maintained about 30,000 troops in Lebanon. These troops are based  mainly in Beirut, North Lebanon, and the Bekaa Valley. Syria's deployment  was legitimized by the Arab League early in Lebanon's civil war and in the  Ta'if accord. Citing the continued weakness of the LAF, Beirut's requests,  and failure of the Lebanese Government to implement all of the  constitutional reforms in the Ta'if accord, Damascus has so far refused to  withdraw its troops from Beirut.*Lebanon, GeographyLocation:  Middle East, in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, between Israel and SyriaMap references:  Africa, Middle East, Standard Time Zones of the WorldArea: total area:  10,400 km2 land area:  10,230 km2 comparative area:  about 0.8 times the size of ConnecticutLand boundaries:  total 454 km, Israel 79 km, Syria 375 kmCoastline:  225 kmMaritime claims: territorial sea:  12 nmInternational disputes:  separated from Israel by the 1949 Armistice Line; Israeli troops in southern  Lebanon since June 1982; Syrian troops in northern, central, and eastern  Lebanon since October 1976Climate:  Mediterranean; mild to cool, wet winters with hot, dry summers; Lebanon  mountians experience heavy winter snowsTerrain:  narrow coastal plain; Al Biqa' (Bekaa Valley) separates Lebanon and  Anti-Lebanon MountainsNatural resources:   limestone, iron ore, salt, water-surplus state in a     water-deficit regionLand use: arable land:  21 permanent crops:  9 meadows and pastures:  1 forest and woodland:  8 other:  61Irrigated land:  860 km2 (1989 est.)Environment:  rugged terrain historically helped isolate, protect, and develop numerous  factional groups based on religion, clan, ethnicity; deforestation; soil  erosion; air and water pollution; desertificationNote:  Nahr al Litani only major river in Near East not crossing an international  boundary*Lebanon, PeoplePopulation:  3,552,369 (July 1993 est.)Population growth rate:  1.81(1993 est.)Birth rate:  27.86 births/1,000 population (1993 est.)Death rate:  6.66 deaths/1,000 population (1993 est.)Net migration rate:  -3.1 migrant(s)/1,000 population (1993 est.)Infant mortality rate:  41 deaths/1,000 live births (1993 est.)Life expectancy at birth: total population:  69.01 years male:  66.63 years female:  71.52 years (1993 est.)Total fertility rate:  3.47 children born/woman (1993 est.)Nationality: noun:  Lebanese (singular and plural) adjective:  LebaneseEthnic divisions:  Arab 95, Armenian 4, other 1Religions:  Islam 70(5 legally recognized Islamic groups - Alawite or Nusayri, Druze,  Isma'ilite, Shi'a, Sunni), Christian 30(11 legally recognized Christian  groups - 4 Orthodox Christian, 6 Catholic, 1 Protestant), Judaism NEGLLanguages:  Arabic (official), French (official), Armenian, EnglishLiteracy:  age 15 and over can read and write (1990) total population:  80 male:  88 female:  73Labor force:  650,000 by occupation:  industry, commerce, and services 79, agriculture 11, government 10(1985)*Lebanon, GovernmentNames: conventional long form:  Republic of Lebanon conventional short form:  Lebanon local long form:  Al Jumhuriyah al Lubnaniyah local short form:  noneDigraph:  LEType:  republicCapital:  BeirutAdministrative divisions:  5 governorates (muhafazat, singular - muhafazah); Al Biqa, 'Al Janub, Ash  Shamal, Bayrut, Jabal LubnanIndependence:  22 November 1943 (from League of Nations mandate under French  administration)Constitution:  26 May 1926 (amended)Legal system:  mixture of Ottoman law, canon law, Napoleonic code, and civil law; no  judicial review of legislative acts; has not accepted compulsory ICJ  jurisdictionNational holiday:  Independence Day, 22 November (1943)Political parties and leaders:  political party activity is organized along largely sectarian lines;  numerous political groupings exist, consisting of individual political  figures and followers motivated by religious, clan, and economic  considerationsSuffrage:   21 years of age; compulsory for all males; authorized for women at     age 21  with elementary educationElections: National Assembly:  Lebanon's first legislative election in 20 years was held in the summer of  1992; the National Assembly is composed of 128 deputies, one-half Christian  and one-half Muslim; its mandate expires in 1996Executive branch:  president, prime minister, Cabinet; note - by custom, the president is a  Maronite Christian, the prime minister is a Sunni Muslim, and the speaker of  the legislature is a Shi'a MuslimLegislative branch:  unicameral National Assembly (Arabic - Majlis Alnuwab, French - Assemblee  Nationale)Judicial branch:  four Courts of Cassation (three courts for civil and commercial cases and  one court for criminal cases)Leaders: Chief of State:  President Ilyas HARAWI (since 24 November 1989) Head of Government:  Prime Minister Rafiq HARIRI (since 22 October 1992)*Lebanon, GovernmentMember of:  ABEDA, AFESD, AL, AMF, CCC, ESCWA, FAO, G-24, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC,  ICFTU, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, ILO, IMF, IMO, INTELSAT, INTERPOL, IOC, ITU,  LORCS, NAM, OIC, PCA, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO, UNRWA, UPU, WFTU,  WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTODiplomatic representation in US: chief of mission:  Ambassador Simon KARAM chancery:  2560 28th Street NW, Washington, DC 20008 telephone:  (202) 939-6300 consulates general:  Detroit, New York, and Los AngelesUS diplomatic representation: chief of mission:  Ambassador Ryan C. CROCKER mailing embassy:  Antelias, Beirut address:  P. O. Box 70-840, Beirut, or Box B, FPO AE 09836 telephone:  [961] 417774 or 415802, 415803, 402200, 403300Flag:  three horizontal bands of red (top), white (double width), and red with a  green and brown cedar tree centered in the white band*Lebanon, EconomyOverview:  Since 1975 civil war has seriously damaged Lebanon's economic  infrastructure, cut national output by half, and all but ended Lebanon's  position as a Middle Eastern entrepot and banking hub. Following October  1990, however, a tentative peace has enabled the central government to begin  restoring control in Beirut, collect taxes, and regain access to key port  and government facilities. The battered economy has also been propped up by  a financially sound banking system and resilient small- and medium-scale  manufacturers. Family remittances, banking transactions, manufactured and  farm exports, the narcotics trade, and international emergency aid are main  sources of foreign exchange. In the relatively settled year of 1991,  industrial production, agricultural output, and exports showed substantial  gains. The further rebuilding of the war-ravaged country was delayed in 1992  because of an upturn in political wrangling. Hope for restoring economic  momentum in 1993 rests with the new, business-oriented Prime Minister  HARIRI.National product:  GDP - exchange rate conversion - $4.8 billion (1991 est.)National product real growth rate:  NANational product per capita:  $1,400 (1991 est.)Inflation rate (consumer prices):  100(1992 est.)Unemployment rate:  35(1991 est.)Budget:  revenues $533 million; expenditures $1.3 billion, including capital  expenditures of $NA (1991 est.)Exports:  $490 million (f.o.b., 1991) commodities:  agricultural products, chemicals, textiles, precious and semiprecious metals  and jewelry, metals and metal products partners:  Saudi Arabia 21, Switzerland 9.5, Jordan 6, Kuwait 12, US 5Imports:  $3.7 billion (c.i.f., 1991) commodities:  Consumer goods, machinery and transport equipment, petroleum products partners:  Italy 14, France 12, US 6, Turkey 5, Saudi Arabia 3External debt:  $400 million (1992 est.)Industrial production:  growth rate NAElectricity:  1,300,000 kW capacity; 3,413 million kWh produced, 990 kWh per capita (1992)Industries:  banking, food processing, textiles, cement, oil refining, chemicals,  jewelry, some metal fabricatingAgriculture:  accounts for about one-third of GDP; principal products - citrus fruits,  vegetables, potatoes, olives, tobacco, hemp (hashish), sheep, goats; not  self-sufficient in grain*Lebanon, EconomyIllicit drugs:  illicit producer of opium, hashish, and heroin for the international drug  trade; opium poppy production in Al Biqa almost completely eradicated this  year; hashish production is shipped to Western Europe, Israel, US, the  Middle East, and South AmericaEconomic aid:  US commitments, including Ex-Im (FY70-88), $356 million; Western (non-US)  countries, ODA and OOF bilateral commitments (1970-89), $664 million; OPEC  bilateral aid (1979-89), $962 million; Communist countries (1970-89), $9  millionCurrency:  1 Lebanese pound (#L) = 100 piastersExchange rates:  Lebanese pounds (#L) per US$1 - 1,742.00 (April 1993), 1,712.80 (1992),  928.23 (1991), 695.09 (1990), 496.69 (1989), 409.23 (1988)Fiscal year:  calendar year*Lebanon, CommunicationsRailroads:  system in disrepair, considered inoperableHighways:  7,300 km total; 6,200 km paved, 450 km gravel and crushed stone, 650 km  improved earthPipelines:  crude oil 72 km (none in operation)Ports:  Beirut, Tripoli, Ra'Sil'ata, Juniyah, Sidon, Az Zahrani, Tyre, Jubayl,  Shikka JadidahMerchant marine:  63 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 270,505 GRT/403,328 DWT; includes 39  cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 2 vehicle carrier, 3 roll-on/roll-off, 1  container, 9 livestock carrier, 2 chemical tanker, 1 specialized tanker, 4  bulk, 1 combination bulkAirports: total:  9 usable:  8 with permanent-surface runways:  6 with runways over 3,659 m:  0 with runways 2,440-3,659 m:  3 with runways 1,220-2,439 m:  2Telecommunications:  telecommunications system severely damaged by civil war; rebuilding still  underway; 325,000 telephones (95 telephones per 1,000 persons); domestic  traffic carried primarily by microwave radio relay and a small amount of  cable; international traffic by satellite - 1 Indian Ocean INTELSAT earth  station and 1 Atlantic Ocean INTELSAT earth station (erratic operations),  coaxial cable to Syria; microwave radio relay to Syria but inoperable beyond  Syria to Jordan, 3 submarine coaxial cables; broadcast stations - 5 AM, 3  FM, 13 TV (numerous AM and FM stations are operated sporadically by various  factions)*Lebanon, Defense ForcesBranches:  Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF; including Army, Navy, and Air Force)Manpower availability:  males age 15-49 798,299; fit for military service 495,763 (1993 est.)Defense expenditures:  exchange rate conversion - $271 million, 8.20f GDP (1992 budget)Remark: The Kaleidoscope listing (dated 1990) contains old statistics, I thoughtthat it is better not to post it with the FAQ, eventhough this listing isavailableat the ftp server eurecom.cica.fr/SCL/statistics file name:kaleidoscope_1990_lebanonthe above CIA Factbook listing is also availble from the same diectory filename:CIA_Factbook_Lebanon_1993*******************************************************************************end of part2/2-- ______________________________________________________________________________Alaa DAKROUB    E-mail : dakroub@eurecom.fr------------------------------------------------------------------------------<A HREF=http://www.cica.fr:8080/>Check it out !!</A><A HREF=http://www.cica.fr:8080/cgi-bin/coordinates>coordinates :o)</A>------------------------------------------------------------------------------