I wonder if they insulted each other’s mamas

I mentioned that I was reading David Hackett Fischer’s Champlain’s Dream. I found this passage interesting. It describes the scene in the hours before a battle in 1609 between Champlain’s Indian allies and the Mohawk. They were on the shores of the lake Champlain had named for himself just days before.

“We were on the water,” he wrote, “within bow-shot of their barricades.” Songs and cries pierced the night. The Mohawk shouted insults at their enemies. “Our side was not lacking in repartee,” Champlain recalled, “telling them that they would see feats of weaponry that they had never known before, and a great deal of other talk as is usual at the siege of a city.”

In other words, trash talking has been around for a while.

[It’s interesting to learn from Fischer that according to Champlain’s reports, woodland Indians at that time entered battle pretty much as Europeans did — mass, coordinated movements, armored warriors (albeit wooden armor). It was, he says, firearms that caused the Eastern Indians to adopt the type of warfare historians (and novelists) associate with them, the hit-and-run, hiding in the woods, kind of warfare.]

The Obama states

Obama’s three best states (percentage of vote) were:

Hawaii (71.8%)
Vermont (66.8%)
Rhode Island (63.1%)

Seven other states and the District of Columbia gave Obama more than 60% of their vote. They were:

D.C. (92.9%)
New York (62.1%)
Massachusetts (62.0%)
Illinois (61.7%)
Delaware (61.3%)
California (61.1%)
Maryland (60.9%)
Connecticut (60.2%)

Of the 15 states with the most people, all but Texas (#2) and Georgia (#9) went for Obama. Interestingly enough, the other 13 most populous states have exactly half of all electoral votes.

The McCain states

McCain’s three best states (percentage of vote) were:

Oklahoma (65.6%)
Wyoming (65.2%)
Utah (62.9%)

Two of Utah’s 29 counties went for Obama. Two of Wyoming’s 23 counties went for Obama.

None of Oklahoma’s 77 counties went for Obama.

Alaska (61.5%), Idaho (61.5%) and Alabama (60.4%) were the only other states that gave McCain more than 60% of their vote.

November 6th

Mike Nichols is 77 today. Nichols has been nominated for four best director Oscars, winning for “The Graduate.”

Sally Field is 62. Field has won two best actress Oscars (because the Academy really likes her); one for “Norma Rae” and the other for “Places in the Heart.”

Glenn Frey of The Eagles is 60.

Blues singer Rory Block is 59. So is jazz trumpeter Arturo Sandoval.

California’s first lady, Maria Shriver, is 53.

Ethan Hawke is 38. Hawke has been nominated for two Oscars, one for supporting actor, “Training Day,” and one for co-writing, “Before Sunset.”

Thandie Newton is 36. Miss Newton’s mother is Zimbawbean, her father English.

New Yorker founder Harold Ross was born in Aspen, Colorado, on November 6, 1892.

Walter “Big Train” Johnson was born 121 years ago today. Johnson was one of the first five players elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame — along with Cobb, Ruth, Mathewson and Wagner.

There were no sophisticated measuring devices in the early 1900s, but Walter Johnson’s fastball was considered to be in a class by itself. Using a sweeping sidearm delivery, the Big Train fanned 3,508 over a brilliant 21-year career with the Washington Senators, and his 110 shutouts are more than any pitcher. Despite hurling for losing teams most of his career, he won 417 games – second only to Cy Young on the all-time list – and enjoyed 10 successive seasons of 20 or more victories.

National Baseball Hall of Fame

James Naismith was born on this date in 1861. He’s the guy that created basketball and for whom the basketball hall-of-fame is named — and basketball’s most prestigious trophies. Dr. James Naismith’s 13 Original Rules of Basketball.

John Philip Sousa was born on November 6, 1854.

Sousa said a march ‘should make a man with a wooden leg step out’, and his surely did. However, he was no mere maker of marches, but an exceptionally inventive composer of over two hundred works, including symphonic poems, suites, songs and operettas created for both orchestra and for band. John Philip Sousa personified the innocent energy of turn-of-the-century America and he represented America across the globe. His American tours first brought classical music to hundreds of towns.

Naxos.com

Abraham Lincoln was elected president on this date in 1860.

Best line of the day, so far

Mr. King ended his Hawaii speech by quoting a prayer from a preacher who had once been a slave, and it’s an apt description of the idea of America today: “Lord, we ain’t what we want to be; we ain’t what we ought to be; we ain’t what we gonna be, but, thank God, we ain’t what we was.”

Martin Luther King Jr. in 1959 quoted by Nicholas Kristof.