Archive for April 17, 2004

Obnoxious Omarosa pumps up a deflated ego, experts say

The Chicago Sun-Times talks to a shrink about Omarosa. The article, by the Sun-Times health reporter, begins:

Omarosa might think she belongs in a big leather chair at the head of a board table. But the snarky apprentice-wannabe’s behavior made her seem better suited for a couch — a psychiatrist’s couch.

All that scheming and lying rendered 30-year-old Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth The Woman America Loves To Hate and left us wondering what makes her tick . . . and tick off everyone else?

West Chicago psychologist, author and “executive coach” Tim Ursiny has his theories. Ursiny has never met Omarosa. But what little he does know about her –courtesy of the producers and editors of “The Apprentice,” mind you — smacks of someone whose self-esteem gauge is hovering dangerously close to empty.

Kwame caused himself to lose, Omarosa says

From The Charlotte Observer:

Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth is one of the most well-known of the 16 candidates who competed on “The Apprentice” because of her role as the show’s villain.

Many fans have blamed her for the defeat of Kwame Jackson in the show’s final task. As a member of Jackson’s team she bungled nearly every assignment and was caught lying about them on camera. Donald Trump, in explaining his decision to hire Chicago entrepreneur Bill Rancic over Jackson, faulted Jackson for failing to fire her.

In a conversation at the show’s after party at Trump Tower, Manigault-Stallworth gave her thoughts on Jackson and her performance.

Read the rest of this entry.

I’m impressed

When completed, the Eckerd drug store under construction about three-quarters of a mile from NewMexiKen will be the closest commercial establishment. Understandably the building’s appearance has been a concern to this hitherto undeveloped community. The newest Homeowners Association newsletter has this welcome report:

At what will prove to be a considerable expense to themselves, Eckerd put together a “crash” program to redesign the store’s appearance to be more pleasing….The rooftop “cupolas” will be changed from the triangular design to much lower flat structures, and tinted windows will be installed on the storefront to reduce lighting emissions during the evening. As Eckerd explained, they wish to be good neighbors and they were quite apologetic that any controversy had occurred.

That’s the good news. That bad news is that Eckerd has been sold by its parent company J.C. Penney to CVS. The worse news is that the structure going up next to the drug store is a quick lube place.

Difficult choice

From the St. Petersburg Times, Driver’s parents risk jail for silence:

The parents of a young woman implicated in a hit-and-run accident that killed two children told a judge Friday they would rather go to jail than answer questions about their daughter’s role in the collision.

James and Lillian Porter, looking frazzled and scared, appeared before Hillsborough County Judge Walter Heinrich and asserted their Fifth Amendment rights to refuse a subpoena issued earlier Friday by the Hillsborough State Attorney’s Office.

Read more.

Well alright Roger!

Movie critic Roger Ebert sounds off on Howard Stern, Rush Limbaugh and freedom of speech — Stern belongs on radio just as much as Rush. He concludes:

It is a belief of mine about the movies, that what makes them good or bad isn’t what they’re about, but how they’re about them. The point is not the subject but the form and purpose of its expression. A listener to Stern will find that he expresses humanistic values, that he opposes hypocrisy, that he talks honestly about what a great many Americans do indeed think and say and do. A Limbaugh listener, on the other hand, might not have guessed from campaigns to throw the book at drug addicts that he was addicted to drugs and required an employee to buy them on the street.

But listen carefully. I support Limbaugh’s right to be on the radio. I feel it is fully equal to Stern’s. I find it strange that so many Americans describe themselves as patriotic when their values are anti-democratic and totalitarian. We are all familiar with Voltaire’s great cry: ”I may disagree with what you say, but I shall defend, to the death, your right to say it.” Ideas like his helped form the emerging American republic. Today, the Federal Communications Commission operates under an alternative slogan: ”Since a minority that is very important to this administration disagrees with what you say, shut up.”

Biere de Mars

Colorado Luis says:

Let me recommend hurrying out to the liquor store and grabbing a six pack of New Belgium’s Biere de Mars ale before they replace it with Loft, their summer seasonal offering. … If you like Fat Tire and think you might like something a bit more adventurous, give Biere de Mars a try before the stores run out of it.

OK, I think I will, because I do like Fat Tire.

Original Dow Jones

The original 12. (On the first day, May 26, 1896, the average stood at 40.94).

American Cotton Oil
American Sugar
American Tobacco
Chicago Gas
Distilling & Cattle Feeding
General Electric
Laclede Gas
National Lead
North American
Tennessee Coal & Iron
U.S. Leather
U.S. Rubber

The Dow Jones 30

The Dow Jones Industrial Average began in May 1896 with 12 companies; increased to 20 in 1916; 30 since 1928. (General Electric is the only one of the original 12 still included.) Here are the 30 after the changes that took place at the beginning of the week.

Alcoa
Altria Group (Philip Morris)
American Express
American International Group (AIG)
Boeing
Caterpillar
Citigroup
Coca-Cola
DuPont
Exxon Mobil
General Electric
General Motors
Hewlett-Packard
Home Depot
Honeywell International
Intel
IBM
JP Morgan Chase
Johnson & Johnson
McDonald’s
Merck
Microsoft
3M
Pfizer
Procter & Gamble
SBC Communications
United Technologies
Verizon
Walt Disney
Wal-Mart

Added April 8:
AIG
Verizon
Pfizer

Removed (with years included):
Eastman Kodak (1930-2004)
AT&T (1916-1928, 1939-2004)
International Paper (1956-2004)

Let top seeds pick opponents

Stuart Benjamin at The Volokh Conspiracy suggests:

Playoff seedings are determined by regular season records. If (as in the NBA) 8 teams go to the playoffs from each conference, the team with the best record will play the team with the 8th best, the 2nd will play the 7th, and so on. The idea is to reward the teams with the best records by pitting them against the weakest opponents. But a better — and more interesting — system would allow the top seeds to choose their opponents.

NewMexiKen thinks this is a great idea.

Nikita Khrushchev…

was born on this date in in 1894. Khrushchev was Soviet Premier from 1954-1964. The New York Times has posted its lengthy obituary from 1971.

One of the more infamous moments at the United Nations took place when Khrushchev visited there in 1960 and reportedly banged his shoe on the desk in a protest. Or maybe he didn’t. Khrushchev biographer William Taubman isn’t so sure.

Nikita Khrushchev and the Shoe

The shoe that the world thinks Khrushchev banged at the United Nations is one of history’s most iconic symbols. Ask many Westerners, and even quite a few Russians, about the man who succeeded Stalin and then denounced him, who ruled the Soviet Union for a decade and brought to world to the nuclear brink in Cuba, and what they remember most is the shoe. But it may never have happened. The celebrated shoe was allegedly banged on Oct. 13, 1960. A New York Times correspondent, Benjamin Welles, reported that Khrushchev was reacting to a speech by a Philippine delegate who charged that the Soviet Union had “swallowed up” Eastern Europe and “deprived [it] of political and civil rights.” According to Welles, Khrushchev “pulled off his right shoe, stood up and brandished the shoe at the Philippine delegate on the other side of the hall. He then banged his shoe on the desk.”

Yet another Times man, James Feron, who was at the United Nations but did not write a story, recalls, “I actually saw Khrushchev not bang his shoe.” According to Feron, whom I interviewed in 2002, the Soviet leader “leaned over, took off a slip-on shoe, waved it pseudomenacingly, and put it on his desk, but he never banged his shoe.”

Did he or didn’t he? A KGB general remembered that Khrushchev banged the shoe rhythmically, “like a metronome.” A UN staffer claimed Khrushchev didn’t remove his shoe (”he couldn’t have,” she recalled, because the size of his stomach prevented him from reaching under the table), but it fell off when a journalist stepped on his heel. The staffer said she passed the shoe wrapped in a napkin to Khrushchev, after which he did indeed bang it. Viktor Sukhodrev, Khrushchev’s brilliant interpreter, for Soviet leaders from Khrushchev to Gorbachev remembers that his boss pounded the UN desk so hard with his fists that his watch stopped, at which point, irritated by the fact that some “capitalist lackey” had in effect broken a good watch, Khrushchev took off his shoe and began banging.

When I talked about Khrushchev to veterans of his era in Washington, one eyewitness confirmed the banging. But another eyewitness confirmed the nonbanging. A third, who said he’d been standing several feet behind the premier, insisted that the heel of the hand that held the shoe slammed the desk but that shoe never actually touched it.

John Loengard, former picture editor for Life magazine, wrote me that he was in a General Assembly booth, along with 10 or so photographers from New York city dailies and national wire services. Loengard is “certain” that Khrushchev “did not bang his shoe on the desk,” but that “he certainly meant to do so.” According to Loengard, Khrushchev “reached down and took off a brown loafer from his right foot and put it on the desk. He grinned to delegates from the United Arab Republic who sat across the aisle and mimed (with an empty hand) that the next time he’d use the shoe to bang. I can assure you that every camera in the booth was trained on Khrushchev, waiting for him to use the shoe. He only put it on again and left. None of us missed the picture — which would have been a serious professional error. The event never occurred.” A woman whose parents emigrated from Ukraine wrote to say that her husband, who was getting ready to go to work, happened to see it as he was walking past the TV. “He told me to run quickly to watch, and we stood there transfixed,” she wrote. “We had a house guest at the time — my cousin Sonia, who was here from the Soviet Union on a visit. When we told her what had happened she didn’t believe us. Eventually, other relatives who had also been watching told her they had seen it, too, so she finally conceded he must have done so.”

One might think that the controversy could be resolved by television or photo archives. Several years ago, Khrushchev’s son, Sergei, asked NBC and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation for a tape of the event, but neither could find one. A former CBS Moscow correspondent told me that his search turned up nothing either. My own Internet quest unearthed a photo of the shoe (a light brown sandal, it turns out) on the UN desk, but none of the former colliding with the latter.

Whether Khrushchev banged or merely brandished, the larger question is how to establish truth in history, or whether it can be established at all. A friend in Moscow, a distinguished medieval historian, reacted to the shoe controversy this way, his tongue only partly in cheek: “If one cannot establish the truth in an event with hundreds of eyewitnesses many of whom are alive and talking, what’s the point of reconstructing events centuries old?”

From the Cold War International History Project @ the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars

Thornton Wilder…

was born in Madison, Wisconsin, on this date in 1897. As they so often do, Minnesota Public Radio’s The Writer’s Almanac has an interesting profile.

As a boy, [Wilder] lived near a university theater where they performed Greek dramas, and his mother let him participate as a member of the chorus. He never forgot the experience, and decided then that he would try to write for the theater someday. He produced his first play, The Trumpet Shall Sound (1926), while he was still an undergraduate at Yale.

After graduating from college, his father sent him to Rome, where he worked on an archaeological dig at the site of ancient Roman ruins. He later said, “Once you have swung a pickax that will reveal the curve of a street four thousand years covered over which was once an active, much-traveled highway, you are never quite the same again.” The experience inspired him to begin writing fiction about characters caught up in the forces of fate and history. His second novel was The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1927), about a group of unrelated characters who are all killed by the collapse of a bridge in Peru. That novel was a huge success, and it won the Pulitzer Prize.

Read the rest of this entry.

Dow Jones

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 3000 for the first time just 13 years ago today (1991).

The Dow’s all time high was 11722.98 on January 14, 2000.

On this day…

in 1790, Benjamin Franklin died at the age of 84.

William Holden…

was born on this date in 1918. Holden was nominated three times for the Best Actor Oscar, winning for Stalag 17 in 1954. His other nominations were for Sunset Blvd. and Network. Holden is probably as well known for his portrayal of Hal Carter opposite Kim Novak in Picnic and as the leader of the demolition team intent on destroying Alec Guiness’ Bridge on the River Kwai.

Chris Rock

“A black C student can’t run no f***ing company. A black C student can’t even be the manager of Burger King. Meanwhile, a white C student just happens to be the president of the United States of America!”

– Chris Rock. HBO. Tonight.

Say hey!

“All true, but I can’t agree that No. 661 wasn’t a big deal. I don’t care if you’re swinging a bat or driving on the Bayshore Freeway: Passing Willie Mays is always a big deal.”

– King Kaufman at Salon on Barry Bonds.

You’re fired

From Morning Briefing in the Los Angeles TImes:

On the final episode of “The Apprentice” on Thursday night, Donald Trump told winner Bill Rancic, “You’re hired.”

Rancic, of Chicago, had a choice of jobs — general manager of the Trump Plaza in Chicago or general manager of the Ocean Trails Golf Club in Rancho Palos Verdes.

He picked the Chicago job.

“I definitely breathed a sigh of relief,” Mike Vandergoes said with a laugh. He became Ocean Trails’ general manager only a month and a half ago. He had been the director of golf until getting a call from Trump telling him he was promoted.

The last thing Vandergoes wanted was a call from Trump saying, “You’re fired.”

Emily…

was born in Oakland, California, very early on this date in 1972.

Imagine if you will the ideal teacher. What would they be like?

Intelligent. Sensitive. Caring. Prepared. Hard working. Above all, enthusiastic.

That’s her.
Journey.jpg