Archive for November 2007

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Who’s Who & What’s What Quiz

Hey, let’s all take the Who’s Who & What’s What Quiz.

NewMexiKen scored 13 correct out of 15 this week, second guessing myself on the last two.

Tell us how you did.

Football factoid of the day

“T]he Hokies have not faced a team twice in a season since beating William & Mary twice in three days in 1906.”

The Quad, commenting on tomorrow’s Virginia Tech rematch with Boston College.

November 30th

Today is the birthday

… of Efrem Zimbalist Jr. Inspector Lewis Erskine and Stuart Bailey is 90.

… of Dick Clark. America’s oldest teenager is 78.

… of G. Gordon Liddy, 77.

… of movie director Ridley Scott. He’s 70. Three nominations for the best director Oscar. Can you name the films?

… of David Mamet. The playwright is 60. Two Oscar nomintations for writing, Wag the Dog and The Verdict.

[Mamet], whose father was a labor lawyer and loved to argue for the sake of arguing. Mamet said, “In my family, in the days prior to television, we liked to while away the evenings by making ourselves miserable, solely based on our ability to speak the language viciously.” Mamet has gone on to write a series of plays about con men, salesmen, thieves, and liars in plays such as American Buffalo (1975) and Glengarry Glen Ross (1984), which won the Pulitzer Prize for drama. His newest play, November, is scheduled to open on Broadway this January (2008).

The Writer’s Almanac from American Public Media

… of Mandy Patinkin. Inigo Montoya is 55.

… of Jeannie Kendall, of The Kendalls. She’s 53. Heaven’s Just a Sin Away, one of NewMexiKen’s favorites.

… of Bo Jackson, 45.

… of Ben Stiller. He’s 42.

… of Sandra Oh. The actress (Sideways, Arli$$, Grey’s Anatomy) is 37.

Oliver Winchester was born on this date in 1810. A clothing manufacturer, Winchester bought a small failing division of Smith & Wesson in 1850, the division that made a rudimentary repeating rifle. In 1860, an engineer working for Winchester, Benjamin Tyler Henry, developed the first successful repeating rifle. It was improved upon and became known as the Winchester in 1866.

It was on this date in 1835 that Samuel Langhorne Clemens was born.

He’s best known to us today for his novels about Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, but in his own lifetime his best-selling books were his travel books such as Roughing It (1872), A Tramp Abroad (1880), and Life on the Mississippi (1883).

The above from The Writer’s Almanac last year, which had quite a bit about Twain. The following is from The Writer’s Almanac for this year.

Mark Twain wrote, “It’s lovely to live on a raft. We had the sky up there, all speckled with stars, and we used to lay on our backs and look up at them, and discuss about whether they was made or only just happened.”

And Winston Churchill was born on this date in 1874.

Churchillian quotes:

“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”

“A fanatic is one who can’t change his mind and won’t change the subject.”

“He has all of the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire.”

“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.”

“I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.”

“Ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which I will not put.”

Zing

Cartoonist Tom Toles lampoons his own newspaper. Don’t miss it.

Meanwhile Jesus’ General calls for cleansing America of The Lutefisk Menace.

Another book list

The National Book Critics Circle lists the top books of 2007 as voted by its members and former finalists and winners of its awards.

Fiction

1. Junot Diaz, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Riverhead)
2. Denis Johnson, Tree of Smoke (Farrar Straus & Giroux)
3. Michael Chabon, The Yiddish Policeman’s Union (HarperCollins)
4. Philip Roth, Exit Ghost (Houghton Mifflin)
5. Per Petterson, Out Stealing Horses (Graywolf)

Nonfiction

1. Edwidge Danticat, Brother, I’m Dying (Knopf)
2. Alan Weisman, The World Without Us (St. Martin’s)
3. Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine (Metropolitan Books)
4. David Michaelis, Schulz and Peanuts (HarperCollins)
5. Tim Weiner, Legacy of Ashes (Doubleday)

Poetry

1. Robert Hass, Time and Materials: Poems 1997–2005* (HarperCollins)
2. Zbigniew Herbert, Collected Poems: 1956-1998 (Ecco)*
3. Robert Pinsky, Gulf Music (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)*
4. Rae Armantrout, Next Life (Wesleyan University Press)
5. Mary Jo Bang, Elegy (Graywolf)

*There was a three-way tie for first place in poetry

Two of the fiction works — Tree of Smoke and Out Stealing Horses — are on this list and The New York Times list.

Mandates and Mudslinging

NewMexiKen has been taking a closer look at Barack Obama this past week or so and generally being impressed. I have to say, however, that if Paul Krugman is right, I’m back to where I was on the Senator — that he doesn’t know what he’s doing.

Is Perry Bacon Serious?

In The Washington Post this morning, reporter Perry Bacon Jr. wrote what may be the single worst campaign ‘08 piece to appear in any American newspaper so far this election cycle.

In the front-page piece, Bacon muses over how the chances of Barack Obama getting elected president might be affected by the fact that he’s not Muslim. Seriously. To build his case, Bacon stumbles artlessly through all manner of rumor, innuendo, and xenophobic smear–never bothering to refute any of it, even though there is plenty of well-documented evidence to knock down much of this stuff.

Columbia Journalism Review

Bacon essentially equates internet rumors with Obama’s own statements (and church membership).

I’m surprised the Post continues to employ Perry Bacon Jr. given the rumor of his multiple child rape convictions on the internet.

Update: The Post’s story has wings.

The problem with the original Post story is that the “rumors” have already been reliably established as false. To make this a he said/she said story is to give credence to the lies. Lies are lies, not rumors.

Green Tree Envy?

In the latest move, New York City’s Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, illuminated last night, shines not with old-style incandescent bulbs but with 30,000 electricity-sipping light-emitting diodes, or L.E.D.’s, powered in part with solar panels. (And the tree was even cut with a hand saw, the city says.)

Dot Earth

And you, what type of lights are you putting up this year? A 100-light string of multi-colored LED bulbs uses just 8 watts, compared to 36 watts for mini lamps and 500 for incandescent Christmas lights (C-7 bulbs).

Here’s another best line of the day

“Which brings us to Mitt Romney. He appeared to need GPS to find his core beliefs.”

Joel Achenbach

Romney has about as much chance of finding any core beliefs as Bush did finding those weapons of mass destruction.

Tiger Woods, a man who speaks for us all

“Tiger Woods text message to Charles Barkley, as reported by the L.A. Times, as Barkley droned on in a sideline interview during the USC-Arizona State game: ‘Shut up, so I can watch the game.’”

Reported at Sideline Chatter.

Cheers and Jeers

Cheers and Jeers has too many LOL lines today for me to try and plagarize excerpt. Go read.

Best bumper sticker lines of the day, so far

“Rudy got laid, New York paid.”

“Sixty-nine eleven.”

Daily Kos

Update: Here’s the story just in case your news source “missed it” — Newsday.com or
New York Daily News.

Best line of the day, so far

“So CNN chose which questions would be asked in the Republican debate last night. And guess what: not one question about health care, the central domestic issue for this election.

“They did, however, include a question about putting a man on Mars.”

Paul Krugman

November 29th

Vin Scully is 80 today. Scully started doing Dodger’s broadcasts in Brooklyn in 1950. His current contract runs through the 2008 season.

Diane Ladd is 65. Ladd has appeared in more than 100 films and television programs and has been nominated for the best supporting actress Oscar three times including her portrayal of Flo in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.

Garry Shandling is 58.

Don Cheadle is 43. Cheadle was, of course, nominated for the best actor Oscar for his performance in Hotel Rwanda.

Louisa May Alcott was born on this date in 1832. Garrison Keillor has this interesting background on The Writer’s Almanac back in 2003.

It’s the birthday of Louisa May Alcott, born in Germantown, Pennsylvania (1832), but brought up in Concord, Massachusetts, among the Transcendentalists, of which her father was one. She’s remembered now for Little Women (1869), which she found tedious to write. In her journal she wrote, “I plod away, though I don’t enjoy this sort of thing.” She much preferred writing lurid, Gothic stories, about women who sold their souls to the devil, and governesses who looked sweet and innocent by day but who ruined the souls of little children by night. She published these stories under several different pen names. Her publishers offered her more money if she would agree to publish under her own name, but she could not bring herself to embarrass her father and his colleague, Ralph Waldo Emerson. She wrote to a friend, “To have had Mr. Emerson for an intellectual god all one’s life is to be invested with a chain armor of propriety.”

The Library of Congress’s Today in History has a lot about Alcott.

One good best line deserves another

“What a debate. Eight white guys all arguing over who hates immigrants and their children the most.”

kos on Wednesday’s GOP debate.

“Watching this debate, I hereby predict that the winner of the GOP nomination will be a total asshole.”

Atrios

It won’t be long now

… before the only Rudy we hear about will be the one who wanted to play football at Notre Dame.

Who’s on first?

It’s down to the semi-finals in Who’s the Worst Sports Announcer? and Who’s the Best Sports Announcer?.

The last five state quarters

Images of the five quarters to be issued next year by The United States Mint — Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska and Hawaii.

The 10 Best Books of 2007

The New York Times lists its top 10 books of the year.

Fiction

MAN GONE DOWN
By Michael Thomas. Black Cat/Grove/Atlantic, paper, $14.

OUT STEALING HORSES
By Per Petterson. Translated by Anne Born. Graywolf Press, $22.

THE SAVAGE DETECTIVES
By Roberto Bolaño. Translated by Natasha Wimmer. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.

THEN WE CAME TO THE END
By Joshua Ferris. Little, Brown & Company, $23.99.

TREE OF SMOKE
By Denis Johnson. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.

Nonfiction

IMPERIAL LIFE IN THE EMERALD CITY: Inside Iraq’s Green Zone.
By Rajiv Chandrasekaran. Alfred A. Knopf, $25.95; Vintage, paper, $14.95.

LITTLE HEATHENS: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression.
By Mildred Armstrong Kalish. Bantam Books, $22.

THE NINE: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court.
By Jeffrey Toobin. Doubleday, $27.95.

THE ORDEAL OF ELIZABETH MARSH: A Woman in World History.
By Linda Colley. Pantheon Books, $27.50.

THE REST IS NOISE: Listening to the Twentieth Century.
By Alex Ross. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $30.

Another reason to vote for Obama

According to an upcoming story in TV Guide, Barack Obama says his favorite TV shows all-time are M*A*S*H and The Wire.

The toughest schedules

With just a few regular season games remaining, here’s Jeff Sagarin’s 10 toughest schedules (and the team’s won-lost record):

  1. Washington (4-8)
  2. California (6-5)
  3. Nebraska (5-7)
  4. UCLA (6-5)
  5. Florida (9-3)
  6. South Carolina (6-6)
  7. Oregon (8-3)
  8. Syracuse (2-10)
  9. Duke (1-11)
  10. Stanford (3-8)

Makes Florida and Oregon look good, no?

William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway

… were married on November 28th in 1582. He was 18, she 26. As with many facets of Shakespeare’s life, there is some confusion about the marriage. Among other things, Shakespeare received a marriage license with an Anne Whatley the day before. Secondly, relatives of Anne Hathaway (or Hathwey) posted bond so that her marriage to Shakespeare could proceed with only one reading of the bans. Perhaps the confusion is best resolved by noting that, six months later, on May 26, 1583, William and Anne’s daughter Susanna was christened. It appears the Bard had a shotgun wedding.

Best line of the day, so far

“Drew Curtis of Fark.com, on the death of Gatorade inventor Robert Cade, 80: ‘Remains will be cremated, and then the ashes will be dumped over some coach’s head.’”

Reported by Sideline Chatter.

Do you myth me?

Examples: In the past two months, the Kyl-Lieberman amendment has played a major role in the Democratic primaries. Have you seen a single [media] report examining the merits of this amendment? Driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants have turned the Democratic race upside down. Have you seen any reports, of any length, about the states which already allow this? (About New Mexico, whose governor is one of the Democratic candidates?)

The Daily Howler, which once again explains how much of modern political coverage is just plain myth-making. Some good background on David Broder and his infamous 1972 report which described Ed Muskie, the leading Democrat, with “tears streaming down his face.” No other reporter mentioned tears.

November 28th

Today is the birthday

… of Barry Gordy. The founder of Motown is 78.

… of Gary Hart, 71. I wonder if he’s still hanging out on the “Monkey Business” with Donna Rice.

… of Randy Newman. The 16-time Oscar nominee (one win) is 64. The win was for “If I Didn’t Have You” from “Monsters, Inc.”

… of Paul Shaffer. “The Letterman Show” band-leader is 58.

… of Ed Harris. The four-time Oscar nominee is 57. Harris has been nominated for three best supporting actor Oscars and once as best actor (for “Pollock”).

… of S. Epatha Merkerson. Lt. Van Buren is 55.

… of Judd Nelson. John Bender of “The Breakfast Club” is 48.

… of Jon Stewart. “The Daily Show” star is 45.

Flip Flop

In May, [Albuquerque Mayor] Chavez had announced plans to expand his program to include freeway-based speed cameras. In April, he successfully lobbied New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson (D) to veto legislation that would have limited profit from automated ticketing. The pro-camera lobbying effort was so strong that leaders of the state legislature asked for an investigation into whether lobbying rules were violated.

Despite this active and effective role in the photo enforcement program, the official Chavez for Senate campaign website biography limits his most important mayoral accomplishments to: “He declared war on gangs, graffiti and DWI.” Photo ticketing does not merit even a brief mention on an extensive list of his accomplishments while in office.

The Newspaper

Most noteworthy line of the day, so far

“Social Security, in other words, is in much better financial shape than the rest of the government.”

Paul Krugman, who briefly explains. Worth a minute of your time.

Update: You should also read Ruth Marcus for another thoughtful and more concerned look at Social Security.

Best line of the day, so far

“The government is sending hand baskets this week to every American citizen. Apparently we’re all going somewhere.”

Cheers and Jeers

You Look a Lot Less Like You in Person

Man #1: What is going on here?

Man #2: They are filming the new Sex in the City movie with Sarah Jessica Parker. They have the entrance to the subway blocked off.

Man #1: Wonderful. I wouldn’t even know what Sarah Jessica Parker looks like.

Woman nearby: Hi. I’m Sarah Jessica Parker.

Man #1: Nice to meet you. Can I go home now?

Sarah Jessica Parker: Sure, go ahead.

–Outside 6 train entrance

Overheard in New York

Best line worth bringing up again

But, listen, let’s review the rules. Here’s how it works: the president makes decisions. He’s the Decider. The press secretary announces those decisions, and you people of the press type those decisions down. Make, announce, type. Just put ‘em through a spell check and go home. Get to know your family again. Make love to your wife. Write that novel you got kicking around in your head. You know, the one about the intrepid Washington reporter with the courage to stand up to the administration. You know - fiction!

Stephen Colbert at the 2006 White House Correspondents’ Dinner quoted by Glenn Greenwald.

Podcasts

NewMexiKen never ceases to be amazed at the amount of free material available at the iTunes store in the form of podcasts — ESPN, NPR, PBS, college courses and lectures, and so on. Today I copied a number of free episodes of old time radio programs for my next road trip. I find the old episodes of “Suspense” and “Gunsmoke” and the like to be fast-paced and easier to listen to than audio books [while driving].

Do any of NewMexiKen’s readers have any favorite podcasts they’d like to recommend?

Doing well, not good

Dan Neil objects to incremental improvements in SUV mileage.

Strategic: This is the strongest objection. In a time of surpassing urgency — whether your pet issue is global warming, oil security or economic disruption — we are accepting, even rewarding relatively modest and incremental changes in efficiency that require no sacrifice, no change in consumer behavior at all. This isn’t going to get it done, people. The notion that American drivers can sally on as before, driving the miles and tonnage they do, and only the technology under the hood has to change, is complete bollocks. We will incrementalize ourselves to the crack of doom.

Neil points out that the manufacturers and their accomplices legislators in Washington are working to exempt trucks (and thereby large SUVs) from future fuel economy standards (35 mpg by 2020). I will go on to point out, that for example, as noted here this morning, 57% of GMs sales in North America are trucks.

Mars

We’re now beginning several very special months for seeing Mars. This planet appears bright in our sky only about every two years, and that best time to see Mars is here. Mars is bright now, and it’ll be even brighter by December. That’s when Earth – in its smaller, faster orbit – will be quickly gaining on the red planet in the race of the planets around the sun.

In just a few more weeks – December 18, to be exact – Earth will swing closest to Mars for this two-year period. Mars, in turn, will shine at its brightest in our sky. In fact, December will bring Earth’s closest encounter with Mars, and Mars’ brightest appearance in our sky, until the year 2016.

Earth & Sky

Right now Mars rises in the east 2-3 hours after sunset and, of course, will be on the western horizon near dawn.

November 27th

Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg is 50 today.

Bill Nye, the Science Guy, is 52.

Angels manager Mike Scioscia is 49.

Jimi Hendrix might have been 65 today.

Jimi Hendrix expanded the range and vocabulary of the electric guitar into areas no musician had ever ventured before. Many would claim him to be the greatest guitarist ever to pick up the instrument. At the very least his creative drive, technical ability and painterly application of such effects as wah-wah and distortion forever transformed the sound of rock and roll. Hendrix helped usher in the age of psychedelia with his 1967 debut, Are You Experienced?, and the impact of his brief but meteoric career on popular music continues to be felt.

More than any other musician, Jimi Hendrix realized the fullest range of sound that could be obtained from an amplified instrument. Many musical currents came together in his playing. Free jazz, Delta blues, acid rock, hardcore funk, and the songwriting of Bob Dylan and the Beatles all figured as influences. Yet the songs and sounds generated by Hendrix were original, otherworldly and virtually indescribable. In essence, Hendrix channeled the music of the cosmos, anchoring it to the earthy beat of rock and roll.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Buffalo Bob Smith was born 90 years ago today. (He died in 1998.)

Buffalo Bob and Howdy DoodyThe new Howdy, who premiered in March 1948 was an all-American boy with red hair, forty-eight freckles (one for each state in the Union), and a permanent smile. Howdy’s face symbolized the youthful energy of the new medium and appeared on the NBC color test pattern beginning in 1954.

Smith treated the marionettes as if they were real, and as a result, so did the children of America. Among the many unusual marionettes on the show was Phineas T. Bluster, Doodyville’s entrepreneurial mayor. Howdy’s grumpy nemesis, Bluster had eyebrows that shot straight up when he was surprised. Bluster’s naive, high-school-aged accomplice, was Dilly Dally, who wiggled his ears when he was frustrated. Flub-a-dub was a whimsical character who was a combination of eight animals. In Howdy and Me, Smith notes, “Howdy, Mr. Bluster, Dilly, and the Flub-a-Dub gave the impression that they could cut their strings, saunter off the stage, and do as they pleased.”

Although the live characters, particularly the native Americans Chief Thunderthud and Princess Summerfall Winterspring, were by modern standards stereotypical and often clownish, each had a rich heritage interwoven into the stories.

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

NewMexiKen had an appendectomy when I was six. I checked into the hospital Thursday evening for the Friday surgery and so missed that Friday’s episode of “Howdy Doody.” I’m still wondering whether Salami Joe found the jewel in the banana. (He only ate bananas on Fridays.)

The Quad

It’s kind of late for me to mention this, but The Quad college football blog from The New York Times is, I think, quite good at following college football without getting carried away about it.

The Quad is a blog about the fierce competition and engrossing culture of college football. From the Bowl Championship Series and Heisman Trophy watch, to news and features about one’s alma mater or local collegiate team, The New York Times will take readers inside America’s great fall weekend ritual with interviews, insights and analysis from the tailgates to the sidelines.

Car talk

57% of General Motors’ sales units are trucks.

If Toyota stopped making vehicles on June 1st, their dealers would be out of stock by Independence Day. If GM stopped making vehicles on June 1st, their dealers could have kept selling stock until Labor Day. (The point being that GM has a million units in dealer stock on average; Toyota 200,000.)

(NewMexiKen was born in Detroit. I can’t help it, I find the automobile industry strangely fascinating.)

Facts gleaned from The Truth About Cars.

Best line of the day, so far

“Time Magazine politcal savant says Oprah won’t help Obama. Because we all know if there’s one thing Oprah’s bad at, it’s convincing middle-aged women to do something.”

FARK.com referring to Mark Halperin.

Interesting, very interesting

A new Zogby Interactive survey shows Democrat Hillary Clinton of New York would lose to every one of the top five Republican presidential contenders, representing a reversal of fortune for the national Democratic front–runner who had led against all prospective GOP opponents earlier this year.

Meanwhile, fellow Democrats Barack Obama of Illinois and John Edwards of North Carolina would defeat or tie every one of the Republicans, this latest survey shows.
. . .

The online survey included 9,150 likely voters nationwide, and was conducted Nov. 21–26, 2007. It carries a margin of error of +/– 1.0 percentage points.

Zogby International

Obama beats each of the five Republicans by 5-7 percent. Clinton loses to each by 3-5 percent.

Oldies, but definitely goodies

An 800-year-old map, the sole surviving copy of a chart used by the Roman Empire’s courier service, was put on show for just one day on Monday after being accorded “Memory of the World” status by UNESCO.

The parchment scroll, nearly 7 metres (yards) long, could only be displayed briefly because too much light would damage it, before it was returned to storage at Austria’s National Library, where it has been since 1738.

Named Tabula Peutingeriana after the German antiquarian who owned it in the 16th century, the map shows roads linking some 4,000 settlements as well as mountains, rivers and forests from Spain in the west to China in the east.

From north to south, the map covers the British Isles to north Africa. But because the scroll is just over 30 cms (12 inches) high, the north-south axis is greatly compressed, depicting the Mediterranean Sea as a small stretch of blue squeezed between today’s Croatia and Italy.

Yahoo! News

A Springfield rifle owned by the famed Apache warrior Geronimo fetched $100,000 during an auction of Wild West guns and weapons that brought in more than $1 million.

Lawman Wyatt Earp’s double-barreled shotgun garnered $65,500, while a saber attributed to U.S. Army cavalry commander George Custer sold for $20,315 at the Bonhams & Butterfields auction Tuesday.

Yahoo! News

November 26th

Today is the birthday of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee (with Ike) Tina Turner; she’s 68.

The Ike and Tina Turner Revue was one of the highest energy ensembles on the soul circuit in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s.

Ike Turner had begun as a bandleader and talent scout in the ‘40s for blues and R&B performers. He recorded “Rocket 88,” considered by many the first rock ‘n’ roll recording, under the name of his baritone sax player, Jackie Brenston, in 1951.

Turner and his band, the Kings of Rhythm, found a young singer named Annie Mae Bullock in 1956. Eventually, the singer was renamed Tina Turner and the two married.

Their first hit, “A Fool in Love,” was recorded in 1961 when another singer failed to show up for a session. After several early ‘60s hit R&B singles, including “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine” in 1961, they became major stars in England.

A 1971 cover version of John Fogerty’s “Proud Mary” reached No. 4 on the pop chart. Ike and Tina divorced in 1976.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

A Fool in Love

John McVie is 62 today. McVie is the Mac in Fleetwood Mac. (Stevie Nicks is 59½ today.)

Despite all the changes, two members have remained constant over the years: drummer Mick Fleetwood and bassist John McVie, whose surnames provided the group name Fleetwood Mac. Though most rock fans are familiar with the lineup that includes Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks—by far the longest-running edition of the band, responsible for the classic albums Fleetwood Mac and Rumours—the group possesses a rich and storied history that predates those epics.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Gold Dust Woman

Art Shell is 61 today. Shell is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame as a player and he was the first African-American head coach in modern NFL history.

Hall of Fame pitcher Vernon Louis “Lefty” Gomez was born on this date in 1908. He died in 1989.

“No one hit home runs the way Babe (Ruth) did. They were something special. They were like homing pigeons. The ball would leave the bat, pause briefly, suddenly gain its bearings, then take off for the stands.” Lefty Gomez

“When Neil Armstrong first set foot on the moon, he and all the space scientists were puzzled by an unidentifiable white object. I knew immediately what it was. That was a home run ball hit off me in 1933 by Jimmie Foxx.” Lefty Gomez

“I talked to the ball a lot of times in my career. I yelled, ‘Go foul. Go foul.’” Lefty Gomez

CharlieBrown.gif

Charles M. Schulz was born on this date in 1922. He died in February 2000, the night before his last Sunday strip appeared. Last month John Updike wrote a fascinating review of Schulz and Peanuts, a biography by David Michaelis — Sparky from St. Paul.

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