“If you’re in the market for an antioxidant to keep your body young and healthy, new research suggests you’d be much better off with oranges than vitamin C tablets.”
Details from news @ nature.com.
“If you’re in the market for an antioxidant to keep your body young and healthy, new research suggests you’d be much better off with oranges than vitamin C tablets.”
Details from news @ nature.com.
Scroll to the bottom for some samples of his work.
A painter for the Fresno school district by day and inveterate antique buff the rest of his waking hours, Norsigian was combing through suburban castoffs when he came across a time-weathered wooden box. The crate was heavy with old glass-plate photographic negatives.
Frozen in early 20th century black and white were sharply detailed shots of Yosemite landmarks, the San Francisco waterfront, Carmel’s historic mission and scenic Point Lobos.
Norsigian bought the five dozen negatives for about 75 cents apiece. They were a nice bit of memorabilia, he figured, nothing more.
Still, over the months that followed, when he gingerly pulled the delicate plates out of faded manila envelopes to show friends and relatives, nearly everyone said the same thing: These old glass negatives look like the work of Ansel Adams.
A notion slowly took hold of Norsigian: Perhaps this was a misplaced collection of the American photographic legend’s early work. Maybe he had turned up a lost treasure.
. . . of Elizabeth R. She’s 81. (R for Regina, i.e., Queen.) Her name is Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor.
. . . of Elaine May, 75.
. . . of Charles Grodin, 72.
. . . of Iggy Pop, 60.
. . . of Tony Danza, 56.
. . . of Andie MacDowell, 49.
Charlotte Bronte was born on this date in 1816.
John Muir was born on this date in 1838.
When we think of art patrons, prestigious names normally come to mind. Medici, Getty, Rockefeller.
But Cheech?
That’s a name we associate more with lowbrow humor than fine art. Yet Cheech Marin, half of the ’70s comedy duo Cheech and Chong, arguably has emerged as the nation’s leading advocate for Chicano art.
“On Capitol Hill Attorney General Alberto Gonzales raised his right hand, swore to tell the truth, and then everybody had a good laugh and went back to what they were doing.”
Jay Leno
Actresses nominated for an Oscar for playing a nun (Meryl Streep is playing a nun this year in the movie Doubt):
Jennifer Jones – “The Song of Bernadette” winner
Gladys Cooper – “The Song of Bernadette”
Ingrid Bergman – “The Bells of St. Marys”
Loretta Young – “Come to the Stable”
Celeste Holm – “Come to the Stable”
Audrey Hepburn – “A Nuns Story”
Lilia Skala – “Lilies of the Field”
Julie Andrews – “The Sound of Music”
Peggy Wood – “The Sound of Music”
Anne Bancroft – “Agnes of God”
Meg Tilly – “Agnes of God”
Susan Sarandon – “Dead Man Walking” winner
Priests have done even better, at least so far as actually winning:
Spencer Tracy – “Boys Town” (winner)
Bing Crosby – “Going My Way” (winner)
Barry Fitzgerald – “Going My Way” (winner)
Richard Burton – “Becket”
Jason Miller – “The Exorcist”
List from The Envelope.
They forgot Cheerios — and Goldfish.
Thanks to Veronica for the link.
. . .is 48 today.
Clint Howard is credited with more than 170 films and television programs including roles in many of his brother’s films — Cocoon, Apollo 13 and Cinderella Man come to mind. Many will remember Clint as the 8-year-old kid in the TV series Gentle Ben. Howard was also the voice of Roo in the Disney Winnie the Pooh films, and more recently the voice of the balloon man in Curious George.

See NewMexiKen’s special Ron Howard’s Brother page.
. . . of Justice John Paul Stevens, 87 today. He went on the Court in 1975.
. . . of Mr. Sulu. That’s actor George Takei of Star Trek. He’s 70.
. . . of Ryan O’Neal, nominated for best actor for Love Story, but never again. He’s 66.
. . . of Coach Steve Spurrier, 62.
. . . of Andrew Tobias. He’s 60.
. . . of six-time Oscar nominee and two-time winner Jessica Lange. Lange won best supporting actress for Tootsie and best actress for Blue Sky. She’s 58.
. . . of Ron Howard’s brother, 48. (See separate entry.)
. . . of Carmen Electra, 35.
Daniel Chester French was born on this date in 1850.
French studied in Boston and New York prior to receiving his first commission for the 1875 statue The Minute Man. Standing near the North Bridge in Concord, in the Minute Man National Historical Park, this work commemorates events at the North Bridge, the site of “the shot heard ’round the world”. An American icon, images derivative of The Minute Man statue appeared on defense bonds, stamps, and posters during World War II.
With the success of The Minute Man came opportunities to study abroad. After a year in Italy, French opened a studio in Washington, D.C. Additional trips to Europe and a friendship with fellow sculptor Augustus Saint Gaudens resulted in more ambitious work beginning with the impressive General Lewis Cass executed for the U.S. Capitol in 1888.
By the turn of the century, French was America’s preeminent monumental sculptor. The Angel of Death Staying the Hand of the Sculptor, created for Boston’s Forest Hills Cemetery; John Harvard, located at Harvard University; and a standing Abraham Lincoln at the west entrance to the Nebraska State Capitol are a few of the important monuments French produced during a long and productive career.
Adolph Hitler was born on this date in 1889.
Harold Lloyd was born on this date in 1893.
“The King of Daredevil Comedy,” Harold Lloyd is best remembered today as the young man dangling desperately from a clock tower in the 1923 classic Safety Last. At the height of his career, Lloyd was one of the most popular and highest-paid stars of his time. While his achievements have been overshadowed by the work of contemporaries Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, he made more films than the two of them combined. With hits like his 1922 film Grandma’s Boy, Lloyd became a strong force in bringing about the advent of the “feature-length” film.
Lionel Hampton was born on this date in 1908.
Hampton was not the first jazz musician to take up vibraphone (Red Norvo had preceded him in the late 1920s), but it was he who gave the instrument an identity in jazz, applying a wide range of attacks and generating remarkable swing on an instrument otherwise known for its bland, disembodied sound. Undoubtedly his best work was done with the Goodman Quartet from 1936-1940, when he revealed a fine ear for small-ensemble improvisation and an unrestrained, ebullient manner as a soloist. The big band format was probably better suited to the display of his flamboyant personality and flair for showmanship, but after a few early successes, especially the riff tunes Flying Home, Down Home Jump, and Hey Bab-Ba-Rebop, the group was too often content to repeat former triumphs for its many admirers. Hampton has at times also appeared as a singer, played drums with enormous vitality, and performed with curious success as a pianist, using only two fingers in the manner of vibraphone mallets.
Luther Vandross was born on this date in 1951. His album Never Too Much is one of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s Definitive 200 (albums that every music lover should own).
The Daily Show reports on the Gonzales testimony (there may be a brief ad first).
Electric guy to himself: Where’s my gloves?
Grip guy: Gloves? I don’t use gloves. I use my bare hands like a man! Only pussies use gloves. Are you a pussy? Be a man, ya pussy.
Electric guy: But then my skin will get all dry and crack and stuff.
Grip guy: Duh, well, yeah. That’s why you have to moisturize.
–Movie set of I Am Legend
Overheard by: Another electric guy
It was on this day in 1841 that Edgar Allan Poe…published his short story “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.” It’s the story of the brilliant amateur detective Auguste Dupin and how he solves the crime of two murders that turn out to have been committed by an orangutan. It was the first story to feature a detective solving a crime, and it would spark the entire genre of detective fiction, one of the most popular fiction genres in the history of English literature.
Of course, it wasn’t the first mystery story. The mystery story is as old as literature. What made Poe’s short story “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” different was that it was about a man solving a crime by examining and piecing together clues through a process of scientific reasoning. It also introduced many of the elements of mysteries that are still popular today: the genius detective Auguste C. Dupin, the not-so-smart sidekick, the plodding policeman, and the use of the red herring to lead readers off the track. Arthur Conan Doyle borrowed almost all of those elements to create the Sherlock Holmes stories and novels, which were what really popularized the detective story. Doyle had actually done some work as a scientist, so he was able to make the investigations in his stories more realistic.
Appropriately, in anticipation of today’s anniversary, NewMexiKen yesterday read The Shape of Water by Andrea Camilleri, featuring Inspector Salvo Montalbano. Last night I began Acqua Alta by Donna Leon, a Guido Brunetti mystery. Thank you Poe.
Virginia Tech family members across the country have united to declare this Friday, April 20th, an “Orange and Maroon Effect” day to honor those killed in the tragic events on campus Monday, and to show support for Virginia Tech students, faculty, administrators, staff, alumni, and friends. “Orange and Maroon Effect” was born several years ago as an invitation to Tech fans to wear orange and maroon to Virginia Tech athletic events. We invite everyone from all over the country to be a part of the Virginia Tech family this Friday, to wear orange and maroon to support the families of those who were lost, and to support the school and community we all love so much.
Bush being Bush at a town meeting, which means, as Time’s Joe Klein says, “unplugged, unhinged, unscripted, incoherent.”
As noted earlier today, it was 12 years ago that the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City was bombed, killing 168 people and injuring 500. NewMexiKen has been to the Memorial twice, most recently last June with Dad. I’ve created an album with 12 photos of this striking, yet somber place.
You may click on the image to advance to the next photo.
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A truly fascinating little essay on The Smallest Small Towns of New Mexico, population 25, 4 and 2. It begins:
As of 2007, almost two million people live in New Mexico. Almost 500,000 of these live in Albuquerque. And more than 300,000 live in Las Cruces, Santa Fe, Rio Rancho, Roswell, and Farmington.
As a result of so many people gathered in so few places, these cities have come to provide a near-majority of New Mexicans with their visual definitions of what New Mexico is, and have become the face this state shows the world. Tourists recalling New Mexico likely think of Santa Fe, with its cottonwood-shaded plazas, adobe churches, and stuccoed Wal-Marts. They might picture Kodachrome balloons wafting over downtown Albuquerque and its dusty suburbs. And they probably won’t call to mind the tiny desert towns that freckle the state, that punctuate its roads, and that offer travelers a relief from driving and residents a place to call home.
“I defy you to take the performance of the Attorney General and put it up against any boardroom segment on the Donald Trump reality show The Apprentice and tell me if you see any difference in the plaintive, cloying arguments of Gonzales and the plaintive, cloying arguments of any of the contestants on that reality show when they are begging not to be fired.”
Reader TA at Talking Points Memo.
NewMexiKen realizes that at some level this isn’t funny, but how many times have you wanted to see something like this while watching the news?
Here, in response to a comment, are the top 50 cities worldwide for Quality of Living from Mercer Human Resource Consulting. Scroll down for the Health and Sanitation (Cleanest) list.
NewMexiKen hasn’t read this book yet, but it’s getting good reviews. The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution by David O. Stewart.
And this, of course.
Einstein: His Life and Universe.
And, among the Pulitzer winners, this stands out for me:
The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright.
Walt Mossberg provides his “annual spring buyer’s guide to desktop PCs.” It includes this:
So, if you desperately need a new Windows PC, be prepared to be underwhelmed and to be frustrated by incompatible software and hardware. And if you’re not desperate, you might wait another six months or so for the software and hardware to catch up — and for Microsoft to issue some bug fixes.
Or you could buy a Mac instead. I still believe the best desktop computer on the market for mainstream, nontechnical consumers is the Apple iMac. It has gorgeous hardware and superior built-in software. Its operating system, Mac OS X, includes most of the key new features of Vista. And the iMac can even run Vista, along with its own operating system, if you need the occasional Windows program.
NewMexiKen runs Vista on my iMac — for the handful of Windows programs I choose not to give up, Vista’s lovely new version of Spider Solitaire among them.