Author: NewMexiKen
Carolina controversy
According to it’s website, the UNC Chapel Hill “Carolina Summer Reading Program is designed to introduce you to the intellectual life of Carolina. Expected of all new undergraduate students (first year and transfer), it involves reading an assigned book over the summer, and participating in a two-hour discussion with select faculty and staff members.” The program is in its fifth year.
As might be expected, there has been controversy. Last summer a conservative Christian group filed a lawsuit on behalf of three students in an attempt to stop UNC from requiring the class of 2006 to read Michael Sells’ Approaching the Qur’an: The Early Revelations. This year the reading is no longer "required"—it is "expected." Even so, some conservative UNC students and state legislators leveled criticism at the reading program for selecting Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, a book that displayed what they deemed an incomplete view of working America.
[Raleigh] News & Observer columnist J. Peder Zane provides interesting commentary:
According to officials at UNC-Chapel Hill, they’re just a bunch of clueless naifs, mystified by the controversy surrounding the book they’ve asked incoming freshmen to read…But to their well financed right-wing critics, they’re calculating bomb throwers, bent on indoctrinating unformed minds with their leftist politics…
[T]he ‘Nickel and Dimed’ debate is far more than a tired rerun of the ongoing drama ‘Ivory Tower Liberals and the Right-Wing Fanatics Who Despise Them.’ The two radically divergent views of the book reflect the increasing compartmentalization of American intellectual life. As our politics become more partisan and our news sources more varied and ideological, it is becoming easier to pass one’s life without ever hearing many opinions that challenge one’s perspective. Broadly speaking, liberals get their version of reality from CNN, NPR, the Nation magazine and progressive books and Web sites, while the right feeds on a steady diet of Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, the Weekly Standard, Ann Coulter and conservative blogs.
Do the five selections demonstrate a bias? Should they? (Descriptions from Carolina Summer Reading Program with minor edits.)
2003 — Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America is Barbara Ehrenreich’s account of what it is like to make a living on the salary of a low paid or ‘unskilled’ worker. Taking jobs as a waitress, cleaning woman, nursing home assistant and Wal-Mart employee in three different cities across the nation, Ehrenreich struggled to make ends meet. Her account of these jobs, the generous and gutsy people she works with and their desperate struggles for survival on minimum wage is direct, vivid, and engaging.
2002 — Approaching the Qura’n: The Early Revelations, translated and introduced by Michael Sells, consists of thirty-five suras, or short passages from the chief holy book of Islam, that largely focus on the experience of the divine in the natural world and the principle of moral accountability in human life. Easily accessible to any college-level reader, these suras are poetic and intensely evocative, beautiful meditations, comparable in many ways to the Psalms of David and other classics of world literature.
2001 — Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures by Anne Fadiman explores urgent yet painful questions of medical ethics and cultural difference. It tells the story of Lia Lee, the child of Hmong immigrants from Laos, who was born with severe, life-threatening epilepsy. Relating the tragedy of Lia, her parents, and her doctors with skill and compassion for all involved, Anne Fadiman explores the radically different notions of disease that divided the Hmong sense of health and disease from the views of American scientific medicine. The resulting conflict left behind heartbreak and bitterness and raises pressing questions for all thoughtful citizens.
2000 — Chosen by a group of students and faculty, Confederates in the Attic, a national bestseller by Tony Horwitz, is a poignant book about the Civil War and its effects on today’s society. Horwitz writes with a journalistic edge honed by his work with The Wall Street Journal and a few years dodging danger as a foreign correspondent. As many a Southerner will tell you, the war which technically ended 135 years ago continues to impact the nation’s cultural identity. Horwitz’s fast-paced and entertaining text describes a group of men and women attempting to relive the Civil War era in every detail.
(Even this was not without controversy: According to UNC, "the book’s Chapter 13 has engendered comments and criticisms of its portrayal of Mrs. Alberta Martin, the last known living widow of a Confederate Veteran.” See statement by the person who holds power of attorney for Mrs. Martin.)
1999 — There Are No Children Here: The Story of Two Boys Growing up in the Other America by Alex Kotlowitz tracks two young boys — Lafeyette and Pharoah Rivers — and what it is like in parts of contemporary urban America by focusing on life in a tough public-housing project on Chicago’s west side over a two-year period. We get to see how real, good people, in a terrible environment, are affected by social problems and social policies at ground level.
Each year an estimated 284,000 distracted drivers are involved in serious crashes
Drivers under 20 were especially likely to be distracted by tuning the radio or changing CDs, while young adults (ages 20 – 29) seemed to be more distracted by other passengers. Drivers over 65 were more distracted by objects or events happening outside the vehicle. Most of the distracted drivers were male (63 percent), in part because as a group males drive more than females and are more likely to be involved in serious crashes.
Approximately one-third of subjects used a cell phone while driving. Forty percent engaged in reading or writing.
Child passengers were about four times, and infants about eight times, more likely to cause distraction than adult passengers.
University of North Carolina Highway Safety Research Center Study
The habits and needs of a little-understood group
America’s Best Places to Live 2003
2. Denver, CO
Denver is a great place for those concerned about the economy. The city has a low unemployment rate and affordable housing. Denver is winning the battle against the air pollution problem that threatened in the 1990s, and its 554,636 residents now breathe some of the cleanest air in the country. The ninth-safest big city in the country, Denver has a low violent crime rate. With little rain and few days over 90 degrees F, the climate is comfortable, with no noticeable humidity. There’s also great recreation indoors and out, including world-class theater, opera, dance and of course, skiing.5. Tucson, AZ
The Sunbelt is the fastest growing region of the United States, and for good reason. Few places can compare to Tucson’s natural beauty. Set in the Sonoran Desert, the city’s air is amazingly pure, there’s little snow and rain, and it rarely gets too cold. To top it off, Tucson gets 287 days of sunshine a year! It’s no surprise that this warm, sunny city has many spas, resorts, and golf courses. The economy is also excellent in Tucson, with very low health care costs and a low unemployment rate. For those looking to start a family, houses can be quite affordable in Tucson.
Number 1 is Raleigh, NC. See full report from MSN.
A national park-to-be
Gritty and gorgeous — Great Sand Dunes National Monument.
Good tunes from NPR
Great Grandpa Charlemagne
The Royal We: “The mathematical study of genealogy indicates that everyone in the world is descended from Nefertiti and Confucius, and everyone of European ancestry is descended from Muhammad and Charlemagne.”
West-Side Stories
In 1999 San Francisco Chronicle readers ranked the best fiction and non-fiction books of the 20th century written in, about, or by an author from the Western United States.
TOP 10 NON-FICTION
1. “Land of Little Rain,” Mary Austin
2. “Beyond the Hundredth Meridian,” Wallace Stegner
3. “Desert Solitaire,” Edward Abbey
4. “This House of Sky,” Ivan Doig
5. “Son of the Morning Star,” Evan S. Connell
6. Western trilogy, Bernard DeVoto
7. “Assembling California,” John McPhee
8. “My First Summer in the Sierra,” John Muir
9. “The White Album,” Joan Didion
10. “City of Quartz,” Mike Davis
TOP 10 FICTION
1. “Angle of Repose,” by Wallace Stegner
2. “The Grapes of Wrath,” by John Steinbeck
3. “Sometimes a Great Notion,” by Ken Kesey
4. “The Call of the Wild,” by Jack London
5. “The Big Sleep,” by Raymond Chandler
6. “Animal Dreams,” by Barbara Kingsolver
7. “Death Comes for the Archbishop,” by Willa Cather
8. “The Day of the Locust,” by Nathanael West
9. “Blood Meridian,” by Cormac McCarthy
10. “The Maltese Falcon,” by Dashiell Hammett
Horrifying realization
Marcia Brady (Maureen McCormick) is 47 today.
The only way to take the SAT — one question a day
Did Bob Hope ever say anything funny?
Not according to Christopher Hitchens.
Eva Cassidy
Eva Cassidy was a singer from Bowie, Maryland, near Washington, who died of melanoma in 1996. She was 33. Click here and here and here to read about Eva.
I first heard Eva’s CD Imagine one evening last October at Tower Records in DC. I bought it then and three more CDs since. Her eighth album, American Tune is due out August 12th.
According to reports, Boston DJ Robin Young was able to get Sting to listen to Eva’s rendition of “Fields of Gold”. “She has him on camera saying that he was quite territorial about that song, arrogant even, only to be brought to tears by her totally different vocal interpretation.”
Eva Cassidy owns “Over the Rainbow” and “Fever”.
Well, actually Eva shares ownership of “Over the Rainbow” with Israel Kamakawiwo’ole.
Ansel Adams
Online exhibit of 15 classic Adams photos.
Albuquerque from high above
Isotopes Baseball
The Albuquerque Isotopes were down 7-0 going into the bottom of the 6th against the Memphis Redbirds Monday night but rallied to win 9-7. I was one of 4,954 in attendance on a beautiful night at the new Albuquerque ballpark, a guest in a corporate suite (free tickets, free food, free Isotopes Amber Ale).
The Isotopes get their name from the Simpsons. According to the Simpsons Episode Guide, in “Hungry, Hungry, Homer”:
Homer becomes a Good Samaritan after seeing the benefit of helping people. When he attempts to get Lenny a refund on his Springfield Isotopes season tickets, Homer discovers that the baseball team’s new owner, Duff Beer, plans to move the team to Albuquerque. Homer tries to rally the town in protest, however, no one believes his allegation. To expose Duff’s plan, he stages a hunger strike by chaining himself to a light pole near the stadium. Days later, the Duff Corporation deems Homer their ballpark attraction. They unchain him and tempt his cravings with an Isotope Dog Supreme. Before eating it, Homer realizes that the Southwestern ingredients on the hot dog prove that the team is moving to Albuquerque.
Actually the Isotopes moved here from Calgary, where they were the Cannons.
American Voyage
Timothy Egan of The New York Times revisits places along Lewis and Clark’s trail, examining how the land and people have changed since 1803.
Seabiscuit
Saw the film Seabiscuit Saturday evening and found it thoroughly enjoyable.
The film is based on the book by Laura Hillebrand that has been a non-fiction bestseller in both hard and soft copies for a couple of years. Seabiscuit was, as one reviewer described him, “an extraordinary animal, genetically endowed with bullet speed, a lion’s heart and a wing-nut personality.” The story is about his heart, and that of the three men who found it — played by Jeff Bridges, Chris Cooper and Tobey Maguire. The film takes the time to develop each of the four leading characters and their times, while David McCullough provides voice-over commentary on contemporary history. The racing scenes are enough to get you to the track.
True, it’s just Rocky retold. But as someone once said, there is really only one story; it’s the telling that counts.
For an informative review click here.
Why NewMexiKen?
The World Wide Web is about 10 years old. Almost from the beginning I have been interested in its content and use. In 1994 I spent ten weeks on a working group whose mission was to evolve an approach the Department of State should take regarding use of the web. Fortunately, many at State took their own initiative and established useful and informative State-related sites even before we had an “approach.”
By 1996 I had built my first personal web pages and put them on line. I still have a print out. At about the same time I also designed the State Department Library’s first web pages. (My little piece of history—State’s Library was established by Thomas Jefferson; its web pages were established by me.) Later I built pages for Debby and Kenny’s books and presentations, Lee’s PCT thru-hike and others.
All along I have maintained some sort of personal page or pages on-line. Often these have been simply lists of links. Occasionally I have added photos or commentary. Ultimately, each time, I wonder what’s the point—no one besides me looks at the page. I delete whatever is there and go back to just links or to nothing at all.
But I always come back and build another page.
- I find I enjoy the creativity and the endless tweaking it takes to get the page to look just right (to my eyes at least).
- I also find I like coming up with links, or photos or my own words and sharing them—and hoping others will find them interesting, too.
- Blogging software makes adding items quick and simple.
- It’s free and I have the time. Except for Law & Order it’s better than TV. And I do do other things.
And so, NewMexiKen begins.