October 11th

Today is the birthday

… of Elmore Leonard. He’s 82 today. Leonard on his Rules of Writing — “These rules I picked up along the way to help me remain invisible while I’m writing a book, to help me show rather than tell what’s taking place in the story.” (Quotation from If You Can’t Do It Well, Don’t Do It.)

Elmore Leonard’s western stories are as good if not better than his detective novels.

… of Steve Young. The hall-of-fame quarterback is 46.

… of Joan Cusack. The actress is 45. She’s been nominated for the best actress in a supporting role Oscar twice, Working Girl and In & Out.

And, if they rated first ladies like they rate the presidents, the one who would surely be at the top, Eleanor Roosevelt, was born on this date in 1884. (She died in 1962.) The following is excerpted from the White House Biography of Eleanor Roosevelt:

Eleanor RooseveltA shy, awkward child, starved for recognition and love, Eleanor Roosevelt grew into a woman with great sensitivity to the underprivileged of all creeds, races, and nations. Her constant work to improve their lot made her one of the most loved–and for some years one of the most revered–women of her generation.

She was born in New York City on October 11, 1884, daughter of lovely Anna Hall and Elliott Roosevelt, younger brother of Theodore. …

In her circle of friends was a distant cousin, handsome young Franklin Delano Roosevelt. They became engaged in 1903 and were married in 1905, with her uncle the President giving the bride away. Within eleven years Eleanor bore six children; one son died in infancy. …

From [Franklin’s] successful campaign for governor in 1928 to the day of his death, she dedicated her life to his purposes. She became eyes and ears for him, a trusted and tireless reporter.

When Mrs. Roosevelt came to the White House in 1933, she understood social conditions better than any of her predecessors and she transformed the role of First Lady accordingly. She never shirked official entertaining; she greeted thousands with charming friendliness. She also broke precedent to hold press conferences, travel to all parts of the country, give lectures and radio broadcasts, and express her opinions candidly in a daily syndicated newspaper column, “My Day.”

The Writer’s Almanac from American Public Media has biographical background today about both Elmore Leonard and Eleanor Roosevelt.

Truest line of the day, so far

“In American political commentary we often pick on the candidates but the voter is always sacrosanct. He’s usually portrayed as a noble innocent who may be betrayed but whose mistakes are always honest ones. But sometimes the voter is just plain stupid. He’s a guy you wouldn’t trust to mow your lawn, much less chose the leader of the free world.”

A Video Report by Matt Taibbi.

National Book Awards Nominees

“God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything,” a vigorous attack on religion by Christopher Hitchens, and “Legacy of Ashes: The History of the C.I.A.,” by Tim Weiner, a reporter for The New York Times, both appeared on best-seller lists this year. A from-the-ground-up look at the founding of the United States, “Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution” by Woody Holton, joined those two finalists, as did Edwidge Danticat’s wrenching memoir of her family in Haiti, “Brother, I’m Dying,” and Arnold Rampersad’s “Ralph Ellison: A Biography.”

[T]he fiction finalists included first-time novelists as well as familiar storytellers. The novices — Mischa Berlinski for “Fieldwork,” about a journalist living in Thailand, and Joshua Ferris for “Then We Came to the End,” a comic story about office life — were joined by Lydia Davis for her seventh collection of short stories, “Varieties of Disturbance”; Denis Johnson for “Tree of Smoke,” a tale of espionage in Vietnam; and Jim Shepard for “Like You’d Understand, Anyway,” a group of stories told in the first person.

The New York Times

Follow the link for the poetry and young people’s literature nominees.

NewMexiKen has read the first two of the non-fiction works, but none of the others. How about you?

Loathsome understates it

This is so loathesome I am literally sick to my stomach. These kids were hurt in a car accident. Their parents could not afford health insurance — and sure as hell couldn’t get it now with a severely handicapped daughter. And these shrieking wingnut jackasses are harassing their family for publicly supporting the program that allowed the kids to get health care. A program, by the way, which a large number of these Republicans support as well.

They went after Michael J. Fox. They went after a wounded Iraq war veteran. Now they are going after handicapped kids. There is obviously no limit to how low these people will go.

Digby

More from The New York Times.

And Think Progress.

And the Daily Howler.

October 10th

Today is the birthday

… of Peter Coyote, the actor. He’s 65. Coyote does a lot of voice-over and narration. He’s the one that sounds a lot like Henry Fonda. He’s appeared in more than 100 films and television shows (including recently in “Commander in Chief”), though he began acting only at age 39. He tested for the part of Indiana Jones.

… of “Chicken George.” Actor Ben Vereen is 61. He played Alex Haley’s ancestor, “Chicken George,” in Roots.

… of singer John Prine, 61.

… of Tanya Tucker, 49.

… of Bradley Whitford. He’s 48.

… of Brett Favre. He’s 38.

… of Dale Earnhardt. He’s 33.

Helen Hayes was born on October 10th in 1900. Hayes won two acting Oscars — leading in 1932 and supporting 39 years later in 1971.

Long regarded as “the First Lady of American Theater,” Helen Hayes earned international esteem and affection during a career that spanned more than eighty years on stage and in films, radio, and television. As a screen actor she won two Oscars, as a stage actor she won a prestigious Drama League of New York award, and in 1988 President Ronald Reagan presented her with the National Medal of Arts. Deeply in love with her profession, Hayes enjoyed playing a variety of roles, from Amanda Wingfield in Tennesse Williams’s “The Glass Menagerie” (1948) to a little old lady stowaway in AIRPORT (1970). Both the charm of her comic roles and the depth of her tragic ones made Hayes one of the most respected and beloved American actors.

American Masters

Thelonious Monk was born on this date in 1917.

Thelonious Monk, who was criticized by observers who failed to listen to his music on its own terms, suffered through a decade of neglect before he was suddenly acclaimed as a genius; his music had not changed one bit in the interim. In fact, one of the more remarkable aspects of Monk’s music was that it was fully formed by 1947 and he saw no need to alter his playing or compositional style in the slightest during the next 25 years. (All Music)

A must-have jazz album is Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall. All Music has a review and the background — the tape had been lost for decades.

Monk died in 1982.

The Lives of Others

Earlier this year when Pan’s Labyrinth collected several early Oscars — the film won for art, cinematography and makeup — many were surprised when it didn’t win best foreign language film of the year.

See the movie that did win — Das Leben der Anderen (The Lives of Others) — and you’ll understand.

Truest — and saddest — line of the day, so far

“[L]aunching a balloon is never mandatory, but landing it always is.”

The above from hot air balloon pilots quoted in the Albuquerque Tribune in a story about a fatality as a woman fell about 80-feet from a balloon gondola Monday morning. The balloon, Heavenly Ride, was carrying four paid passengers when it collided with a utility line. A tether to people on the ground was used to steady the balloon; the line snapped, tipping the wicker gondola as the balloon rose quickly.

The last fatality at the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta was in 1998. It too was a balloon carrying paid passengers. Balloon pilots NewMexiKen knows told me last night that accidents are often (usually) commercial balloons, as they tend to fly in more borderline conditions.

On Saturday, balloonists in the second (and later) wave of launches were told the wind was increasing and to treat their flight like a first date: “Don’t go far and come home early.” Commercial balloons don’t always have that prerogative.

What I Want For Election ’08

New Mexicans interested in politics and sharing more or less NewMexiKen’s outlook should be sure to read Burque Babble’s What I Want For Election ’08.

NewMexiKen, too, might vote for Republican Wilson in a Wilson (R) vs. Mayor Marty (D) senate race. And I have never voted for a Republican, and I have been voting since 1966. I even voted for Black Panther Party founder Bobby Seale once (for mayor of Oakland, California — he came in second of nine).

Photo Enforcement Generating Millions

All together, [Albuquerque] collected $10,611,397 in revenue and handed over $2,844,920 to Redflex. This left the city with between $5.8 and $7.8 million in net profit. The precise figure is not known as officials charged as photo enforcement expenses a number of part and full-time police officer salaries as well as the entire administrative hearing office budget. The audit report sidestepped the question of whether the ticketing program has had any beneficial effect on traffic accidents. It mentioned that police could claim only two of the nineteen intersections with cameras might have seen a decrease in accidents.

TheNewspaper

I like this most about our local system: “The so-called ‘speed on green’ feature ensures that motorists will not be able to adjust their speed to make it through a short yellow light without getting a ticket.”

No brainers

“The interstate highway system could turn into a nationwide network of toll roads as plans proceed to add tolls to existing freeways in Maine and Pennsylvania while an entirely new tolled interstate is approved for South Carolina.”

TheNewspaper has details.

Many of these same politicians scream mightily at the thought of raising the tax on gasoline. The federal tax has remained constant at 18.4¢ a gallon while the price of gas has gone up 200 percent. As the majority of the gasoline tax goes to maintaining roads and bridges, this seems like a no-brainer to NewMexiKen. Raise the tax a few cents and forego the expense of toll gates and booths, electronic toll systems and the associated bureaucracy.

But there are a lot of no-brainers in political office.

October 9th

John Lennon should have been 67 today.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Jackson Browne is 59.

Jackson Browne has been both an introspective, cerebral songwriter and a politically attuned voice of conscience. He emerged in the early Seventies as a soul-baring young folksinger whose songs dealt with riddles of romance and existence. In his middle period he became a more extroverted rock and roller. Later work grew more topical in nature as Browne sang of political and social realities within and beyond our borders.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Robert Wuhl is 56. Wuhl, known most recently for Arli$$, shared in two Emmys for writing for the Academy Awards show (1991, 1992). NewMexiKen liked him best as the coach in Bull Durham.

“Okay, well, uh… candlesticks always make a nice gift, and uh, maybe you could find out where she’s registered and maybe a place-setting or maybe a silverware pattern. Okay, let’s get two! Go get ’em.”

Guillermo del Toro, writer-director-producer of El Laberinto del fauno, is 43.

Annika Sorenstam is 37.

Sean Lennon is 32.

Charles Walgreen was born on this date in 1873. Yes, he’s the man who began the Walgreen’s drug store chain, starting in Chicago. It was a Walgreen’s soda fountain employee who invented the malted milkshake in 1922, which puts him right up there with Edison as far as NewMexiKen is concerned.

Cristobal Colon

Today is the second Monday in October and the day we celebrate the federal holiday honoring Christopher Columbus. Two years ago NewMexiKen posted some thoughts on the matter. Here they are again (with a few inconsequential edits):


NewMexiKen is well aware of the feelings among many American Indians and others about Columbus Day. One Lakota woman who worked for me used to ask if—as a protest—she could come in and work on Columbus Day, a federal holiday.

My feeling is that we can’t have enough holidays and so I choose to think of Columbus Day as the Italian-American holiday. Nothing wrong with that. We have an African-American holiday on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday. We have the Irish-American celebration that is St. Patrick’s Day. And Cinco de Mayo is surely the Mexican-American holiday, a much larger celebration here than in most of Mexico.

So, instead of protesting Columbus Day, perhaps American Indians should lobby to bring about a holiday of their own. Given the great diversity among Indian nations, the tribes might never reach agreement, though, so NewMexiKen will suggest a date.

The day before Columbus Day.


As for Columbus himself, a short biography from AmericanHeritage.com begins:

No matter how widely he had been hailed as a hero 14 years before, by 1506, when he died (500 years ago today), Christopher Columbus was all washed up.

Crowds from across Spain lined the streets of Seville in 1493 to welcome him home from his first voyage to the Americas, but he already hadn’t found what he was looking for, a seaway to India’s spice-trade ports. He never would, though the search consumed the rest of his life. A little genocide here, some slavery there, several mutinies, and multiple executions of crew members later, and Columbus fell out of favor with the Spanish crown and the public. When he died he was surrounded by family and by the trappings of his substantial income. But he went to his grave with the gouging sense of injustice he couldn’t forgive and of failure he couldn’t explain.

Perhaps the Italian-Americans should transfer their holiday allegiance to Tony Bennett.

Another look at Columbus Day

Oglala Lakota journalist Tim Giago says Stop trying to rename ‘Indians’. Giago’s whole essay merits your time, but I especially liked this paragraph:

I am a firm believer that most historians are wrong when they credit Christopher Columbus for coining the word “Indian” because he thought he was landing his ships in India. In 1492 there was no country known as India. Instead that country was called Hindustan. I think that is closer to the truth that the Spanish padre that sailed with Columbus was so impressed with the innocence of the Natives he observed that he called them Los Ninos in Dios. My spelling may be wrong on the Spanish words, but the description by the padre means something like “Children of God.”

Six-five-four-three-two-one

There are two Sweetie birthdays in October, one today and one coming up Saturday.

For six days until Saturday, though, The Sweeties are 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1.

Kiley was the Sweetie who turned five today. It’s always subject to change with children that age, but last I knew Kiley’s favorite thing was the Disney princesses.

Grandpa thinks Kiley is more of a princess than any of those storybook fictions.

This photo of Kiley was taken at her cousin’s recent birthday party — that’s him looking over her shoulder. Looks to me like Kiley was thinking ahead to her own cake today.

Click photo for larger version.

Kiley Looking Ahead

Happy Is a Yuppie Word

Annette takes a longer look at a topic NewMexiKen introduced last week — Why Are Women So Unhappy? — and the result is an interesting essay as Annette wonders whether Happy is a Yuppie Word.

I’d much rather be liberated than happy. I’d rather have what I have now, even if it means gi-normous amounts of anxiety, than go back to a time where women had fewer options in life. I guess what I’m saying is, happiness is overrated.

Go read what else Annette has to say.

Best I don’t think he thought through what he’s saying line of the day, so far

“We gave up 24 points there in the blink of an eye, but we’ve had losses worse than this one.”

University of Arizona linebacker Spencer Larsen quoted by Greg Hansen in his Arizona Daily Star column after the Wildcats lost to Oregon State 31-16.

Hansen himself has a pretty foolish line:

“A week ago you might have bought stock in the UA football program. Today you would probably sell at a deficit. If the Wildcats get to something like 5-7, winning three more games, [Coach] Stoops would be a miracle worker.”

So, if I understand that correctly, Stoops would be responsible for the 5, but not the 7 in his fourth season as head coach?