Click chart to try the quiz yourself.
[NewMexiKen couldn’t get the graph to display properly, so copied this image from Live From Silver City. Go visit and check out the photography!]
Click chart to try the quiz yourself.
[NewMexiKen couldn’t get the graph to display properly, so copied this image from Live From Silver City. Go visit and check out the photography!]
FunctionalAmbivalent has a photo.
… of Vin Scully. He’s 79. Scully started doing Dodger’s broadcasts in Brooklyn in 1950. His current contract runs through the 2008 season.
… of Diane Ladd. She’s 74. 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.”
… of Don Cheadle. He’s 42. 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’ Today in History has a lot about Alcott.
It’s been snowing early this morning at Casa NewMexiKen. Nothing much, just enough to cover the trees and shrubbery and be kind of pretty. That’s especially true if you can just sit here and look at it and not go out.
Yes, I did get the shower faucet fixed. Thanks for asking.
New springs and seats: $3.99
New handle: $10.98
Satisfaction of doing it myself: Priceless
I saw yesterday that the mascot for the Alamosa (Colorado) High School is the Mean Moose. Cool.
Some people have said to me, “Your Mom is from Japan and your Dad is from India, so that makes you half-Asian.” What continent do they think India is in? I mean, 20 percent of American schoolchildren can’t find Earth — on a map of Earth.
That’s comic Dan Nainan quoted by Joe Sharkey in a column in Tuesday’s Times, It’s Not Easy Being a Comic on the Airport Security Line.
NewMexiKen is really enjoying the mellow sounds of The Road to Escondido, the album by J.J. Cale and Eric Clapton. Cale wrote “After Midnight” and “Cocaine.”
I’ve learned there is a new and improved way to construct the code behind the layout of this weblog, so bear with me this next day or so while I make the change. This new approach includes modular inserts for the sidebars.
Cal Berkeley and, to a lesser extent, Stanford are offering speakers and even courses free online via podcasts. UC Berkeley on iTunes U has course lectures in history, psychology, geography, ecology, economics, computer science and much more. Stanford on iTunes U is limited more to one-shot events than classes, but still has an interesting selection. How did we live before the internets?
I read a short item in The New Yorker over the weekend about sugar and corn and ethanol. Really it’s about our convoluted government. Here’s a taste:
In the nineteen-seventies, Brazil embarked on a program to substitute sugar ethanol for oil. Today, every gallon of gas in Brazil is blended with at least twenty per cent of ethanol, and many cars run on ethanol alone, at half the price of gasoline.
What’s stopping the U.S. from doing the same? In a word, politics. The favors granted to the sugar industry keep the price of domestic sugar so high that it’s not cost-effective to use it for ethanol.
Oh, it’s worse than that. Go read.
And Ben Stein had an interesting column, In Class Warfare, Guess Which Class Is Winning. An excerpt:
Mr. Buffett compiled a data sheet of the men and women who work in his office. He had each of them make a fraction; the numerator was how much they paid in federal income tax and in payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare, and the denominator was their taxable income. The people in his office were mostly secretaries and clerks, though not all.
It turned out that Mr. Buffett, with immense income from dividends and capital gains, paid far, far less as a fraction of his income than the secretaries or the clerks or anyone else in his office. Further, in conversation it came up that Mr. Buffett doesn’t use any tax planning at all. He just pays as the Internal Revenue Code requires. “How can this be fair?” he asked of how little he pays relative to his employees. “How can this be right?”
Maureen Dowd puts into words:
“But the reality on the streets of Baghdad suggests Maliki is either ignorant of what is going on, misrepresenting his intentions, or that his capabilities are not yet sufficient to turn his good intentions into action.”
It’s bad enough to say that about the Iraqi puppet. But what about when the same is true of the American president?
Over at the Duke City Fix there’s a discussion of the Sandia Mountains.
Here’s what they looked like at 4:51 (photo cropped and straightened but otherwise unedited).
Photo taken just outside, a few feet from my computer. Shadows are branches in the foreground. I was eager to capture the color. Click to enlarge.
It’s Black Suit Tuesday in Turkey.

NewMexiKen thinks you should be reading the Daily Howler every day because a lot of what Bob Somerby writes about is important and revealing. (Alas, he has no RSS feed.)
Normally I would just provide a teaser and a link. Today I’m including the whole first part of his posting because I think it is that important and that revealing.
YOU OUGHTTA KNOW: After yesterday’s post (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 11/27/06), we briefly revisited the 1994 public discourse about “midnight basketball.” We really thought you ought to consider a bit of what we observed.
In Saturday’s New York Times, Thomas Edsall warned Dems to stop making such proposals, even though they may represent the “pursuit of laudable goals.” After all, Edsall noted, “conservative talk radio” will trash such ideas; the trashing will “spread to the establishment media, and soon became a liability.” As we noted, this is a perfect history of our recent politics—and it’s a perfect history of the way the establishment media has learned to bow low to pseudo-con power. Edsall seems to take it as a given: His colleagues won’t defend the pursuit of laudable goals. Instead, they’ll simply repeat What Rush Says, even when he trashes such efforts.
In precisely that manner, the crackpot forces in American politics seized control of the public discourse during the early Clinton-Gore years. Yesterday, our brief research showed that “midnight basketball”—Edsall’s chosen topic—was an especially good example of the way this process has worked.
What did we think you ought to consider? We were struck by a short, unsigned report in the 8/17/94 New York Times. The Times report noted an interesting fact—the previous Republican president had also approved of midnight basketball:
NEW YORK TIMES (8/17/94): The Republicans who maintain that President Clinton’s stalled crime bill is loaded with excessive social spending often point to a provision for midnight basketball as a prime example of waste.What they may not know is that the idea of midnight basketball was promoted by George Bush when he was President. In fact, Mr. Bush, a Republican, was so impressed with a midnight basketball program in Maryland that he named it as one of his Thousand Points of Light.
“The last thing midnight basketball is about is basketball,” Mr. Bush said when he visited the program in 1991 in Glenarden, Md., home of the first midnight basketball program in the nation.
Representative Steny H. Hoyer, a Democrat who represents that district, quoted the former President’s remarks on the House floor today.
“Mr. Bush named the program his 124th point of light,” the Times noted. And the paper quoted more of Bush’s 1991 statement: “Here, everybody wins. Everybody gets a better shot at life.”
Fascinating, isn’t it? Before Bill Clinton showed up at the White House, the sitting Republican president applauded this program. But when Clinton proposed modest funding in its support, “conservative talk radio” began to trash it, in ways that were often racially coded; according to Edsall, these attacks “spread to the establishment media,” making the proposal a liability for Clinton. But Edsall doesn’t criticize his establishment colleagues for adopting these pseudo-conservative values; instead, he implores the Democrats to never-again pursue such laudable goals. As such, Edsall’s column becomes a perfect portrait of the way our discourse was lost in this era—of the way a new wave of pseudo-conservatives seized control of the public discourse, with the willing acquiescence of Edsall’s weak-willed cohort. By 1999, Edsall’s establishment colleagues were happily conducting their War Against Gore, taking their talking-points from Jim Nicholson, the endlessly dissembling RNC chairman. After twenty months of such crackpot behavior, they’d sent another Bush to the White House—and he sent us to a new Vietnam.
In short, before the “conservative revolution” of the early Clinton years, everyone thought well of midnight basketball. But soon, a group of loudmouth kooks weighed in—and the Edsels of the establishment media began to suffer the endless breakdowns which have shaped our politics right to this day. Even today, Edsall can’t see the peculiar shape of the history he relates. Even today, he begs the Democrats: Please don’t incite those talk-radio hosts! In the name of all that’s convenient, don’t pursue “laudable goals!”
… was authorized on this date in 1990.
Amistad NRA is known primarily for excellent water-based recreation including: boating, fishing, swimming, and water-skiing. The park also provides opportunities for picnicking, camping and hunting. The reservoir, formed at the confluence of the Rio Grande, Devils and Pecos rivers, is surrounded by a landscape rich in archeology and rock art, as well as a wide variety of plant and animal life.
“How do we know what’s important in a newscast if you’re not yelling at your guests?”
Stephen Colbert to PBS’s Jim Lehrer.
From National Lampoon. Guess what this is about. Awesome!
It comes back to me now about how the people of Wyoming feel about Coloradans. Wash Park Prophet has an item on a proposal to eliminate semis on I-70 west of Denver. Key part of the plan: “The cross-country stuff can go on Interstate 80 across Wyoming or Interstate 40 across New Mexico.”
It seems a local IHOP in Quincy, Mass., was asking to hold your ID while you dined. And I get ticked when the hair cutting place wants my telephone number.
A Quinnipiac University poll asked people to rate their feelings concerning 20 politicans on a scale of 0-100.
Bottom three:
18) Sen. Bill Frist – 41.5
19) Sen. Harry Reid – 41.2
20) Sen. John Kerry – 39.6
Top three:
1) Rudolph Giuliani – 64.2
2) Sen. Barack Obama 58.8
3) Sen. John McCain 57.7
Well, except for Obama, those could be NewMexiKen’s bottom five. The full list is in a comment.
Did you hear about the cannibal restaurant? Missionaries were $10. Explorers were $15. Politicians were $100. When asked why the politicians were so much more, the cannibal chef replied, “Did you ever try to clean one?”
NewMexiKen met a young guy, Matt, over the weekend whose family here in Albuquerque has two bison as pets. Really. A male named “Boy” and a female named — take a guess — you got it, “Girl.” Matt even showed me a photo. He said the male plays with a large ball. The two animals are three years old, which is getting pretty close to reproduction age. At full maturity a male bison can weigh 2,000 pounds, a female around 1,100. State regulations require a minimum of one acre per bison Matt told me — and a reinforced fence. The state wouldn’t let the family keep elk.
NewMexiKen figures we haven’t heard the end of this story: “An Albuquerque man who last week was awarded more than $300,000 in damages in a civil lawsuit against city police has been identified as the man found shot [to death] on Fourth Street on Thanksgiving.”
I got a kick out of this routing from Southwest for a possible trip to visit some Sweeties: Albuquerque to San Francisco, San Francisco to Los Angeles, Los Angeles to Oakland. Guess Southwest doesn’t know that the “O” in SFO (the San Francisco International Airport code) stands for “Oakland.”
Sorry to hear that Kid Rock and Pamela Anderson are getting divorced after four months of marriage. I thought they might have genuine staying power — six months at least. Oh, and I see Dumb and Dumber are all decked out in Christmas colors already.
Fun new “I’m a Mac, I’m a PC” ads from Apple. I especially liked this one. Also, there is news that there will soon be a Nike Amp+. It’s a bluetooth wristband that communicates with your Nike+iPod. From your wrist you can operate the iPod and monitor your workout. Coming soon.
The University of Arizona just completed its third season with Coach Mike Stoops. They’ve gone 3-8, 3-8 and 6-6 (and one of the wins each year was against a I-AA team). So really, 9-22. What’s reasonable for us alums to expect next year?
If I’m interpreting Andrew Tobias correctly, about a third of all the income taxes we pay goes to interest just on the debt accumulated under Reagan, Bush and Bush.
After a warm fall (Albuquerque has had nine totally cloudless days in November) we are told to expect lows in the teens and the possibility of snow tonight and tomorrow.
Chestnuts roasting on the open fire,
Jack Frost nipping at your nose.
… of Barry Gordy. The founder of Motown is 77.
… of Randy Newman. The 16-time Oscar nominee (one win) is 63. The win was for “If I Didn’t Have You” from “Monsters, Inc.”
… of Paul Shaffer. “The Letterman Show” band-leader is 57.
… of Ed Harris. The four-time Oscar nominee is 56. 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 54.
… of Judd Nelson. John Bender of “The Breakfast Club” is 47.
… of Jon Stewart. “The Daily Show” star is 44.
“If they weren’t blowing them up in Amman, they would be blowing them up in America. We are much better off hunting them down there, and I have no problem at all articulating that whether it’s an election year or not. … I think we’ve made quite a bit of progress in the past eight months.”
Representative Heather Wilson, R-NM, a year ago.
“A California couple is facing federal charges after allegedly refusing to stop ‘overt sexual activity’ on a Southwest flight from Los Angeles to Raleigh, North Carolina. Since it was Southwest, the airline immediately charged all the other passengers five bucks to watch.”
Jay Leno
Mark Cuban with some provocative (I think) thoughts on marketing. He begins:
The best example of this was when I bought the Dallas Mavericks. When I bought the team the conventional wisdom was that we were in the basketball business. That our customers were entertained by the beauty of the game. In reality our real business was “creating sore throats from screaming and sore hands from clapping”. Sporting events are pretty much the only place where a CEO will scream and yell while sitting or standing right next to a 16 year old with a Mohawk and pierced everything and then hi five him/her when something good happens for their team.
Google realized early on that they are in the traffic monetization business. They started off in the search business, but quickly realized that while continuously improving search was important, continuously improving search and page view monetization was more important.
The Christian Science Monitor list the Best Fiction 2006 and Best Nonfiction 2006.
There are 17 players on the Baseball Hall of Fame ballot for the first time and 15 holdovers.
Which of the 32 would you vote to admit to Cooperstown?
| First year: | The 15 holdovers: |
|---|---|
| Harold Baines Dante Bichette Bobby Bonilla Scott Brosius Jay Buhner Ken Caminiti Jose Canseco Eric Davis Tony Fernandez Tony Gwynn Wally Joyner Mark McGwire Paul O’Neill Cal Ripken Jr. Bret Saberhagen Devon White Bobby Witt |
Albert Belle Bert Blyleven Dave Concepcion Andre Dawson Steve Garvey Rich “Goose” Gossage Orel Hershiser Tommy John Don Mattingly Jack Morris Dale Murphy Dave Parker Jim Rice Lee Smith Alan Trammell |
Debby, official younger sister of NewMexiKen, sends along a recipe she came across for Union Army Civil War era homemade liquor:
bark juice
tar-water
turpentine
brown sugar
lamp oil
alcohol
And this was for Billy Yank. Lord only knows what Johnny Reb was drinking.
The surprise attack on Black Kettle’s village of Southern Cheyenne at the Washita River in Indian Territory (now western Oklahoma) took place on this date in 1868. This is the attack portrayed in the movie “Little Big Man.”
Just before midnight, they crawled to the edge of a bluff which overlooked a river valley. One of the scouts announced he could smell smoke. The other heard a dog bark. Custer could not see anything, and he did not smell smoke or hear the dog. But in the quiet moments of listening, he heard a baby cry. He had found his Indians.
Custer divided his command into four detachments, which would surround the village, north, south, east, and west, and wait for dawn. On his command, they would charge from the four directions.
At first light, Custer turned to the band leader and directed him “to give us ‘Garry Owen’ [his favorite song]. At once the rollicking notes of that familiar marching and fighting air sounded forth through the valley, and in a moment were re-echoed back from the opposite sides by the loud and continued cheers of the men of the other detachments, who, true to their orders, were there and in readiness to pounce upon the Indians the moment the attack began. In this manner the battle of the Washita commenced.”
The “battle” in the village was short, barely fifteen minutes. The soldiers drove the people from their lodges barefoot and half naked, shooting them in the open. Many of the warriors managed to reach the trees, where they began to return fire; a few of them escaped, but after a couple of hours, the firing ceased and 103 Cheyennes lay dead in the snow and mud. Custer reported that they were fighting men, but others said that ninety-two of them were women, children, and old people. Black Kettle, the sixty-seven-year-old leader of the band, and his wife, Medicine Woman Later, who had survived nine gunshot wounds at the Massacre of Sand Creek four years before, had been shot in the back as they attempted to cross the Lodge Pole or Washita River. Their bodies, trampled and covered with mud, were found in the shallow water by the survivors.
The soldiers seized everything in the village—guns, bows and arrows, decorated clothing, sacred shields, tobacco, dried meat, dried berries, robes, and fifty-one lodges—and burned it. In addition, they captured 875 horses and mules. Custer gave the order to slaughter these animals by cutting their throats, but the horses feared whiteman smell and shied away, and after several attempts, the men grew tired. Custer gave the order to shoot the animals instead. Custer himself slaughtered camp dogs. Then the 7th Cavalry took its captives, mostly women and children and old ones, and headed north to its base of operations, Camp Supply.
Custer’s attack on the village of Southern Cheyennes was hailed as a great victory in the Indian wars.
Excerpt from Killing Custer by James Welch
This was almost eight years before Little Bighorn.
[Reposted from last year.]