It’s the birthday

… of Michael Douglas. He’s 62.

… of Mrs. Douglas. Catherine Zeta-Jones is 37.

… of Will Smith. The Prince MIB is 38.

… of Heather Locklear. She’s 45.

… of Mark Hamill. Luke is 55.

… of Barbara Walters. She’s 75.

… of Phil Rizzuto. “Scooter” is 89.

Phil Rizzuto Plaque

The Shakespeare of sportswriters was born on this date 101 years ago. That’s Red Smith. Here he is on the 1951 World Series (after the Giants’ miraculous playoff win to be there):

Magic and sorcery and incantation and spells had taken the Giants to the championship of the National League and put them into the World Series … But you don’t beat the Yankees with a witch’s broomstick. Not the Yankees, when there’s hard money to be won.

And on Seabiscuit:

With that established, let’s talk about the death of Seabiscuit the other night. It isn’t mawkish to say there was a racehorse, a horse that gave race fans as much pleasure as any that ever lived, and one that will be remembered as long and as warmly. If someone asked you to list horses which had, apart from speed or endurance, some quality that fixed the imagination and captured the regard of more people than ever saw them run, you’ve had to mention Man o’ War and Equipoise and Exterminator, and Whirlaway, and Seabiscuit. And the honest son of Hard Tack wouldn’t be last.

And: “Writing is easy. All you have to do is sit at a typewriter and open a vein.”

Ass

Peter Roskam, the GOP candidate to succeed outgoing Rep. Henry Hyde, accused Dem opponent Tammy Duckworth of wanting to “cut and run” from Iraq during a debate a couple days ago. The use of this common pro-war talking-point in this case surprised some observers—not to mention Duckworth herself—because the veteran Duckworth lost both of her legs in Iraq.

TPMCafe

How Many Do You Know?

As opposed to a list of documents to read, what would you nominate as the list of concepts journalism students should be exposed to? Here’s a quick sample:

* Institutional culture
* Regression toward the mean
* Moral hazard
* Expected value (of an uncertain outcome)
* Present value (of a stream of gains and losses over time)
* Statistical control
* Correlation v. causation
* Benefit-cost analysis and willingness-to-pay
* Cost-effectiveness
* Separation of powers
* Mill’s “harm principle”
* Rent-seeking

* Opportunity cost
* Cognitive dissonance
* Milgram experiment

The Reality-Based Community

Here’s the original reading list.

Just in Time

That means that after passengers go through airport security checkpoints, they can purchase liquids at airport stores and take them onto their planes.

New procedures also were announced for toiletries and products like lip gloss and hand lotion that passengers bring to the airport. Previously, those liquids have been confiscated at security checkpoints. Now, these products will be limited to 3-ounce sizes and must fit in a clear, 1-quart size plastic bag with a zip top. The bags will be screened and returned if they are cleared.

The new security regimen is for an indefinite period and will take effect Tuesday morning.

Yahoo! News

Just in time for NewMexiKen’s trip Thursday. Also, good time to buy stock in whomever makes one-quart zip bags.

Do You Know Why?

“By 2004, the five most highly paid N.F.L. left tackles were earning an average of nearly $3 million a year more than the five most highly paid right tackles and more than the five most highly paid running backs and wide receivers.”

On the average, left offensive tackle is the second highest paid position in the NFL after quarterback.

Why left offensive tackle?

Think about it. Answer in comments.

The quotation is from The Ballad of Big Mike, an article based on Michael Lewis’ new book.

The Blind Side

Malcolm Gladwell writes:

“I just had the pleasure of reading an advance copy of the new book by Michael Lewis, the author of, among other things, MoneyBall and Liars Poker. Its called the The Blind Side. It is simply sensational. It will be in bookstores October 2nd.”

There’s more on this book and other sportswriting. Don’t miss it.

Update: And here’s an article based on the book — The Ballad of Big Mike.

Katmai National Park & Preserve (Alaska)

… was proclaimed a national monument on this date in 1918. It became a national park and preserve in 1980.

Katmai National Park

Katmai National Monument was created in 1918 to preserve the famed Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, a spectacular forty square mile, 100 to 700 foot deep ash flow deposited by Novarupta Volcano. A National Park & Preserve since 1980, today Katmai is still famous for volcanoes, but also for brown bears, pristine waterways with abundant fish, remote wilderness, and a rugged coastline.

Katmai National Park & Preserve

Birthdays

Jim Henson, the creator of the Muppets, should have been 70 today.

Jim McKay, the long-time Wide World of Sports host, is 85.

Nia Vardalos, the actress-screenwriter from My Big Fat Greek Wedding is 44. She received an Oscar nomination for the screenplay.

Lovely to Look At

View from Taos

Farr Feed had this great photo of the season’s first evidence of snow — this from Taos, so I’m thinking that is New Mexico’s highest point, Wheeler Peak, 13,161 feet (4,011 m).

Click photo to see larger version. Click here to visit its author.

A true test to see if someone is a genuine New Mexican — they pronounce Taos with only one syllable.

[Just as genuine southern Californians know that Tijuana is three syllables, not four.]

Medical Privacy

Have you noticed that medical records privacy form you have to sign or initial whenever you fill out any medical paperwork? Freakonomics author Steven D. Leavitt wonders why the big deal:

“So let me pose the question another way: why do people think that absent stringent rules there would be such demand for access to their medical records when there is no demand for looking through other people’s garbage?”

Read what Leavitt has to say.

Love, Oh Love, Oh Careless Love

One thing that iTunes makes possible that I find is really fun and fascinating. Pick a great classic song — “Careless Love” is a good choice.

Then listen to all the versions — Odetta, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Madeleine Peyroux, Benny Goodman, Brook Benton, Dinah Washington, Dave Van Ronk, Joan Baez, Dr. John, Josh White, Lena Horne, Leadbelly, Lightnin’ Hopkins, The Ravens, Pinetop Perkins, Wynton Marsalis and (the only one you really need) Bessie Smith.

And one they don’t have, but should, Ray Charles.

How did we live before the internets?

Music! Music! Music!

NewMexiKen has been working at converting all of my CDs (600, more or less) to computer files. Many I’ve done during the past few years, but it’s taking forever to go back through and copy the discs and tracks I skipped. I keep stopping to listen.

The other problem with doing this, of course, if you are obsessive-compulsive about it (who, me?) is one discovers there are records I don’t have that I just “have to have,” usually just a track or two. Some are available from the iTunes store for 99¢, and I’ve bought a few, (a good new Buck Owens greatest hits CD released in August was a find), but there are a few that even iTunes doesn’t have.

Among the MIA: The infamous “I Love Rock ‘n Roll” by Joan Jett and the Blackhearts is foremost. It’s the only track I’m missing from Rolling Stone‘s 500 top songs. A good cut of Sammi Smith’s “Help Me Make It through the Night” is also unavailable. (A collector can’t be buying the remakes; we need the original sound.) Jethro Tull’s “Aqualung” is another — I need it to complete some list of the top rock guitar solos.

(This is not a scanvenger hunt. I don’t want anyone to copy these songs and send them to me. The fun is in the search, as any collector knows. And none of these tracks are impossible to find if one wants to buy whole CDs.)

Another thing is I can’t quite convince myself to buy just digital files if I want a whole album (Grateful Dead’s Live/Dead comes to mind or Sasha Dobson’s Modern Romance). I still think I’ll get the CD — so I can copy it to the computer, which is where I listen. Buying the album from iTunes is a few dollars cheaper than getting the CD from Amazon, and instant gratification, but having the physical CD seems, somehow, worthwhile. Anyone else still hung up on this?

By the way, every once in awhile I run across a track, or even a whole CD, that won’t copy. That just drives this me nuts. Anyone else have this happen?

I Would Pick Oxygen

Dork #1: So what’s your favorite element?

Dork #2: Ummm… I guess rhodium.

Dork #1: Rhodium, huh? Mine’s osmium. Why wouldn’t you pick chromium or cobalt?

Dork #2: I’m not sure. I just like rhodium.

–Madison Square Park

Overheard in New York

NewMexiKen is partial to oxygen, especially in combination with nitrogen.

Best line of the day, so far

“The simple fact is that every time Krauss opens her mouth to sing, angels stop what they’re doing and take notes.”

— Rick Anderson in a review of Alison Krauss at All Music. He adds:

“There may be no musical pleasure quite as pure and sweet as listening to Krauss sing ‘Baby, Now That I’ve Found You’ or ‘When You Say Nothing at All.’ And when she starts in on the impossibly beautiful gospel tune ‘Down to the River to Pray,’ the effect is almost disturbingly moving.”

The Boston Celtics, Check That, The Boston Basques

“Everything you know about British and Irish ancestry is wrong. Our ancestors were Basques, not Celts. The Celts were not wiped out by the Anglo-Saxons, in fact neither had much impact on the genetic stock of these islands.”

So claims Stephen Oppenheimer based on genetic (DNA) research. An excerpt:

Everyone has heard of Celts, Anglo-Saxons and Vikings. And most of us are familiar with the idea that the English are descended from Anglo-Saxons, who invaded eastern England after the Romans left, while most of the people in the rest of the British Isles derive from indigenous Celtic ancestors with a sprinkling of Viking blood around the fringes.

Yet there is no agreement among historians or archaeologists on the meaning of the words “Celtic” or “Anglo-Saxon.” What is more, new evidence from genetic analysis — indicates that the Anglo-Saxons and Celts, to the extent that they can be defined genetically, were both small immigrant minorities. Neither group had much more impact on the British Isles gene pool than the Vikings, the Normans or, indeed, immigrants of the past 50 years.

The genetic evidence shows that three quarters of our ancestors came to this corner of Europe as hunter-gatherers, between 15,000 and 7,500 years ago, after the melting of the ice caps but before the land broke away from the mainland and divided into islands.

According to Oppenheimer, being the furthest west (furthest from Europe), only 12% of Irish have genetic material resulting from any immigration since the original hunter-gatherer settlement after the ice age.

They’d Better Fight Like Wildcats

Former USC coach John McKay, bless his heaven-sent soul, used to analyze Trojan opponents by listing both starting lineups, side by side, on a blackboard. McKay used a point system to grade each player, 1 to 5, with 5 as the best.

When McKay completed grading each player, he totaled the figures and, most Saturdays, stepped back and lit a cigar.

On the few occasions opponents had more points, McKay would turn, and with his dry wit, say, “Well, men, it looks like we’ll need some brilliant coaching today.”

Story told in The Arizona Daily Star today by sports columnist Greg Hansen. Hansen did a McKay-like inventory for today’s game between USC and Arizona and figured 20 of the best 22 play for the Trojans; the other two play for the Wildcats.

It has always troubled NewMexiKen by the way, as an Arizona alum, that the nickname Wildcats came after a game against Occidental College in 1914. The Los Angeles Times‘ Bill Henry wrote: “The Arizona men showed the fight of wildcats….” The name stuck. The troubling part wasn’t that the game was versus Occidental. The troubling part is that Arizona got its nickname from a game they lost 14-0.

Happy Birthday Dear Trane, Genius and Boss

It’s the birthday of John Coltrane (1926), Ray Charles (1930) and Bruce Springsteen (1949).

It ought to be a damn holiday.

Oh, and four-time Oscar nominee Mickey Rooney is 86 and seven-time Emmy nominee Jason Alexander is 47.


Trane.

“My music,” John Coltrane said, “is the spiritual expression of what I am — my faith, my knowledge, my being…” The grandson of ministers, he began his career in the blues clubs of Philadelphia, and throughout his career combined the sacred and the secular in the intense, earnest sound of his saxophone. His musical sermons, by turns somber and ecstatic, radiated his undying faith in music’s power to heal.

Coltrane fell under the spell of Charlie Parker at age 18 and dedicated himself to a practice regime that sometimes found him asleep, fingers still ghosting the keys. He first gained fame as a member of Miles Davis’s classic quintet in 1955, worked with Thelonious Monk, then took the lessons he’d learned from those masters and became a leader in his own right — and the most admired, most influential and most adventurous saxophonist of the 1960s.

“There is never any end,” Coltrane said. “There are always new sounds to imagine; new feelings to get at. And always, there is the need to keep purifying these feelings and sounds so that … we can give … the best of what we are.” (Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame)

The Genius.

Many musicians possess elements of genius, but only one — the great Ray Charles — so completely embodies the term that it’s been bestowed upon him as a nickname. Charles displayed his genius by combining elements of gospel and blues into a fervid, exuberant style that would come to be known as soul music. While recording for Atlantic Records during the Fifties, the innovative singer, pianist and bandleader broke down the barriers between sacred and secular music. The gospel sound he’d heard growing up in the church found its way into the music he made as an adult. In his own words, he fostered “a crossover between gospel music and the rhythm patterns of the blues.” But he didn’t stop there: over the decades, elements of country & western and big-band jazz have infused his music as well. He is as complete and well-rounded a musical talent as this century has produced. (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

The Boss.

Bruce Springsteen ranks alongside such rock and roll figureheads as Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, the Beatles and Bob Dylan. Just as those artists shaped popular music, Springsteen served as a pivotal figure in its evolution with his rise to prominence in the mid-Seventies. Early on, he was touted as one of several heirs to Bob Dylan’s mantle. All of these would-be “new Dylans”-who also included Loudon Wainwright, John Prine and Elliott Murphy-rose above the hype, but Springsteen soared highest, catapulting himself to fame on the unrestrained energy of his live shows, the evocative power of his songwriting, and the direct connection he forged with his listeners.

Springsteen lifted rock and roll from its early Seventies doldrums, providing continuity and renewal at a point when it was sorely in need of both. During a decade in which disco, glam-rock, heavy-metal and arena-rock provided different forms of escape into fantasy, Springsteen restored a note of urgency and realism to the rock and roll landscape. (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

58…59…60

The Phillies Ryan Howard hit his 58th home run this evening — he has nine games left after tonight.

Only five players — Bonds (73), McGwire (70, 65), Sosa (66, 64, 63), Maris (61) and Ruth (60) — have hit 60.

Think Howard will make it? Do you hope he will? Do you think he cheats? Do you care?