was granted a charter by England’s King William III and Queen Mary II on this date in 1693. The College of William and Mary in Virginia was the second college established in what is now the United States.

Read the Charter and its history.
was granted a charter by England’s King William III and Queen Mary II on this date in 1693. The College of William and Mary in Virginia was the second college established in what is now the United States.

Read the Charter and its history.
was born on this date in 1931. Here’s what I posted a year ago.
… of Ted Koppel. Alfred E. Newman’s brother is 65.
… of Nick Nolte. Twice nominated for the best acting Oscar, he’s 64.
… of Mary Steenburgen. The Oscar-winning actress is 52.
… of John Grisham. The attorney turned best-selling author is 50.
… of Gary Coleman. Arnold is 37.
Functional Ambivalent speculates about the identity of Deep Throat, Bob Woodward’s high-level source during Watergate.
“It remains my opinion that Social Security reform is not necessary at all if Congress would seriously address Medicare reform, balance the budget, erase the trade deficit, and make pension reform a real priority.”
Rep. Jo Ann Emerson (R-MO) quoted by Talking Points Memo
Collateral, with Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx, is a fine psychological thriller, beautifully photographed and superbly acted. NewMexiKen saw the DVD Sunday and then watched again with director Michael Mann’s commentary audio this evening. Among things learned from the commentary: much of the film was shot in HD digital video, several of the minor roles of police officers were played by actual police, several of the club security guards were actual security guards, and some of the individuals playing bodyguards were on work-release.
Jamie Foxx, nominated for the Supporting Actor Oscar for this film, is simply outstanding. The only question is, just how was this a “supporting” role?
Almost as if he were here with this Grandpa’s Sweeties, Dwight Perry has kids on his mind in this morning’s Sideline Chatter —
For the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Fred Hoiberg, the NBA All-Star three-point shootout is just kid stuff.
“I’d love to go out there and give it a shot,” Hoiberg, the league’s top long-distance shooter, told the Chicago Tribune. “The biggest reason would be to take my kids.
“My 5-year-old (Jack) now has some interest in sports. Before, all he asked me was about Power Rangers.
“It would be fun for him to go out there and meet the guys in his PlayStation.”
. . .
There are Green Bay Packers fans, and then there is 8-year-old David Witthoft of Ridgefield, Conn., who has worn his Brett Favre jersey every day — that’s 409 days and counting — since he received it as a Christmas gift in 2003.
As David’s father, Chuck, told the Green Bay Press-Gazette: “David has a lot of sticktoitiveness.”
And after 400-plus days, we assume, the same can be said for the jersey.
Three-fourths of the Sweeties were visiting for the past several days to help Grandpa celebrate his birthday. (They brought their moms, official NewMexiKen daughters Jill and Emily.) They’re all off for home today, but the new carpet is being installed this week, so blogging may remain light while I empty the house, then refill it.
“Ever since the two men [George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton] teamed up to raise money for tsunami victims, Clinton has looked less like Bush’s successor than the United Nations translator for a non-English-speaking foreign head of state: he does all the talking.”
Alessandra Stanley discussing TV coverage of the Super Bowl in The New York Times
“Let me put it to you this way: I earned capital in the campaign, political capital, and now I intend to spend it.”
President George W. Bush, Press Conference, November 4, 2004.
From Nicholas Confessore in The New York Times, Going for Broke May Break Bush:
Opinion polls show no public clamor to change the Social Security system; citizens are not yet marching on the Capitol demanding that they be allowed to invest a portion of their payroll taxes in the stock market. Nor does the program face an imminent threat that demands immediate action: According to the Congressional Budget Office, the Social Security trust fund won’t run out until 2052, after which payroll tax receipts will still cover 81 percent of the benefits promised senior citizens. Even many Republicans seem cool to the idea.
Nevertheless, Mr. Bush embarked last week on a five-state Social Security tour, determined to get traction on the first major effort of his second term.
And if the past is any guide, he is unlikely to change direction.
ratified the Constitution on this date in 1788, thereby becoming the sixth state.
Aaron Burr (1756)
Babe Ruth (1895)
Ronald Reagan (1911)
Eva Braun (1912)
Zsa Zsa Gabor (1917)
Mike Farrell (1939)
Tom Brokaw (1940)
Fabian (1943)
Bob Marley (1945)
began on this date in 1945.

So far as I know, none of the gentlemen in this photo was aware of the other eventful beginning that Sunday 60 years ago.
Happy birthday to me
Happy birthday to me
Happy birthday dear NewMexiKen
Happy birthday to me
It’s also the birthday
… of Byron Nelson. The hall-of-fame golfer is 93.
… of Miss Rosa Parks. The soul of the civil rights movement is 91.
… of Betty Friedan. The feminist leader is 84.
… of Conrad Bain. The actor (Maude, Diff’rent Strokes) is 82.
… of John Steel. The Animals drummer (and therefore Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee) is 64.
… of David Brenner. The comedian is 60. Good day. Good age.
… of Dan Quayle. The former VP is 58.
… of Alice Cooper. The rocker is 57.
… of Clint Black. The country music star is 43.
Ain’t it funny how a melody can bring back a memory,
Take you to another place and time,
Completely change your state of mind.
Charles Lindbergh was born on this date in 1902.
was born New York City on this date in 1894.
Visit the Norman Rockwell Museum.

St. Blaise was, so far as is known, a bishop in Armenia who was martyred in the early fourth century. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, St. Blaise (or Blasius)
was taken prisoner at the command of the governor, Agricolaus. The hunters of the governor found him [Blaise] in the wilderness in a cave to which he had retired and while in prison he performed a wonderful cure of a boy who had a fishbone in his throat and who was in danger of choking to death. After suffering various forms of torture St. Blasius was beheaded….In many places on the day of his feast the blessing of St. Blasius is given: two candles are consecrated, generally by a prayer, these are then held in a crossed position by a priest over the heads of the faithful or the people are touched on the throat with them. In other places oil is consecrated in which the wick of a small candle is dipped and the throats of those present are touched with the wick. At the same time the following blessing is given: “Per intercessionem S. Blasii liberet te Deus a malo gutteris et a quovis alio malo” (May God at the intercession of St. Blasius preserve you from throat troubles and every other evil).
While having his throat blessed each year as a kid, NewMexiKen often wondered why Blaise — if he was the protector of throats — didn’t save his own throat from the ax.
Charles Arthur Floyd was born on this date in 1904. From a desciption of The Life and Death of Pretty Boy Floyd:
Charles Arthur Floyd, better known as Pretty Boy Floyd, was one of the last of the so-called Robin Hood outlaws in the tradition of Jesse James, Billy the Kid, and John Dillinger. He engaged in numerous bank-robbing exploits across the Midwest until federal agents and local police shot him down near East Liverpool, Ohio, on October 22, 1934–a feat which helped build the image of the modern FBI….
Neither highly intelligent nor polished, Floyd relied on his cool demeanor, shrewd cunning, and expert gun-handling ability, but he was also considered by those who knew him to be generous and honest. During the depression, many people saw banks as enemies and Floyd as a hero, and helped screen him from the police. Once he left a large contribution at an Oklahoma church–and no one reported his visit. He was known to drop in at country dances, dance with the prettiest girls, and pay the fiddler well. One story claims that he kept a rural school in fuel one winter. He attended church regularly, even during intense manhunts, and visited his father’s grave each Memorial Day, despite the risk of capture.
Court TV’s Crime Library has a multi-part biography of Charles Arthur Floyd: “Pretty Boy” from Cookson Hills.
In the end, Choc Floyd was betrayed. Not by a woman in red, as was Indiana bank robber John Dillinger; not by his own taste for blood, as was the mad-boy child “Baby Face” Nelson; not by a death wish that was Bonnie and Clyde’s. But, allegedly, by an ambitious protector of American Justice called J. Edgar Hoover who thought Floyd would be better a stepping stone to higher things if killed and not incarcerated. In short, America betrayed him when it forecast an end to its tolerance for wild oats to make way for progressiveness and modernity.
Choc, or Choctaw, was Floyd’s preferred nickname.
If you’ll gather ’round me, children,
A story I will tell
‘Bout Pretty Boy Floyd, an outlaw,
Oklahoma knew him well.It was in the town of Shawnee,
A Saturday afternoon,
His wife beside him in his wagon
As into town they rode.There a deputy sheriff approached him
In a manner rather rude,
Vulgar words of anger,
An’ his wife she overheard.Pretty Boy grabbed a log chain,
And the deputy grabbed his gun;
In the fight that followed
He laid that deputy down.Then he took to the trees and timber
To live a life of shame;
Every crime in Oklahoma
Was added to his name.But a many a starving farmer
The same old story told
How the outlaw paid their mortgage
And saved their little homes.Others tell you ’bout a stranger
That come to beg a meal,
Underneath his napkin
Left a thousand dollar bill.It was in Oklahoma City,
It was on a Christmas Day,
There was a whole car load of groceries
Come with a note to say:Well, you say that I’m an outlaw,
You say that I’m a thief.
Here’s a Christmas dinner
For the families on relief.Yes, as through this world I’ve wandered
I’ve seen lots of funny men;
Some will rob you with a six-gun,
And some with a fountain pen.And as through your life you travel,
Yes, as through your life you roam,
You won’t never see an outlaw
Drive a family from their home.Lyrics as recorded by Woody Guthrie, RCA Studios, Camden, NJ, 26 Apr 1940
From a report in The New York Times:
More than half the plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit in Texas seeking compensation for exposure to silica – used in making glass, paint, ceramics and other materials – previously filed claims against a trust set up to compensate those injured by asbestos, a cancer-causing flame retardant.
The tort reform NewMexiKen would like to see would be to make it a potential criminal offense to bring frivolous lawsuits.
Item in The New York Times:
The Universal Home Video disc [of Ray] contains an option: push one button and the film unfolds in the 152-minute form in which it played in theaters; push another, and a substantially different movie appears, incorporating 24 more minutes of material that adds considerably to the film’s rhythm, dramatic depth and complex, ambivalent vision of its subject.
Netflix has been a bit irksome this week, bumping Ray down my queue twice. They’d better cut that out.
More on the Honda Ridgeline from Dan Neil:
But the Ridgeline is full of market-transforming features, such as the lockable trunk under the pickup bed. This is a heck of an idea: a weather-resistant compartment situated between the rear wheels and the bumper about the size of a 50-gallon Igloo cooler. It even has a drain plug so you can fill it with ice and keep drinks cold. May I suggest another use? Bait well?
From Dan Neil:
Whatever bubble-headed robots there are in Detroit ought to be flailing their flexible rubber arms right about now, because the new Honda Ridgeline — the company’s first foray into the land of pickups — means danger, danger, Will Robinson.
Not that the Ridgeline will steal so many sales from Detroit. The Honda’s expected annual production of 50,000 units is a rounding error to the Big Three, which together with Nissan and Toyota sell almost 3 million pickups a year.
But the Ridgeline is so scary good, so smart and so instantly likable that it’s going to send everybody back to pickup school. Oh, the pain, the pain.
You might think “Honda” and “pickup” go together like “Bill O’Reilly” and “perfect gentleman,” but company execs argue that it has a long history in the light-truck market.
Apple Computer stock is up 23% ($79.47) since I mentioned wanting to buy some here on January 11 ($64.56).
Google stock is up 249% ($211.80) since the IPO on August 11 ($85).
He who hesitates is poor.
“In any industry that actually mattered, incompetence like this would not be accepted.”
The Daily Howler discussing a CBS news report on Social Security this past Saturday.