Groundhog.org – the Official Site of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club
UPDATE: The famous furry forecaster saw his shadow on Gobbler’s Knob, suggesting another six weeks of wintry weather.
Groundhog.org – the Official Site of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club
UPDATE: The famous furry forecaster saw his shadow on Gobbler’s Knob, suggesting another six weeks of wintry weather.
Yours truly took up residence in New Mexico on this date in 1999, thereby becoming NewMexiKen.
New Mexico ranks fifth for longevity among the states where I’ve lived, after Michigan, Virginia, California and Arizona. I’ve also resided in Texas, Nevada and New York, though the latter two just for a few weeks each during the same summer. Long enough to have a job in each, though.
… of Tom Smothers. He’s 68.
… of Graham Nash. The Nash of Crosby, Stills & Nash (or Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young) is 63.
… of Farrah Fawcett. Charlie’s Angel is 58.
… of Christie Brinkley. She’s 51.
was signed on this date in 1848. Its provisions called for Mexico to cede 55% of its territory (present-day Arizona, California, New Mexico, Texas, and parts of Colorado, Nevada and Utah) in exchange for $15 million in compensation for war-related damage to Mexican property. Other provisions stipulated the Rio Grande as the Texas border, protection for the property and civil rights of Mexican nationals living in the United States and a U.S. promise to police its side of the border.
The Library of Congress has an on-line exhibition of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The site was the source for the summary of the Treaty above. To see an image of the map used in the negotiations, click here.
From The New York Times:
At first, the estimate was grim, a subway rider’s nightmare. It could take up to five years to get the A and C trains running normally after a fire in an underground signal relay room last month.
Then the forecast improved: transit officials said it would take only six to nine months to fix the disruptions.
Now the estimate has come down once more. The new prognosis for restoration of most service on the subway lines?
Today. Just nine days and 15 hours after the fire.
Stuff I Think gleans the Wisdom of Warren Buffett.
Remarkable stuff.
Motley Fool reports that Warren Buffett made $645 million on the Procter & Gamble merger with Gillette.
At the Daily Howler, Bob Somerby complains about the media’s inability (and the Democrats inability, too) to frame an understanding of Social Security so there can be an informed discourse.
In an op-ed piece entitled The Washington Post:
David W. Anderson is resigning as head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs after one year on the job, saying he can do more to help Indians by working in the private sector.
Anderson is the Dave of Famous Dave’s barbeque restaurants. Guess he found the BIA a little tougher than the restaurant business.
At Beats Per Minute there’s a quick review of Tony Hillerman’s Skeleton Man by someone who grew up on the Navajo Reservation.
Christopher Reynolds gives up the Wild West column at the Los Angeles Times and tells us Six truths from the wild before packing it in.
Letterman did a salute to Johnny Carson last night (he was away last week). The monologue consisted entirely of jokes Carson had sent him. “Getting a call from Carson with jokes was ‘like Christmas morning, for God’s sake,’ Letterman said.” CNN.com has the story.
And there’s this from Dwight Perry’s Sideline Chatter:
Dan Daly of the Washington Times, noting broadcaster Dick Vitale will be 72 by the time his new contract with ESPN and ABC expires in 2012: “Here’s hoping he isn’t a Diaper Dandy by then.”
from the Roman republican calendar month Februarius, named for Februa, the festival of purification held on the 15th. The name is taken from a Latin word, februare, meaning “to make pure”.
From PBS FEBRUARY ONE:
In one remarkable day, four college freshmen changed the course of American history. On February 1, 1960, Ezell Blair, Jr. (now Jibreel Khazan), David Richmond, Franklin McCain and Joseph McNeil—later dubbed the Greensboro Four—began a sit-in at a Woolworth’s lunch counter in a small city in North Carolina. The act of simply sitting down to order food in a restaurant that refused service to anyone but whites is now widely regarded as one of the pivotal moments in the American Civil Rights Movement.
The Greensboro Woolworth’s lunch counter was integrated in July 1960.
John Ford and Clark Gable were born on this date. Ford in 1895; Gable in 1901.
John Ford won six Oscars for Best Director: The Informer (1935), The Grapes of Wrath (1940), How Green Was My Valley (1941) and The Quiet Man (1952). The other two Oscars were for World War II documentaries: The Battle of Midway and December 7th. Other memorable films include Drums Along the Mohawk, Young Mr. Lincoln, Stagecoach, My Darling Clementine and The Searchers. Regardless of where Ford’s westerns were set, most of the exteriors were filmed in Monument Valley Arizona/Utah.
Clark Gable won the Best Actor award in 1935 for It Happened One Night. He was nominated for Best Actor for Mutiny of the Bounty and Gone With the Wind.
In January there were 25,276 visits to NewMexiKen from 14,306 different IP addresses in 96 countries, Guam and the European Union.
2005 Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta — Friday, September 30 through Sunday, October 9, 2005
From USA Today via Yahoo! News:
One in three U.S. high school students say the press ought to be more restricted, and even more say the government should approve newspaper stories before readers see them, according to a survey being released today.
The survey of 112,003 students finds that 36% believe newspapers should get “government approval” of stories before publishing; 51% say they should be able to publish freely; 13% have no opinion.
From the Telegraph:
A 25-year-old waitress who turned down a job providing “sexual services” at a brothel in Berlin faces possible cuts to her unemployment benefit under laws introduced this year.
Prostitution was legalised in Germany just over two years ago and brothel owners — who must pay tax and employee health insurance — were granted access to official databases of jobseekers.
The waitress, an unemployed information technology professional, had said that she was willing to work in a bar at night and had worked in a cafe.
She received a letter from the job centre telling her that an employer was interested in her “profile” and that she should ring them. Only on doing so did the woman, who has not been identified for legal reasons, realise that she was calling a brothel.
Under Germany’s welfare reforms, any woman under 55 who has been out of work for more than a year can be forced to take an available job — including in the sex industry — or lose her unemployment benefit.
NewMexiKen adjusted my mutual funds today, moving from conservative to more adventuresome investments. Trust me, stock values of all kinds will crash soon.
Monkeys Pay to See Female Monkey Bottoms:
A new study found that male monkeys will give up their juice rewards in order to ogle pictures of female monkey’s bottoms. The way the experiment was set up, the act is akin to paying for the images, the researchers say.
The rhesus macaque monkeys also splurged on photos of top-dog counterparts, the high-ranking primates. Maybe that’s like you or me buying People magazine.
Yeah, but do they get Cinemax?
Apprehensible: Capable of being understood.
Reprehensible: Deserving rebuke or censure; blameworthy.
NewMexiKen is trying — really — to find something worth linking to or writing about, but inspiration is lacking.
If you’ve seen Million Dollar Baby, there’s an article in today’s New York Times about the controvesy emerging over it. (DON’T go there is you haven’t seen the movie. Major plot revelation!).
Today in History (from the Library of Congress) has some stuff about John C. Frémont — he was “court-martialed on grounds of mutiny and disobeying orders” on this date in 1848. Frémont was ahead of his times — all style and public relations and very little true ability.
Charles Pierce, writing at Altercation, tries to put some perspective on the Iraqi election yesterday, but it’s too soon to see what it all meant, and NewMexiKen would just as soon celebrate the accomplishment until we know more.
Josh Marshall continues on Social Security, doing good work I suppose, but is there really only one issue meriting analysis these days?
The Albuquerque Tribune has an nice article on Nuestra Señora de Purísima Concepción de Cuarac, the Quarai mission church.
And Sideline Chatter has some trash talk about Spiro Agnew’s golf game. Always glad to see negative stuff on Agnew, without a doubt the most venal man ever in America’s two top offices.
From tequila mockingbird, mother and daughter discuss the National Museum of the American Indian — sorta. It begins:
“so, i went to the museum of the american indian a couple of weeks ago.”
“you did? how was it? i hope they didn’t screw them on their museum. the least they could do is give them a decent museum.”
“the cafeteria is awesome! really, it’s so cool. …”
Read it all.
was born on this date in 1923.
Mailer has not only published 39 books (including 11 novels), he has written plays (and staged them), screenplays (and directed and acted in them), poems (in The New Yorker and underground journals), and attempted every sort of narrative form, including some he invented. No record of “new journalism” is complete without mention of his 1960s Esquire columns, essays and political reportage. He has reported on six sets of political conventions (1960, 1964, 1968, 1972, 1992, 1996), participated in scores of symposia, appeared and debated hundreds of times on college campuses, boxed (and fought) in several venues and led a vigorous public life in New York and Provincetown, Massachusetts, his current home. His passions, feuds, imbroglios, litigations and loyalities are numerous, notorious and complex. Happily married for nearly a quarter of a century to Norris Church, he was wed five times previously and has nine children all told. A stalwart on radio and television talk shows, he may have been interviewed more times than any writer who has ever lived. Without being paid for his pains, he has given advice to several presidents, has run for office himself (mayor of New York), served as president of the American chapter of the writers organization, P.E.N., and won most of the major literary awards, but for the Nobel. Co-founder of The Village Voice, he also named it, and has been the equivalent of a decathalon athlete in the effort to break down barriers between popular, elite and underground publications. He has written for at least 75 different magazines and journals.
J. Michael Lennon, Professor of English, Wilkes University [for PBS, American Masters]
was born on this date in 1915.
Thomas Merton, known in the monastery as Fr. Louis, was born on 31 January 1915 in Prades, southern France. The young Merton attended schools in France, England, and the United States. At Columbia University in New York City, he came under the influence of some remarkable teachers of literature, including Mark Van Doren, Daniel C. Walsh, and Joseph Wood Krutch. Merton entered the Catholic Church in 1938 in the wake of a rather dramatic conversion experience. Shortly afterward, he completed his masters thesis, “On Nature and Art in William Blake.”
Following some teaching at Columbia University Extension and at St. Bonaventure’s College, Olean, New York, Merton entered the monastic community of the Abbey of Gethsemani at Trappist, Kentucky, on 10 December 1941. He was received by Abbot Frederic Dunne who encouraged the young Frater Louis to translate works from the Cistercian tradition and to write historical biographies to make the Order better known.
The abbot also urged the young monk to write his autobiography, which was published under the title The Seven Storey Mountain (1948) and became a best-seller and a classic. During the next 20 years, Merton wrote prolifically on a vast range of topics, including the contemplative life, prayer, and religious biographies. His writings would later take up controversial issues (e.g., social problems and Christian responsibility: race relations, violence, nuclear war, and economic injustice) and a developing ecumenical concern. He was one of the first Catholics to commend the great religions of the East to Roman Catholic Christians in the West.
Merton died by accidental electrocution in Bangkok, Thailand, while attending a meeting of religious leaders on 10 December 1968, just 27 years to the day after his entrance into the Abbey of Gethsemani.
Many esteem Thomas Merton as a spiritual master, a brilliant writer, and a man who embodied the quest for God and for human solidarity. Since his death, many volumes by him have been published, including five volumes of his letters and seven of his personal journals. According to present count, more than 60 titles of Merton’s writings are in print in English, not including the numerous doctoral dissertations and books about the man, his life, and his writings.
Brother Patrick Hart, OCSO [Abbey of Gethsemani]
was born in Zanesville, Ohio, on this date in 1872.
Zane Grey was the first American millionaire author. According to the Zane Grey’s West Society web site:
The breakthrough success of Heritage of the Desert in 1910 enabled Zane Grey to establish a home in Altadena, California, and a hunting lodge on the Mogollon Rim near Payson, Arizona; and the family of five moved West for good. A lifelong passion for angling and the rich rewards of his writing also allowed Grey to roam the world’s premier game-fishing grounds in his own schooner and reel in several deep-sea angling records which stood for decades. A prodigiously prolific writer, Grey would spend several months each year gathering experiences and adventures, whether on “safari” in the wilds of Colorado or fishing off Tahiti, and then spend the rest of the year weaving them all into tales for serialization, magazine articles, or the annual novel.
Zane Grey wrote to live and lived to write — surely a balance rarely attained — until his untimely death of heart failure on October 23, 1939. He left us almost 90 books in print, of which about 60 are Westerns, 9 concern fishing, and 3 trace the fate of the Ohio Zanes, the rest being short story collections, a biography of the young George Washington, juvenile fiction and baseball stories.
Everyone should read the classic Riders of the Purple Sage.
It seems that Intuit will pull the plug on some features of older versions of Quicken this spring.
Retirement of Online Services for older versions of Quicken
As of April 19th, 2005, in accordance with the Quicken sunset policy, Online Services and Live Technical Support will no longer be available for Quicken 2001 and 2002 users. These services include online bill pay; downloading financial data from your bank, credit union, credit card, brokerage, 401(k) or mutual fund accounts; downloading stock quotes, news headlines and other financial information into Quicken; uploading portfolio information from Quicken to Quicken.com; and access to the investing features on Quicken.com including portfolio tracking, any watch lists you have created, One-Click Scorecard?, Stock Evaluator and Mutual Fund Evaluator. To continue using these services and maintain access to live technical support from an Intuit representative, you will need to upgrade.
NewMexiKen runs Quicken 2002 and it serves perfectly well. I don’t use many of the features that will be “retired” on April 19th, but I find this policy apprehensible. I don’t remember any warnings on the box that I was just renting some features of the software for a couple of years.
The only alternative may be the Evil Empire and Microsoft Money but this kind of business model deserves to be scorned.
Simply superb. Hilary Swank is magnificent.