Richard Wetherill and his brother-in-law Charles Mason…

rode out on what is now Sun Point in search of lost cattle on this date in 1888 and first saw Cliff Palace at Mesa Verde. That afternoon, Richard found Spruce Tree House, and the next day, the two men discovered Square Tower House. Al Wetherill, Richard’s brother, saw Cliff Palace sometime the year before, but he did not enter the dwelling, so the credit for “discovering” the dwelling has been given to Richard Wetherill and Charles Mason.

In 1901, Richard Wetherill homesteaded land that included Pueblo Bonito, Pueblo Del Arroyo, and Chetro Ketl in what is now Chaco Culture National Historical Park. Wetherill remained in Chaco Canyon, homesteading and operating a trading post at Pueblo Bonito until his controversial murder in 1910. Chiishch’ilin Biy, charged with his murder, served several years in prison, but was released in 1914 due to poor health. Wetherill is buried in the small cemetery west of Pueblo Bonito.

[NewMexiKen photo, 2003]

Steven Spielberg…

was born on this date in 1946. The Writer’s Almanac has an interesting biographical essay.

It’s the birthday of Steven Spielberg, born in Cincinnati, Ohio (1946). Even as a child, he knew he wanted to make movies. When he was 13 years old, he won a contest with a 40-minute film called Escape to Nowhere. When he was 16, he produced a movie called Firelight that made a $100 profit at the local movie theater. He wanted to study film at the University of Southern California, but the film school rejected him, so he went to California State University in Long Beach and majored in English. One day, he was taking a tour of Universal Studios when he slipped by security, found an abandoned janitors’ closet, cleaned it up, and turned it into an office. He discovered that if he wore a suit and tie he could walk right past the security guards at the front gate, and he began coming in to his makeshift office every day. While he was there, he started making a short silent movie called Amblin’. It caught the attention of some Universal executives, and he began to make TV movies. His first real breakthrough was Duel (1971), a suspenseful thriller about a man in a small car being terrorized by a man in a large truck for no apparent reason. It came out on TV in the U.S. and in theaters in Europe. Four years later, he directed Jaws (1975), one of the most successful movies ever made.

Spielberg’s parents divorced when he was a child, after years of intense arguing. Many of his movies deal with the relationships between parents and children, especially fathers and sons. In Close Encounter of the Third Kind (1977), children and parents are abducted from their homes. In E.T. (1982), Elliott befriends an alien, in part to make up for the loss of his father. And in the more recent film Catch Me if you Can (2002), the main character runs away from home and becomes a con man after his parents announce their plans to divorce.

Spielberg said, “I dream for a living.”

Getting a start on next Christmas

New Intel Chip for Digital TV Could Remake the Market

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which opens on Jan. 8, Intel is expected to disclose the development of a class of advanced semiconductors that technologists and analysts say will improve the quality of large-screen digital televisions and substantially lower their price, according to industry executives close to the company….could lead to lightweight 50-inch screens only 7 inches thick for about $1,000, perhaps as early as the 2004 holiday season.

Double landlocked

From The Volokh Conspiracy

Let’s call a country “landlocked” if it doesn’t border any ocean or sea, except the purely inland seas that have no substantial natural connection to the ocean (e.g., the Caspian Sea or the Aral Sea). This is more or less the standard definition: Paraguay, for instance, is landlocked; Turkey is not. Which countries in the world are double-landlocked, which means that all the countries that they border are themselves landlocked?

What is the northernmost national capital? What is the southernmost national capital? What is the westernmost national capital in the Americas?

Answers here.

Short story

Also from the Morning Briefing

There are already two books about LeBron James on the market, “King James: Believe the Hype” and “The Rise of a Star.”

Said TNT’s Steve Kerr: “What do you write about when you’re 18 — the kindergarten years were great…. What’s Chapter 4, seventh grade?”

Talkin’ trash

From the Morning Briefing in the Los Angeles Times

In a new NBA promo featuring “Sesame Street” characters, Big Bird says, “I love this game because of two words — Larry Bird.”

From Oscar the Grouch: “I love this game because of the trash talk.”

Keep it simple;
but not too simple

PowerPoint Makes You Dumb

In August, the Columbia Accident Investigation Board at NASA released Volume 1 of its report on why the space shuttle crashed. As expected, the ship’s foam insulation was the main cause of the disaster. But the board also fingered another unusual culprit: PowerPoint, Microsoft’s well-known ”slideware” program.

NASA, the board argued, had become too reliant on presenting complex information via PowerPoint, instead of by means of traditional ink-and-paper technical reports. When NASA engineers assessed possible wing damage during the mission, they presented the findings in a confusing PowerPoint slide — so crammed with nested bullet points and irregular short forms that it was nearly impossible to untangle. ”It is easy to understand how a senior manager might read this PowerPoint slide and not realize that it addresses a life-threatening situation,” the board sternly noted.

PowerPoint is the world’s most popular tool for presenting information. There are 400 million copies in circulation, and almost no corporate decision takes place without it. But what if PowerPoint is actually making us stupider?

NewMexiKen has seen enough PowerPoint presentations — and, alas, given enough — to believe the way the software is used often hinders rather than enhances communication. See the Gettysburg Address PowerPoint style for an illustration.

Monday Morning Monologue

From The Washington Monthly

“Saddam Hussein…was captured Sunday without incident — or as the Pentagon reported it, ‘in a blazing gun battle with Jessica Lynch.’… ”

“President Bush said Halliburton should repay any overcharge [for gasoline in Iraq] to the American taxpayer. And then he awarded the taxpayer overcharge handling contract to Bechtel….”

Top 25 Weblogs

The Truth Laid Bear posted Weblog Traffic Rankings this morning. Below are the top 25 (1,821 sites are listed).

Traffic statistics via SiteMeter
Ecosystem ranking is provided in ()

1) Instapundit 88612 visits/day (1)
2) Daily Kos / Political State Report 49949 visits/day (5)
3) Eschaton (Atrios) 47584 visits/day (3)
4) Gizmodo : The Gadgets Weblog 39759 visits/day (226)
5) Blog for America 33746 visits/day (41)
6) Smirking Chimp 26324 visits/day (186)
7) CalPundit 17699 visits/day (8)
8) The Volokh Conspiracy 10840 visits/day (10)
9) filchyboy 10391 visits/day (4482)
10) Tom Tomorrow 8342 visits/day (27)
11) Dave Barry’s Blog 7910 visits/day (70)
12) Talk Left 6987 visits/day (21)
13) Pandagon 6602 visits/day (48)
14) Wizbang 6572 visits/day (11)
15) Scrappleface 6167 visits/day (31)
16) The Scrolldown 5976 visits/day (2332)
17) Blogcritics 5736 visits/day (68)
18) BuzzMachine 5645 visits/day (33)
19) Kim du Toit 5265 visits/day (67)
20) ZuDfunck’s BloG 5242 visits/day (4372)
21) Brad DeLong 4810 visits/day (30)
22) Citizen Smash 4708 visits/day (53)
23) Stone 4537 visits/day (1580)
24) TBogg 4240 visits/day (71)
25) Anti-Idiotarian Rotweiler 4135 visits/day (29)

It appears by the way, that NewMexiKen would be around 1,200th with 23 visits/day currently.

Where’s that Binky?

According to The New York Times Magazine, U.S. Patent D470,942 was for a pacifier with remote locator.

[Thanks to Veronica]

By the way, a quick search of Google did locate a pacifier/thermometer, which seems like a good idea. The John Lennon pacifier however, seems silly. Not that many babies are Beatles fans.

The Ethicist: New Behavior

The Ethicist in The New York Times Magazine has this interesting take on underage drinking.

At a restaurant, I was seated next to two young ladies who ordered beers. As soon as they produced their I.D.’s, I knew they were fake. Having worked in the bar-nightclub business for 15 years, I am adept at spotting fake I.D.’s. Should I have informed the waiter or, as I was not working, minded my own beeswax? Glenn Price, Stamford, Conn.

Your coming forward is permitted but not required. Here’s one guideline: will doing so thwart serious imminent harm to a particular person? In this case, no. If you mind your own business, a couple of young women — not toddlers, clearly, but old enough to pass for 21 — will have a beer. Why is that bad? Until about five minutes ago, it wasn’t even illegal, assuming they’re 18. (And assuming they want only a beer with dinner, not to go on a drunken spree or pilot a 747.)

The unfortunate consequences of your keeping silent? The restaurant is at legal risk, and the law — not just this law, but all law — is slightly eroded by the customers’ flouting it. Set against the innocent pleasure of a tall cool one with dinner, I’d not have it in me to rat out the customers.

Tatanka-Iyotanka…

was killed on this date in 1890.

Sitting Bull was a Hunkpapa Lakota chief and holy man. He was born around 1831 on the Grand River in present-day South Dakota. He became a warrior in a battle with the Crow at age 14, subsequently becoming renowned for his courage in fights with the U.S. Army.

In 1874, an expedition led by George Armstrong Custer confirmed the discovery of gold in the Black Hills, an area that had been declared off-limits to white settlement by the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868. When efforts by the government to purchase the Black Hills failed, the Fort Laramie Treaty was abrogated. All Lakota not settled on reservations by January 31, 1876, would be considered hostile. Sitting Bull led his people in holding their ground.

As the PBS web site New Perspectives on The West describes it:

In March, as three columns of federal troops under General George Crook, General Alfred Terry and Colonel John Gibbon moved into the area, Sitting Bull summoned the Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho to his camp on Rosebud Creek in Montana Territory. There he led them in the sun dance ritual, offering prayers to Wakan Tanka, their Great Spirit, and slashing his arms one hundred times as a sign of sacrifice. During this ceremony, Sitting Bull had a vision in which he saw soldiers falling into the Lakota camp like grasshoppers falling from the sky.

Inspired by this vision, the Oglala Lakota war chief, Crazy Horse, set out for battle with a band of 500 warriors, and on June 17 he surprised Crook’s troops and forced them to retreat at the Battle of the Rosebud. To celebrate this victory, the Lakota moved their camp to the valley of the Little Bighorn River, where they were joined by 3,000 more Indians who had left the reservations to follow Sitting Bull. Here they were attacked on June 25 by the Seventh Cavalry under George Armstrong Custer, whose badly outnumbered troops first rushed the encampment, as if in fulfillment of Sitting Bull’s vision, and then made a stand on a nearby ridge, where they were destroyed.

Public outrage at this military catastrophe brought thousands more cavalrymen to the area, and over the next year they relentlessly pursued the Lakota, who had split up after the Custer fight, forcing chief after chief to surrender. But Sitting Bull remained defiant. In May 1877 he led his band across the border into Canada, beyond the reach of the U.S. Army, and when General Terry traveled north to offer him a pardon in exchange for settling on a reservation, Sitting Bull angrily sent him away.

Four years later, however, finding it impossible to feed his people in a world where the buffalo was almost extinct, Sitting Bull finally came south to surrender. On July 19, 1881, he had his young son hand his rifle to the commanding officer of Fort Buford in Montana….

Though well-known for his appearances with the Buffalo Bill Wild West show, Sitting Bull actually was only with the show for four months in 1885, during which he was paid $50 a week to ride once around the arena.

Returning to Standing Rock, Sitting Bull lived in a cabin on the Grand River, near where he had been born. He refused to give up his old ways as the reservation’s rules required, still living with two wives and rejecting Christianity, though he sent his children to a nearby Christian school in the belief that the next generation of Lakota would need to be able to read and write.

Soon after his return, Sitting Bull had another mystical vision, like the one that had foretold Custer’s defeat. This time he saw a meadowlark alight on a hillock beside him, and heard it say, “Your own people, Lakotas, will kill you.” Nearly five years later, this vision also proved true.

In the fall of 1890, a Miniconjou Lakota named Kicking Bear came to Sitting Bull with news of the Ghost Dance, a ceremony that promised to rid the land of white people and restore the Indians’ way of life. Lakota had already adopted the ceremony at the Pine Ridge and Rosebud Reservations, and Indian agents there had already called for troops to bring the growing movement under control. At Standing Rock, the authorities feared that Sitting Bull, still revered as a spiritual leader, would join the Ghost Dancers as well, and they sent 43 Lakota policemen to bring him in. Before dawn on December 15, 1890, the policemen burst into Sitting Bull’s cabin and dragged him outside, where his followers were gathering to protect him. In the gunfight that followed, one of the Lakota policemen put a bullet through Sitting Bull’s head.

Tatanka-Iyotanka describes a buffalo (bison) sitting on its haunches.

The Truth Hurts

If you enjoy reading about the Redskins’ failures, as NewMexiKen does, you’ll like Thomas Boswell’s column today.

Meanwhile, Tim Hasselbeck had a 0.0 quarterback rating, tying a record that can never be broken. It’s not like the SAT. You don’t get points for signing your name….

For those who want to make the case that Spurrier is many miles away from becoming an elite NFL coach, then this game can serve as their Exhibit A. The Redskins prepared for the same blitz-crazed defense that the Cowboys used to beat them, 21-14, in Dallas in November. “We prepared for them to come after us a lot. We felt we had a lot of answers for that,” Hasselbeck said. “But they played us differently than they did last time.”

What a shock. Parcells’s team switched tactics. The Redskins prepared, primarily, for the last war. Indeed, the Cowboys almost never blitzed. “They have Bill Parcells, so they are very well-prepared,” Coles said. “It seems that they are anticipating what you are going to do. When you run a route, it seems like they are waiting for you.”…

“People are going to talk about the coaches this week and whatever,” said a disgusted Smoot. “But between the Wilsons and the clocks, the game is about the players, not the coaches. . . . We didn’t play today. . . . Half the guys did, half the guys didn’t.

That’s good — “between the Wilsons and the clocks.” (Wilson is the brand of football the NFL uses.)

The Lunacy of the Heisman

Allen Barra has a solid piece on the Heisman. Published Friday, it’s still pertinent — and he predicted White would win.

The Mackey, the Lombardi, the Outland, the Biletnikoff—there are more than a dozen college football awards, and all of them taken together don’t generate one-tenth of the ink given to the Heisman Trophy. Why, exactly? What is particularly puzzling is that the Walter Camp Award, presented to the “nation’s top player” by the Walter Camp Foundation, has never caught on, considering that it is named for the father of football, the man without whom none of the other awards would exist. But then, the Walter Camp Foundation is in New Haven, Conn., and the Heisman Trophy is presented by the Downtown Athletic Club in New York. Which, come to think of it, probably answers the question right there….

And, by the way, why not present the Heisman sometime in mid-January, after the bowl games have been played? Why continue the pretense that the bowls aren’t part of the “season”? Since the bowl games determine the national championship and final rankings, why do the various groups and foundations that give out trophies pretend that the biggest games these kids will play don’t matter?

Every year, sportswriters wail and wail for a Heisman overhaul, and still nothing changes. So here’s a more feasible remedy. College football would gain some credibility by simply acknowledging that modern football is a division of labor among specialists. Gather up all the various year-end awards, including the Heisman, rent a ballroom, and present them all on the same night. If we can’t get the best players checked off on the Heisman ballot, maybe we can at least get them all in the same room.