January 21, 2006















  • Matisse Filled Old Age With Vibrant Colors
    Current mood: determined




    Estate of Henri Matisse

    "La Gerbe," one of his late works, using cutouts, on view in Paris through July 17, 2005.



    Hélène Adant/Rapho

    Henri Matisse at work on new projects in 1953, when he was 83.


    May 21, 2005

    With No Time for Twilight, Matisse Filled Old Age With Vibrant Colors




    PARIS, May 18 - Henri Matisse had good reason to feel morose in early 1941. France was under German occupation; his wife, Amélie, had left him; and he was suffering from cancer. Before undergoing a risky operation in Lyon, he wrote an anxious letter to his son, Pierre, insisting, "I love my family, truly, dearly and profoundly." He left another letter, to be delivered in the event of his death, making peace with Amélie.


    But when the surgery was successful,  Matisse quickly bounced back, declaring that he had won "a second life" and, at 71, led his art in remarkable new directions. He had a beautiful Russian-born assistant, Lydia Delectorskaya, to keep him company. And while ill health later returned to slow him down, he remained optimistic until his death in Nice on Nov. 3, 1954, just a few weeks short of his 85th birthday.


    "I haven't much to complain about," he wrote to his old friend  André Rouveyre on Sept. 19 of that year. "When I find something is not going well, I look in some satisfying corner and I find I have no reason to complain." And he added: "We have good friends - can one ask for more? I am still working a bit and I observe that its quality has not fallen, thanks to good discipline. But one must remain modest."


    The 13 fruitful years that he unexpectedly gained after his cancer operation are the focus of "Matisse: A Second Life," an invigorating new exhibition at theMusée de Luxembourg here through July 17. It shows him drawing incessantly, painting sporadically, rediscovering the medium of paper cutouts and preparing what he would consider his masterpiece, the paintings and stained-glass windows of the Chapel of the Rosary in Vence, near Nice.


    It also offers fresh evidence of how aged creators can remain energized by their art. Titian and Monet were also painting in their 80's, Picasso and Chagall  even into their 90's. Verdi composed "Falstaff" when he was 80; Richard Strauss wrote his "Four Last Songs" at 84. John Huston was 80 when he directed his last movie, "The Dead." And many writers keep going: Saul Bellow, who died last month at 89, published his last novel only five years ago.


    Still, this is the first time that Matisse's late years have been examined in France. The show's Danish curator, Hanne Finsen, writes in the catalog that she has long been fascinated by how, once great artists reach an advanced age, they often forget commercial considerations and display "extraordinary freedom." This autumnal flowering is what she explores in "Matisse: A Second Life," which travels to the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark this summer.


    She is helped enormously by Matisse's own words, presented here through his intense correspondence with Rouveyre, a bohemian artist and novelist whom he first met at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris in 1892 and who became an intimate friend after 1941. Matisse's letters to Rouveyre, which number more than 1,200 and were donated to the Royal Library in Denmark, serve as a first-person running commentary on his work, health and state of mind.


    His letters and their envelopes are themselves small works of art: the letters often include drawings and poems, while most envelopes are decorated with flowers, stars and baroque handwriting. There is also humor. The fact that Rouveyre lived for some of the time at a boarding house called "La Joie de Vivre" encouraged Matisse to play word games with the address. On one envelope, he simply wrote: "Monseiur Rouveyre, Somewhere in France."


    Rouveyre himself is present in the show through several sketched portraits, as well as a Cartier-Bresson photograph of him sitting for Matisse. But Rouveyre also serves as the artist's sounding board: after Matisse sent him 21 pen-and-ink drawings of trees, an accompanying letter explained the experiment. "I am told that Chinese teachers taught their students that when you want to draw a tree, feel as if you were climbing it when you start at the bottom," he wrote.


    Matisse's art evidently helped him keep the war at bay, not least in 1944, when Amélie was arrested, and his daughter, Marguerite, was sent to a concentration camp for Resistance activities. While both survived, Matisse had no word of their whereabouts for months on end. Nonetheless, he found solace in the bright colors that had always distinguished his painting. And along with some still lifes, he painted and sketched sensual nudes and couples.


    In response to remarks that he was too old to be engaged in erotic art, he wrote to Rouveyre, "Why, if my feeling of freshness, of beauty, of youth remains the same as it was 30 years ago in front of flowers, a fine sky or an elegant tree, why should it be different with a young girl?"


    Among his first adventures with paper cutouts was a cheerful book called "Jazz," which Matisse prepared during the war but which was only published in 1947. The lively multicolor forms, both abstract and figurative, seem to echo the voice of a man stubbornly refusing to be cowed by the times. But he was also enchanted by the technique. "The walls of my bedroom are covered with cutouts," he wrote to Rouveyre in 1948. "I still don't know what I'll do with them."


    Soon afterward, though, it was by using cutouts that he designed the stained-glass windows for the Chapel of the Rosary, a project he took on as a gesture to a young woman who had nursed him in Lyon in 1941 and later became a Dominican nun. The small modern building on the grounds of the Dominican nuns' residence in Vence took almost four years to complete. It was, Matisse said, the production of "an entire life of work."


    Two of the three windows show large yellow and blue leaves against a green background, but the window behind the altar - the study for it is on loan here from the Vatican Museums - is more ambitious: it represents "The Tree of Life," with flowering cactuses and blue leaves scattered across a green curtain hanging over a yellow window.


    Still more testing for this octogenarian artist were the chapel's paintings: three large figures, including "Virgin and Child," as well as 14 Stations of the Cross painted on white ceramic tiles. Studies for these works, which are included in this exhibition, illustrate how Matisse began with detailed drawings and gradually reduced them to a handful of black brush strokes.


    The chapel exhausted Matisse, who by then was unable to stand for long periods and had to attach his paint brush to a long pole. But in his home, sitting on his bed or in a wheelchair, he continued to make gouache cutouts. After Rouveyre teased him for embracing religion, Matisse urged his friend to look at his cutout of a naked woman, "Zulma," at the May Salon in Paris in 1950: "You will see the awakening of the converted," was his retort.


    The final cutout in this exhibition, "La Gerbe," multicolored leaves that resemble a spray of flowers, was completed a few months before his death, but it explodes with life. The artist who almost reinvented color in painting had by now found freedom in the simplicity of decoration. "I have the mastery of it," he told Rouveyre in a letter. "I am sure of it."






     



     







    Medical Devices




    January 21, 2006


    Medical Devices Are Hot, Which Is Why Guidant Is




    Think of it as the fight for the Bionic Baby Boomer.


    From head to toe, aging boomers are being kept alive and kicking - or at least walking - by an expanding array of devices that combine the newest medical knowledge with the latest breakthroughs in digital electronics and material sciences.


    Already, the medical device field has become one of the most innovative and profitable segments of the economy. And as wave after wave of baby boomers enter their prime health care spending years, the medical device market is expected to grow by double digits for years to come.


    That trend more than any other may explain the current bidding war for the medical device maker Guidant. Many analysts have questioned the financial sanity of Boston Scientific's latest offer: $27 billion. Guidant's original suitor, Johnson & Johnson, whose most recent offer was around $25 billion, has until midnight Tuesday to indicate whether it will make yet another bid for the company.


    In many ways, Guidant is a damaged company. Its market share has plunged, and its potential legal liabilities have mounted, after disclosures of fatal product defects that executives evidently knew about long before notifying doctors. But Guidant's continuing allure is its prime location in the booming medical device industry.


    The industry's sweet spot now is the $10 billion market for implanted devices that regulate heartbeats; Guidant has been second only to Medtronic in that field. Forecasts call for that market to expand by 15 percent annually for the next five years, with the fastest growth likely to come from the most expensive and profitable products.


    Guidant is also a player in the $7.6 billion market for balloon devices that can be threaded through arteries to clear blockages in blood vessels, and for the tiny metal cylinders called stents that are inserted to keep those vessels from reclosing. The worldwide market for such devices is expected to top $10 billion by 2010.


    The fight for Guidant, though, is only one sign of the boom in medical devices. Even products that have been on the market for decades, like artificial hips and knees, are undergoing technology-driven makeovers.


    The industry ranges from inexpensive equipment like disposable syringes, crutches and home pregnancy test kits to $1.3 million robotic surgery machines used to remove cancerous prostate glands and equally expensive M.R.I. diagnostic machines that can cost additional hundreds of thousands of dollars to install.


    But right now the financial spotlight is on cardiovascular devices like Guidant's, which treat breakdowns in the heart and circulatory system associated with aging and progressive diseases like diabetes. Drug-coated stents like Taxus from Boston Scientific are estimated to have profit margins approaching 90 percent. Heart-regulating devices like those made by Guidant, Medtronic and St. Jude Medical can cost $25,000 or more and carry gross margins as high as 70 percent.


    The market enthusiasm for medical devices is a bright contrast to the currently cloudy outlook for many traditional drug companies and biotechnology start-ups, which have hit snags in developing major new products.


    "Devices are an area where technology rapidly fuses with medicine," said Amit Hazan, an analyst at Suntrust Robinson Humphrey in New York who focuses primarily on device companies with market values below $1 billion. With big companies like Boston Scientific and Johnson & Johnson looking to grow by acquiring new product lines and few major medical device players like Guidant for sale, Wall Street has come to regard many of the smaller fry as prime takeover candidates.


    "The index of small-cap companies I follow was up over 40 percent last year," Mr. Hazan said.


    As always when markets start looking giddy, there are caution flags. Many doctors say that some of the device industry's innovations, as with a number of drugs, are being marketed too aggressively. Often, too, regulators approve devices based on relatively short-term evidence of benefits that may not end up justifying their costs.


    And some costs are commonly overlooked. Companies like Guidant, for example, are selling ever more sophisticated heart regulating devices. New features include ones enabling the units to deliver more varied forms of stimulation to more regions of the heart. But doctors say the new features, which can add thousands of dollars to a device's cost and more rapidly drain the battery, are often never employed. Besides the burden on the checkbook of the patient or - more likely, the insurer - the battery-sapping features may require a patient to have a replacement operation in three or four years instead of six or seven.


    And compared with their ties to the drug industry, doctors are much more involved with device companies in developing new products and making improvements to older ones. The sometimes tangled relationships can speed innovation. But they can also lead to overly aggressive use of new products and procedures on patients who might have benefited as well, or better, from other, less profitable treatments.


    Even if insurers and regulators bring some of the excesses to heel, the device companies will continue to be fueled by the same baby boomer demographics on which traditional drug companies and the newer biotechnology industry are also placing their hopes.


    Wall Street firms like Lazard Capital Markets project that the number of Americans over age 60 will increase by at least 30 percent over the next eight years. On average, they will spend more on health care between the ages of 60 and 70 than they did in all their previous decades combined. And by the time they are 85, they will each be spending over $16,000 annually - more than their average bills for food or shelter, according to Alexander K. Arrow, the device industry analyst at Lazard.


    "Baby boomers are descending upon the health care infrastructure of the United States like locusts upon a cornfield," Mr. Arrow wrote in an industry overview he published last month.


    As recently as the 1990's, Wall Street was watching the boomer demographic wave mainly for its impact on big drug companies. They flourished as the number of $1 billion drugs jumped from 4 in 1992 to 55 in 2000. Health care investors with a tolerance for risk flocked to biotechnology companies like Amgen, Genentech and Biogen that were using novel methods to create drugs.


    And many of the drug makers that did own device companies viewed them as a drag on growth. Eli Lilly split off Guidant in 1994, and in 2001 Bristol-Myers Squibb did the same with Zimmer Holdings, now the largest maker of hips and other artificial joints.


    But since 2000, earnings growth has slowed for drug makers as blockbuster drugs of the 1990's came off patent and successors proved hard to find. In the meantime, leading device companies have proved adept at racking up year after year of double-digit revenue and earnings growth. Unlike drug makers, device company can continually tinker with hit products to produce a steady stream of incremental improvements that can be used to justify price increases.


    And unlike drugs, devices can be designed with electronic components that link them to computers and communications networks, allowing data from patients with implants to be monitored remotely. Guidant's innovations in such patient monitoring and networking, marketed under the Latitude brand name, are among the enhancements it is counting on to help rebuild market share.


    Stock activity in the last five years attests to the diverging fortunes of drug and device makers. From the beginning of 2000 to the end of 2005, the share price of Pfizer, the largest drug company, declined 10.7 percent, while the stock of Medtronic, the largest independent device company, was rising 63.2 percent.


    During the same period Lilly's share price declined 4.3 percent (assuming dividends were reinvested) while the stock of Guidant, its device offspring, climbed more than 40 percent. Bristol-Myers's stock fell more than 53 percent, while Zimmer's rose more than 135 percent.


    Many of the most successful devices emerged in response to the limitations of drugs. Balloon angioplasty and stents clear blockages in blood vessels where blood-thinning drugs can no longer maintain flow. Pacemakers and defibrillators correct heartbeat abnormalities that are impossible to manage chemically. Spinal fusion devices and, more recently, artificial spinal disks have become treatments of last resort in patients for whom drugs and exercise can no longer control back pain.


    Device makers frequently get clearance to sell new products far more easily than drug makers. That is partly because devices rarely have broad side effects. In addition, most new devices are classified as variations on previously approved products, while each new drug is considered a chemically novel substance requiring a full review of its safety and efficacy.


    Regulators have allowed even devices with relatively low or short-term success rates to enter the market after makers positioned them as therapies of last resort. That happened last year with the Food and Drug Administration's controversial approval of Cyberonics' electrical stimulator of the vagus nerve, used to treat depression in cases where drug therapy has failed.


    Few drug makers have a clearer view of these dynamics than Johnson & Johnson, whose vast health care empire includes pharmaceuticals - 44 percent of revenue through the first three quarters of last year - but whose many device divisions already contribute more than a third of its revenue and are collectively bigger than Medtronic, the largest independent device company.


    Now Johnson & Johnson's working knowledge of the device market is being put to the test, as the company assesses how much value even a damaged Guidant is worth in the Battle for the Bionic Boomer.






    .. 



     


    Wednesday, January 18, 2006







    Paris Hilton












    Paris Nixes Playboy















    Between her X-rated video and various skin-baring red carpet slips (accidental or otherwise), we're probably as familiar with Paris Hilton's anatomy as her internist is. And yet, the talent-challenged Greek billion-heir enthusiast says there's no chance she'll doff her duds and embrace her inner airbrushed sexpot in the pages of Playboy, no matter how much moolah Hugh Hefner shoves at her.

    "They've asked me a million times," Paris, 24, tells the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "Hef has been after me since I was 17, and I got offered a lot of money."

    But, she insists, "I'll never do it," and offers this rock-solid reason why not: "Because I'm Paris Hilton."

    The suddenly straight-laced starlet was in Sin City for Saturday's opening of a new hotspot, but was without underage arm candy Stavros Niarchos, 19, whose recent club-hopping has reportedly attracted the attention of local liquor authorities.

    The moneybags college student was "studying," Paris explained, adding that they planned to meet Sunday morning to pick out a pet monkey to add to her ever-growing menagerie.

    The unlucky simian will join a motley collection of creatures that, last time we checked, included a couple Chihuahuas, a kinkajou, a ferret and a goat (let's hope PETA soon intervenes and convinces Paris that a zoo can be a truly happy place for animals).

    By the by, Hilton's anti-stripping stance comes on the heels of a New York Times profile of Scott Storch, her rumored ex-beau and the producer behind her long-delayed debut album, who coincidentally previews an appropriate song for the paper.

    On "It's Like That," Paris, in what is described as "a breathy, digitally enhanced register," warbles, "Gonna lose my clothes/You like that, don't you/Let's get exposed/You know you want to."

    When asked to comment on Hilton's vocal abilities, Storch bobs and weaves, claiming, "If people are given the right circumstances and the right track and the right melody, it's about the conviction. It's not necessarily about being a god-given virtuoso."

    Approximate translation: She wouldn't sound out of place on the "American Idol" loser reel.

    He also admits he treated Paris to a Bentley, but plays it coy as to whether they mixed "business and pleasure."

    "It's always a pleasure working with Paris," he tells the paper. "We were good friends. Let the world figure that out. I take the high road."

    The album is due out this summer. Consider yourselves warned.

    Next: Sienna Puts Nanny on Notice

January 18, 2006

  • Golden Globes



    Golden Globes Party Round-Up: Castle Hilton Hosts The Stars


    READ MORE: Awards, Paris Hilton, golden globes, jamie foxx, jessica alba, naomi watts, party report, reese witherspoon, top


    albarodriguez.jpgLike spoiled, scheming daddy’s girls with Sweet 16s falling on the same night, the various studios threw out all the stops to lure the popular kids to their Golden Globes bashes. Since all the events took place somewhere in the Beverly Hilton, however, party hopping was as easy as stumbling into an elevator and pressing a button; you just had to be prepared to find a collapsed Paris Hilton with a half-deflated nitrous balloon in her lips when the doors opened. A Golden Globes party round-up:


    · The HBO party is described as a “gateway bash,” thereby making it the weed to the Warner Bros./InStyle’s cocaine and NBC Universal’s heroin “hard parties.”
    · At the Warner Bros.-InStyle party, barefoot and clutching her trophy, Felicity Huffman “shimmied and sang for two hours to the party’s live band,” as concerned Hollywood Foreign Press officials stood in the background second guessing their choice. Meanwhile Cillian Murphy revealed his boy crush on Joaquin Phoenix, gushing, “He’s the best actor of his generation,” as the familiar strains of the Brokeback love theme swelled behind him.


    The NBC Universal party, meanwhile, was a “lavish, rooftop bash,” with delighted winner Reese Witherspoon, “surrounded by grim faced guards,” presumably to keep overenthused, clingy househusband Ryan Phillippe in check.
    · Jamie Foxx, we have reported before, is a big tipper, and always creative with the denominations. This time around, USA Today reports, it’s a lucky bartender who received $200 in 20s. Foxx explains: “I worked a lot of jobs in my life, and I know people forget to tip, so for all those people, I want to take care of them.”
    · Page Six reports that Naomi Watts showed up to the Vanity Fair party without Liev Schreiber on her arm, asking a friend, “You don’t know any nice, single guys?” We imagine spending two years making goo-goo eyes at a green-catsuited Andy Serkis can really give you unrealistically elevated levels of what to expect in a mate.
    · Reuters offers some raw entrance footage, rendered somewhat surreal when unencumbered by animated intros and loud, sycophantic voice overs. Behold! As Jessica Alba enters the Warner Bros./InStyle party, pronouncing the festivities the perfect opportunity to “come and hang and have fun and party. It’s nice and you can dress up and be glamorous,” proving once and for all that there is indeed substance behind this pretty package.


     

  • Apple




    Powebook G4 laptops are seen on display at the Apple Store in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2006. Building on continued momentum of the Ipod player, Apple Computer Inc., posted record earnings and revenue, Wednesday, easily beating Wall Street expectations. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

    Apple sales outlook rattles shares; profit up By Duncan Martell

    Apple Computer Inc. (Nasdaq:AAPL - news) on Wednesday forecast current-quarter results below Wall Street expectations, after strong holiday sales of its iPod led to a near-doubling in quarterly earnings.

    Apple shares fell 3.3 percent in volatile after-hours trading following the results.

    Apple's chief financial officer also said the company's then-pending shift to Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news) microchips for its Mac computers caused it to lose some holiday-quarter sales.

    Apple shares, which had gained almost 15 percent since the end of 2005 as the market reacted to booming holiday sales of its market-leading music player, briefly gave back about half of those gains late on Wednesday in reaction to the company's disappointing current-quarter forecast.

    "Their guidance being overly conservative for next quarter, that's what's causing the most chaos in the shares today," said Jim Grossman, portfolio manager at the Thrivent Technology Fund. "People want a little more explanation of why they're giving such conservative guidance."

    For the current quarter, Apple forecast earnings per share before items of 42 cents on revenue of $4.3 billion. Analysts had expected the company to earn a profit before items of 51 cents per share, on average, on revenue of $4.83 billion.

    'PAUSE' AHEAD OF SHIFT TO INTEL CHIPS

    Apple, which also makes Macintosh computers, said net income for its first fiscal quarter ended in December rose to $565 million, or 65 cents per share, from $295 million, or 35 cents per share, on a split-adjusted basis. Revenue rose 64 percent to $5.75 billion from $3.49 billion.

    Apple Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer said the company had seen "a bit of a pause" in its sales of Mac computers ahead of its widely watched shift to Intel microprocessors.

    "Not only do they now have the access to cheaper chips from Intel, but they have access to all the other parts of the Intel ecosystem," said Barry Jaruzelski, lead partner in Booz Allen Hamilton's global technology and electronics practice, adding that Intel can pocket the savings itself or return them to customers as lower prices, or some mix of the two.

    Apple said again that it had sold 14 million iPods in the holiday quarter, a figure Chief Executive Steve Jobs disclosed last week at the Macworld conference. The company also sold more than 1.25 million Mac computers -- fewer than some analysts expected -- but it was the highest number of Macs sold in the quarter in six years, Apple said.

    Oppenheimer, in a telephone interview, declined to say how many iPod Nanos it sold in the quarter, but said the device "significantly contributed" to the overall number. He said on a conference call that gross margin on the iPods remained at more than 20 percent.

    One analyst said that Apple's runaway success with the iPod had focused investor attention on the performance of the Mac product line.

    "Historically the Mac has been the primary revenue generator," said Nittin Gupta, an analyst with the Yankee Group. "At this rate of growth, the Mac is not going to be their primary revenue driver. If they become too dependent on iPods and digital audio players, that's a risk over the long term. It's going to be hard to maintain those iPod shipment numbers."

    Apple shares trade at 36.5 times projected earnings per share before items of $2.26 for fiscal 2006 ending in September, compared with a multiple of 51 times Google's 2006 estimated profit per share.

    Apple shares more than doubled in 2005, after tripling in 2004. In the past 12 months, its shares are up more than 140 percent, compared with a more than 130 percent increase in shares of Google Inc. (Nasdaq:GOOG - news).

    Apple has sold some 42 million iPods since their introduction in October 2001 and the company has about 75 percent of the U.S. market for digital music players.

    Apple shares fell $2.22, or 2.6 percent, to close at $82.49 on Nasdaq, on a day when tech stocks were dragged down by disappointing results from Yahoo and Intel on Tuesday. In extended trading on Inet, the stock fell below $78 before rebounding. The stock recovered to $79.78 in after-hours, a drop of 3.3 percent from the Nasdaq close.

    (Additional reporting by Jim Finkle in Boston and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles)





















  • Wednesday, January 18, 2006







    Spying on Ordinary Americans




    In times of extreme fear, American leaders have sometimes scrapped civil liberties in the name of civil protection. It's only later that the country can see that the choice was a false one and that citizens' rights were sacrificed to carry out extreme measures that were at best useless and at worst counterproductive. There are enough examples of this in American history - the Alien and Sedition Acts and the World War II internment camps both come to mind - that the lesson should be woven into the nation's fabric. But it's hard to think of a more graphic example than President Bush's secret program of spying on Americans.






    • The White House has offered steadily weaker arguments to defend the decision to eavesdrop on Americans' telephone calls and e-mail without getting warrants. One argument is that the spying produced unique and highly valuable information. Vice President Dick Cheney, who never shrinks from trying to prey on Americans' deepest fears, said that the spying had saved "thousands of lives" and could have thwarted the 9/11 attacks had it existed then.


      Given the lack of good, hard examples, that argument sounded dubious from the start. A chilling article in yesterday's Times confirmed our fears.


      According to the article, the eavesdropping swept up vast quantities of Americans' private communications without any reasonable belief that they could be related to terrorism. The National Security Agency flooded the Federal Bureau of Investigation with thousands of names, e-mail addresses, telephone numbers and other tips that virtually all led to dead ends or to innocent Americans.


      About the only result the administration has been able to dredge up on behalf of the spying program is the claim that the information it gained helped disrupt two plots: one to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge and one to detonate fertilizer bombs in London. But officials in Washington and Britain disputed the connection. And that plot to cut down the Brooklyn Bridge with a blowtorch has been trotted out so many times that it would be comical if the issue were not so serious.


      This was not just a tragic waste of the F.B.I.'s resources in dangerous times. It was an outrageous and pointless intrusion into individuals' privacy. Anyone who read the original reports on the spying operation and thought, "Well, so what, I have nothing to hide," should think about the uncounted innocent Americans who had F.B.I. officers knocking on their doors because of secret and possibly illegal surveillance. The National Security Agency was originally barred from domestic surveillance without court supervision to avoid just this sort of abuse.


      The first lawsuits challenging the legality of the domestic spying operation were filed this week, and Congress plans hearings. We hope that lawmakers are more diligent about reining in Mr. Bush now than they have been about his other abuses of power in the name of fighting terrorism.






     







    Blogging News



    Search Engine Shows Bloggers' Opinions


    In bloggers






    OpinmindOpinmind is a new blog search engine that shows bloggers' opinions. When a subject (keyword) such as "beer" is typed into the search engine the results are divided into two categories: positive opinions and negative opinions. Opinmind also displays the Sentimeter, which displays the relative number of positive and negative opinions identified by Opinmind. The results can also be sorted by date or by the strength of the opinion. A surprising find using Opinmind is that a search for blogging shows sentimeter score of just 71%. There are lots of negative posts about blogging like "i hate blogging..." "I think blogging is an evil thing" and "I hate my blogging style." Of course, a tool like OpinMind can pull things out of context and everyone gets frustrated now and then on their personal blogs. (Via TechCrunch)



     







    My Message



    I have resumed posting here after an unexpected and unwanted interruption of about two weeks. It feels like an eternity. The reasons for this are not matters that will keep me from being here indefinitely.


     


    However, if there is an interruption again, please understand that is through no fault of my own at this point, and I will do everything in my power to remain consistently dedicated to additional content on this page on a daily basis.


    Happy New Year To All.


    We can make this year, 2006, a great time in all of our lives, if we are able to help each other and love one another. The two will always go hand in hand.


    May all of God's blessings be yours in the coming year.


     


    Michael P. Whelan



     







    Blogging News



    Universities Hiring Student Bloggers to Describe Life on Campus


    In universities






    A Chicago Tribune article says some universities have college students blogging about life at the school. The colleges are using the student bloggers as a marketing tool to help bring in new students. Some of the schools using blog posts by college students as a marketing tool include Colgate University (Hamilton, NY), Wofford College (Spartanburg, SC), University of Dayton (Dayton, Ohio) and Ball State University (Muncie, Ind.) At some of the colleges the Tribune article says the college bloggers are being paid.
    Some bloggers are paid for posting their observations. At Wofford, for instance, student bloggers receive $25 per week. Allison Kretz, a sophomore at the University of Dayton in Dayton, Ohio, earns $500 per semester for being an online scribe. Colgate's Burnham, on the other hand, received no compensation.

    Until the university approached her, Kretz had never considered becoming a blogger. "I had applied for a tour guide position, but I didn't get the job," she said. "But they had my references from professors." The recommendations, and her desire to share her college experiences with family and friends, made her an ideal blogger. "I've really fallen in love with the university, and it's a good way to let people at home know how I'm doing," Kretz said.
    Tim O'Keeffe, director of Web content at Colgate, told the Tribune that he has not had to censor any of the blogs -- although he does advise them not to blog about subjects like partying ahead of time.
    Bloggers don't rely on a set of rules or a handbook to guide them on the content of their posts. Instead, the universities rely on the students' good judgment. "As for the rules, we don't have formal written guidelines," said Colgate's O'Keeffe. "But I sit down with the students and have a good discussion about the university's expectations and goals. I let the students know we're not interested in posts about parties or trips to the local taverns."
    Based on some of the comments elsewhere in the article it sounds like the colleges pre-screen carefully so they already have idea of what to expect from the college bloggers they choose. The end of the article includes links to the student blogs mentioned in the article including Allison Kretz's blog and the Colgate blog mentioned above. All of you college kids hanging on MySpace.com that enjoy blogging may want to take a look at the university job board and see if there are any blogger opportunities.



     







    Blogging News



    Is Blogging Cooler Than Writing?


    In writing






    Simon Dumenco, who writes the Media Guy column for AdAge, offers a new opinion piece called "A Blogger is Just a Writer With a Cooler Name."
    And it occurred to me that there is no such thing as blogging. There is no such thing as a blogger. Blogging is just writing -- writing using a particularly efficient type of publishing technology. Even though I tend to first use Microsoft Word on the way to being published, I am not, say, a Worder or Wordder.

    It's just software, people! The underlying creative/media function remains exactly the same.

    OK, you might argue, blogging is aesthetically a different beast -- it's instantaneous media. (Well, since the dawn of the 24-hour news cycle, pretty much all media has had to learn how to be instantaneous.) It's unpolished. (The best blogs I read are as sophisticated as anything old-school media publishes.) It's voice-y. (The best old-school media I read tends to be voice-y.) It's about opinion, not reporting. (The best reporting to come out of MacWorld in San Francisco last week was published on blogs.) It's, well, often sloppy and reckless (and Judy Miller wasn't?).
    We've seen the blogging is writing argument before and since blogging is a form of writing it is hard to argue against. You could say that unlike other forms of writing blogging also incorporates photographs, hyperlinks, trackbacks, video clips, etc. Unlike the title of Dumenco's column we still think writing and writers are cool too. Dumenco also made this interesting point:
    But over the next few years those legacy systems will be phased out and everyone publishing online will be using some form of what's now commonly thought of as blogging software.

    Ultimately, it comes down to this: In the very near future, there are only going to be two types of media people: those who can reliably work and publish (or broadcast) incredibly fast, and those ... who can't.
    True dat, double true! Speed is now an essential skill for bloggers (and writers) in the new media world



     







    Blogging News



    NY Times: More Business Travel Blogs Coming


    In blogging






    A New York Times article expects an increase in blogs by business travelers. The article, which mentions business travel blogs like Inflighthq, PatandMeg.com, Jenidallas Day to Day and Road Warrior Tips, says many more such blogs are on the way.
    An Internet search for full-time business travelers who write Web logs produces astonishingly low numbers, considering the eight million Americans whom the Pew Internet and American Life Project say publish a blog.

    But that appears to be changing. "Just wait," said Steve Broback, a business traveler in Woodinville, Wash., who edits the new blog Inflighthq (www.inflighthq.com) and is an organizer of a blog conference called the Blog Business Summit. "The rush is starting."

    Mr. Broback, whose Web journal is sponsored by Connexion, Boeing's wireless division, writes about the plight of the road warrior and offers links to news for business travelers. And he expects a lot of company soon. "In a year or two we'll probably even have blogs focusing on vintage airport vending machines," he predicted.
    These blogs will be of interest to frequent business travelers as they look for the latest scoop on the best deals and the best places to stay. Blogs providing information about how to navigate airports and tips about hotel rooms and restaurants will also be sought out by travelers. On the plus side maybe some aspects of business travel will improve as a result of bloggers pointing out flaws and inconveniences. The downside is that business competitors may also be reading these blogs. Inc.com's blog called Fresh Inc. advises business travel bloggers to be careful about what they blog:
    One business travel blogger noted that after her colleagues began reading her posts about being homeless after Hurricane Katrina, she felt she lost her anonymity. Her quote: "When your boss is reading your blog, you say to yourself, 'Well, maybe I shouldn't be writing about staying at the Ritz-Carlton.'" Another reason business travelers should be wary to blog: competitive intelligence. A blogging specialist in the article noted that business travelers who mention cities they're staying in or about to visit could reveal "enough information for a competitor to surmise what's going on."
    If that's the case then maybe anonymous business travel blogs are the most likely to emerge



     







    Living Green, but Allowing for Shades of Gray



    January 15, 2006

    At Lunch With Wendy Gordon



    Wendy Gordon  is no fanatic.


    Yes, she believes deeply in living green. She buys only hormone-free milk, cooks only certified organic meat and cleans her house with concoctions made of environmentally innocuous ingredients like vinegar, water and lemon juice.


    But she uses supermarket spices, soups and dishwashing liquids. She eats nonorganic bananas. She thinks that plain soap and warm water kill germs as well as any antibacterial soap, and that canned tuna and salmon are not any less healthy than fresh. While she prefers the sauce she makes from tomatoes she grows at her country house, she keeps store-bought tomato sauce around her Manhattan kitchen, too. And she drives an S.U.V. because, despite numerous studies that have come to the opposite conclusion, she says it makes her feel safer.


    Perhaps most surprising - at least to this reporter, who walked into lunch at Isabella's, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, with lots of preconceived notions about green-living types - she happily spurns bottled water in favor of New York tap.


    "Americans spend billions on bottled water, on this myth that it's safer," Ms. Gordon, 48, said.


    Such a pick-and-choose attitude toward greenness is not unusual in itself - except that Wendy Gordon is executive director of the Green Guide Institute, a nonprofit group dedicated to, as she put it, "helping people make healthy decisions in a world of imperfect information." She calls the Green Guide, which it publishes six times a year, a "Consumer Reports for the eco-conscious."


    Ms. Gordon is a realist. Sure, she would love it if people stuck to containers made from corn-based materials instead of petroleum-based plastics, and if they used only packages that were reusable, recyclable or at least biodegradable. But she knows that few people are ready to spurn cheap plastic packages. So the Green Guide settles for listing the best of the lot - for example, polyethylene terephthalate, commonly used in soda bottles, is relatively O.K. - and cautioning cooks not to reuse plastic containers that seem old, stained or worn.


    She is equally realistic about eating habits. Yes, the Green Guide rails against the possible carcinogens unleashed by deep-fat frying - but it stops short of asking Americans to abandon French fries. Instead, the guide offers a recipe for "fake fries" that are baked in oil, a process that it says generates fewer cancer-causing agents.


    Even as a child, Ms. Gordon did a balancing act between greenness and practicality.


    She grew up in Englewood, N.J., but her fondest memories are of weekends spent with her parents and four siblings at their vacation home in upstate New York. She recalled her young self as "a lonely, unhappy teenager, a stutterer, an excellent student who was a bit of a nerd, I guess." Even her name - her parents named her after Wendy in Peter Pan - was a misnomer. "I loved the concept of Neverland, but boy, I wanted to grow up," she said. In the meantime, she "retreated to nature," riding her bike in the woods and swimming in the Hudson.


    Her father, a surgeon, very much wanted her to be a doctor. She wanted to work with nature. So she compromised: she majored in geology - "at least it was science," she said - at Princeton, and worked with several professors to unearth corporate polluters of the Hudson. "I was a little Erin Brockovich," she recalled.


    She graduated in 1979, moved to Boston and - mainly to appease her father - did cancer research at Massachusetts General Hospital. She hated it, and a year later again found a compromise between her father's wishes and her own: she enrolled in the School of Public Health at Harvard, where she earned a master's degree in science in environmental health. In the summer of 1981 she worked as an intern at the Natural Resources Defense Council, and she wound up working there full time.


    Within a few years, she met two famous people who would change the course of her life. In 1981 she met Larry Rockefeller - John D.'s grandson, Nelson's nephew - a longtime environmentalist and a founding member of the council, whom she married in 1982; they have two sons. Six years later she met Meryl Streep, a mother of three who wanted to fight widespread pesticide use. Ms. Streep and Ms. Gordon formed Mothers and Others, a subgroup of the Natural Resources Defense Council dedicated to publicizing hazards that pesticides pose to children.


    But they felt that it would be useless to tell people to spend huge amounts of money to buy organic produce that in the 1980's still did not look or taste very good, Ms. Gordon said. "We got practical," she said. "We said things like, 'Buy organic applesauce, but buy non-organic bananas.' " The group also published a list, called Mother's Milk, of milk producers that did not use hormones or antibiotics on their cows. Mothers and Others eventually spun off from the council and became the Green Guide Institute.


    These days, Ms. Gordon says, organic foods look and taste a lot better than they did back then. But she concedes that the prices are, for the most part, still very high. So during her lunch of (conventional) salad with shrimp, Ms. Gordon offered these tips for people who want to live green without spending too much green:


    Check out your tap before you spring for bottled water. Federal drinking water standards are "decent," she said, and a quick call to the local water authority will confirm that safe liquid is flowing through your pipes. If you are still uncomfortable, buy a water filter. "It's still a lot cheaper than bottles," she said.


    Don't rely only on labels. They are often confusing and often meaningless. "Salmon safe" on a wine bottle has nothing to do with ingredients; it just means that no runoff from the vineyard polluted nearby rivers. And no regulation prohibits companies from slapping "cruelty free" or "all natural" or "hypoallergenic" on any product. Look for specific assurances, like "no petroleum-derived ingredients," and for certification from a third party that you trust, be it the United States Department of Agriculture or the Rainforest Alliance.


    Make your own household cleansers. Cleaning chemicals, Ms. Gordon warns, can set off asthma and allergies. She says her recipe, a quarter cup of distilled white vinegar in a gallon of water, works wonders on wood floors. Add some dishwashing liquid and it cleans tiles. Salt and baking soda are great oven cleaners.


    Check ingredients in furniture as well as food. Polyurethane foam, common in mattresses and couches, can contain flame retardants that Ms. Gordon says are not proven safe. Go with couches made of wool, which she says is a natural flame retardant.


    Take a case-by-case approach to organic foods. Conventional milk is as wholesome as organic milk, as long as it is free of hormones. And conventionally grown bananas and cucumbers are relatively safe. Ms. Gordon does suggest sticking with organic apples and potatoes, though. "Just peeling conventional ones isn't an answer," she said. "Pesticides can get into the pulp, and the peels hold a lot of the nutrition."


    Don't think that organic processing cancels out other health hazards. Organic cookies and chips are just as high in fats and added sugars as their conventional counterparts. Manure produced by organically raised animals wreaks less havoc on the environment, but the meat may still wreak havoc on arteries. As Ms. Gordon put it, "Certifying something as organic will still not make it health food."






     







    Blog News



    Blogs Not Big Enough for Daily Kos Founder


    In political+blogs






    TomPaine.com reports that Markos Moulitsas, the creator of the popular Daily Kos site, a progressive blog and web community, said that the blog and websites like MoveOn were still not big enough to get their message heard by enough people.
    "It saddens me that Daily Kos is the largest progressive media outlet," Moulitsas mused, in response to a question about the effects the Internet will have on progressive politics in the years to come. "We can't just put it all on the blogs and MoveOn and hope that this is future, because if it is, we're in trouble." These were strange words to hear from a man who has made his name with a blog. But odd as it seemed to me at the time, Moulitsas is almost certainly right: Unstoppable and ever-expanding though the Internet appears, web-based progressivism is not a substitute for the traditional political infrastructure, nor will it be anytime soon.
    The article says that Daily Kos gets an amazing five million pageviews each week but that is just 1/3 to 1/4 of Rush Limbaugh's 14 to 20 million listeners.
    Consider the numbers: Daily Kos gets about five million page views a week. That's not chump change, but Rush Limbaugh still gets somewhere between 14 and 20 million listeners in the same period of time. The contrast with cable news is equally striking: While Moulitsas gets about 700,000 page views a day, almost four times as many people tune into cable news stations during primetime alone, and more than twice as many watch Fox. Nine of the top 10 highest rated cable news programs are on Fox.

    The bottom line--and it is a bottom line Moulitsas was manifestly aware of--is that blogs aren't reaching an audience anywhere near the same size as the traditional news outlets.
    It sounds like Markos Moulitsas will need a tv or radio deal to vault his viewership up to the level of Limbaugh. Still with five million visitors a week and with blogs still growing the Daily Kos site is probably still gaining ground. Meanwhile, Rush Limbaugh continues to charge for his archives -- a policy which likely limits readership



     







    Andrew Sullivan DailyDish



    By Andrew






    MORE AWARDS! We're not done yet. This year's blue-ribbon panel of judges worked very hard. The Begala Award for left-liberal idiocy is still much prized, even though 2005 was a pretty sweet year for the anti-Bush hordes. The Begala Award is given particularly to lefties who deploy personal abuse and bitter hyperbole.

    BEGALA AWARD HONORABLE MENTION 2005: "There is much to be said and done about the man-made annihilation of New Orleans, caused NOT by a hurricane but by the very specific decisions made by the Bush administration in the past four and a half years." - Michael Moore.

    BEGALA AWARD RUNNER UP 2005: "Fuck Tom Friedman. Speaking of degenerate sacks of shit, this is what he thinks of liberals: 'Liberals don't want to talk about Iraq because, with a few exceptions, they thought the war was wrong and deep down don't want the Bush team to succeed.' Here we get to gaze deep inside the heart of Tom Friedman, Pundit extraordinaire, for whom being right is more important than the lives of thousands or millions of people. Deal with your own sick and twisted sociopathic existence. Don't project it onto me." - Atrios.

    BEGALA AWARD WINNER 2005: "The religious right's position on embryonic stem cell research is clear: consign Alzheimer's and Parkinson's sufferers to death on the off chance that a blastocyst will crawl out of the garbage pail to work the breakfast shift at Burger King." - Jerry And Joe Long, at Huffblog.

    WAIT, THERE'S MORE: Last but not least, the Yglesias Awards. These are doled out to people who actually risk something in alienating their own readers, and challenging their own side in political combat. Drum roll, please:

    YGLESIAS AWARD HONORABLE MENTION 2005: "Forget that the nation and the party would both have been better served by the temperamentally suited and professionally qualified John Roberts' winning Senate confirmation with 90-plus votes. The nation would have been better served because such a margin would have represented an un-petty act in a city descended into hateful pettiness. And the Democrats, because by acknowledging Roberts' obvious assets - intellectual firepower, genuine respect from, and friendship with, colleagues who are active Democrats, a reputation for open-mindedness and not being a captive of ideology - they could have then believably used the "Roberts standard" to measure President Bush's future court nominees." - Mark Shields.

    YGLESIAS AWARD RUNNER UP 2005: "Bill Bennett is a hypocrite, a loathsome fungus on the tree of American politics, a man who has worked unceasingly to make America a worse place--when he's not publishing the work of others under his own name, or rolling the dice at Las Vegas while claiming that America's poor would be rich if only they had the righteousness and moral fiber that he does. But Bill Bennett is not afflicted with genocidal fantasies about ethnically cleansing African-Americans. The claim that he is is completely, totally wrong." - Brad DeLong.

    YGLESIAS AWARD WINNER 2005: "Most conservative books are pseudo-books: ghostwritten pastiches whose primary purpose seems to be the photo of the "author" on the cover. What a tumble! From 'The Conservative Mind' to 'Savage Nation'; from Clifton White to Dick Morris; from Willmoore Kendall and Harry Jaffa to Sean Hannity and Mark Fuhrman - all in little more than a generation's time. Whatever this is, it isn't progress." - Andy Ferguson, Weekly Standard.

    DERBYSHIRE AWARD WINNER 2005: Finally, an old favorite. I've basically retired this award for neanderthal bigotry from the right, because the Malkin-Hannity types are far more influential than an old codger venting about blacks and gays. But the Derb still has it. And so this award is reserved for him alone. He competed with himself fitfully this year, but we finally have a winner for 2005:

    "DEALING WITH COMMIE JOURNALISTS: Jonah - Seems to me the best advice one can offer our troops manning checkpoints in Iraq is the same as that given informally by friends & neighbors to me when I became an armed homeowner: If you have to shoot, shoot to kill. You'll face much less trouble afterwards." - John Derbyshire.

  • What Is a Living Wage?




    Alessandra Petlin for The New York Times

    Name: Manuela Soto. Marital status: Single mom. Occupation: Assistant hotel housekeeper. Home: Santa Fe, N.M. Hourly wage before local "Living Wage" ordinance: $7.50. Hourly wage now: $9.50. What she'll do with raise: Pay bills faster, offset higher gas prices, buy more supplies for sons.

    January 15, 2006
    What Is a Living Wage?
    By JON GERTNER

    If It Happened in Baltimore, Maybe It Can Happen Anywhere

    For a few weeks in the summer of 1995, Jen Kern spent her days at a table in the Library of Congress in Washington, poring over the fine print of state constitutions from around the country. This was, at the time, a somewhat-eccentric strategy to fight poverty in America. Kern was not a high-powered lawyer or politician; she was 25 and held a low-paying, policy-related job at Acorn, the national community organization. Yet to understand why living-wage campaigns matter - where they began, what they mean and why they inspire such passion and hope - it helps to consider what Kern was doing years ago in the library, reading obscure legislation from states like Missouri and New Mexico.

    A few months earlier, she and her colleagues at Acorn witnessed an energetic grass-roots campaign in Baltimore, led by a coalition of church groups and labor unions. Workers in some of Baltimore's homeless shelters and soup kitchens had noticed something new and troubling about many of the visitors coming in for meals and shelter: they happened to have full-time jobs. In response, local religious leaders successfully persuaded the City Council to raise the base pay for city contract workers to $6.10 an hour from $4.25, the federal minimum at the time. The Baltimore campaign was ostensibly about money. But to those who thought about it more deeply, it was about the force of particular moral propositions: first, that work should be rewarded, and second, that no one who works full time should have to live in poverty.

    So Kern and another colleague were dispatched to find out if what happened in Baltimore could be tried - and expanded - elsewhere. As she plowed through documents, Kern was unsure whether to look for a particular law or the absence of one. Really, what she was trying to do was compile a list of places in the U.S. where citizens or officials could legally mount campaigns to raise the minimum wage above the federal standard. In other words, she needed to know if anything stood in the way, like a state regulation or a court decision. What she discovered was that in many states a law more ambitious than Baltimore's - one that didn't apply to only city contractors but to all local businesses - seemed permissible.

    Whether a wage campaign was winnable turned out to be a more complicated matter. In the late 90's, Kern helped Acorn in a series of attempts to raise the minimum wage in Denver and Houston, as well as the state of Missouri. They all failed. "It wasn't even close," she says. In the past few years, though, as the federal minimum wage has remained fixed at $5.15 and the cost of living (specifically housing) has risen drastically in many regions, similar campaigns have produced so many victories (currently, 134) that Kern speaks collectively of "a widespread living-wage movement."

    Santa Fe has been one of the movement's crowning achievements. This month the city's minimum wage rose to $9.50 an hour, the highest rate in the United States. But other recent victories include San Francisco in 2003 and Nevada in 2004. And if a pending bill in Chicago is any indication, the battles over wage laws will soon evolve into campaigns to force large, private-sector businesses like Wal-Mart to provide not only higher wages but also more money for employee health care.

    It is a common sentiment that economic fairness - or economic justice, as living-wage advocates phrase it - should, or must, come in a sweeping and righteous gesture from the top. From Washington, that is. But most wage campaigns arise from the bottom, from residents and low-level officials and from cities and states - from everywhere except the federal government. "I think what the living-wage movement has done in the past 11 years is incredible," David Neumark, a frequent critic of the phenomenon who is a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California, told me recently. "How many other issues are there where progressives have been this successful? I can't think of one."

    The immediate goal for living-wage strategists is to put initiatives on the ballots in several swing states this year. If their reckoning is correct, the laws should effect a financial gain for low-income workers and boost turnout for candidates who campaign for higher wages. In Florida, a ballot initiative to raise the state's minimum wage by a dollar, to $6.15, won 71 percent of the vote in 2004, a blowout that surprised even people like Kern, who spent several weeks in Miami working on the measure. "We would like it to become a fact of political life," Kern says, "where every year the other side has to contend with a minimum-wage law in some state." Though victories like the one in Florida may have done little to help the Kerry-Edwards ticket - George Bush won 52 percent of the state's vote - Kern and some in the Democratic establishment have come to believe that the left, after years of electoral frustration, has finally found its ultimate moral-values issue. "This is what moves people to the polls now," Kern insists. "This is our gay marriage." Already, during the past few months, a coalition of grass-roots and labor organizations has begun gathering hundreds of thousands of signatures to ensure that proposed laws to increase wages are voted on in November. The first targets, Kern told me, will be Arizona, Colorado, Michigan and Ohio. Next in line, either this year or soon after, are Montana, Oklahoma and Arkansas, the home of Wal-Mart.

    Does America Care About the Gap Between Rich and Poor?

    I first met Kern on a sunny morning in late September in Albuquerque, a city of 470,000 that made her list when she was working in the Library of Congress 10 years ago. She was now, at age 35, campaigning for a ballot initiative that would raise the minimum wage in the city to $7.50 an hour from $5.15. There was no face for the placards, no charismatic presence to rally the troops at midnight or to shake hands at dawn outside 7-Eleven. Instead, there was a number, $7.50, a troop of campaign workers to canvass the neighborhoods and an argument: that many low-wage workers were being paid poverty wages. That a full-time job at the federal minimum rate added up to $10,712 a year. That local businesses could afford the pay raise. And that it was up to the voters to restore balance.

    One of the more intriguing questions about campaigns like the one in Albuquerque, and those planned for swing states next fall, is whether they reflect a profound sense of public alarm about the divergence between rich and poor in this country. Certainly most Americans do not support higher wages out of immediate self-interest. Probably only around 3 percent of those in the work force are actually paid $5.15 or less an hour; most low-wage workers, including Wal-Mart employees, who generally start at between $6.50 and $7.50 an hour, earn more. Increasing the minimum wage to $7.25 an hour (as proposed by Senate Democrats) would directly affect the wages of only about 7 percent of the work force. Nevertheless, pollsters have discovered that a hypothetical state ballot measure typically generates support of around 70 percent. A recent poll by the Pew Research Center actually put the support for raising the national minimum wage to $6.45 at 86 percent. Rick Berman, a lobbyist who started the Employment Policies Institute and who is a longtime foe of living-wage laws, agrees that "the natural tendency is for people to support these things. They believe it's a free lunch." On the other hand, the electorate's reasons for crossing party lines to endorse the measures may be due to the simple fact that at least 60 percent of Americans have at one time or another been paid the minimum wage. Voters may just know precisely what they're voting for and why.

    In the mid-1990's, the last time Congress raised the minimum wage, the Clinton White House was reluctant to start a war over the federal rate, according to Robert Reich, the former labor secretary. For an administration bent on policy innovation, that would have seemed "old" Democrat. "Then we did some polling and discovered that the public is overwhelmingly in favor," Reich told me recently. "At which point the White House gave the green light to Democrats in Congress." Reich, now a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, happens to view the minimum wage as a somewhat inefficient tool for alleviating poverty (compared with earned income tax credits, say). But he acknowledges that it has a powerful moral and political impact, in states red as well as blue, and especially now, in an era when workers see the social contract with their employers vanishing. "They see neighbors and friends being fired for no reason by profitable companies, executives making off like bandits while thousands of their own workers are being laid off," Reich says. "They see health insurance drying up, employer pensions shrinking. Promises to retirees of health benefits are simply thrown overboard. The whole system has aspects that seem grossly immoral to average working people." As Reich points out, whatever the minimum wage's limitations may be as a policy instrument, as an idea, "it demarcates our concept of decency with regard to work."

    The idea, Reich points out, isn't new, even if the recent fervor for it is. Massachusetts enacted a state minimum wage in 1912, several decades before the federal minimum wage of 25 cents an hour was adopted in 1938. And most of the wage ordinances of the past decade specifically trace their origins back to Baltimore in 1995. After that moment, in fact, the phrase "living wage" soon caught on - or, you might say, returned. It was a popular workers' refrain in the late 19th century and was the title of a 1906 book by John Ryan, a Roman Catholic priest. In the late 1990's, a loose national network of advocates sprang up, incorporating organized labor, grass-roots groups like Acorn and the Industrial Areas Foundation and, more recently, the National Council of Churches. Legal advice often came out of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University's law school, where a lawyer named Paul Sonn helped write wage ordinances and ballot measures for various states and cities.

    By dint of its piecemeal, localized progress, the modern living-wage movement has grown without fanfare; one reason is that until recently, most of the past decade's wage laws, like Baltimore's, have been narrow in scope and modest in effect. Strictly speaking, a "living wage" law has typically required that any company receiving city contracts, and thus taxpayers' money, must pay its workers a wage far above the federal minimum, usually between $9 and $11 an hour. These regulations often apply to employees at companies to which municipalities have outsourced tasks like garbage collection, security services and home health care. Low-wage workers in the private sector - in restaurants, hotels, retail stores or the like - have been unaffected. Their pay stays the same.

    In Santa Fe, the City Council passed a similar kind of wage law in 2002, raising the hourly pay for city employees and contractors. Some officials in Santa Fe, however, had decided from the start that its wage rules should ultimately be different - that the small city (population 66,000) could even serve as a test example for the rest of the U.S. Early on, several city councilors told me, they anticipated that Santa Fe - with a high cost of living, a large community of low-paid immigrants and a liberal City Council - would eventually extend its wage floor to all local businesses, private as well as public, so that every worker in the city, no matter the industry, would make more than $5.15. The initial numbers that the councilors considered as they began to strategize seemed stratospheric: a living wage that began at $10 or $12 or even $14.50 an hour. For some laborers, that could double their incomes. Nothing remotely like it existed in any other city in the country.

    The Economists Are Surprised

    In the years before the enactment of the federal minimum wage in the late 1930's, the country's post-Depression economy was so weak that the notion that government should leave private business to its own devices was effectively marginalized. During the past few decades, though, in the wake of a fairly robust economy, debates on raising the minimum wage have consistently resulted in a rhetorical caterwaul. While the arguments have usually been between those on the labor side, who think that the minimum wage should be raised substantially, and those on the employer side, who oppose any increase, a smaller but vocal contingent has claimed, more broadly and more philosophically, that it is in the best interest of both business and labor to let the market set wages, not the politicians. And certainly not the voters.

    This last position was long underpinned by the academic consensus that a rise in the minimum wage hurts employment by interfering with the flow of supply and demand. In simplest terms, most economists accepted that when government forces businesses to pay higher wages, businesses, in turn, hire fewer employees. It is a powerful argument against the minimum wage, since it suggests that private businesses as a group, along with teenagers and low-wage employees, will be penalized by a mandatory raise.

    The tenor of this debate began to change in the mid-1990's following some work done by two Princeton economists, David Card (now at the University of California, Berkeley) and Alan B. Krueger. In 1992, New Jersey increased the state minimum wage to $5.05 an hour (applicable to both the public and the private sectors), which gave the two young professors an opportunity to study the comparative effects of that raise on fast-food restaurants and low-wage employment in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, where the minimum wage remained at the federal level of $4.25 an hour. Card and Krueger agreed that the hypothesis that a rise in wages would destroy jobs was "one of the clearest and most widely appreciated in the field of economics." Both told me they believed, at the start, that their work would reinforce that hypothesis. But in 1995, and again in 2000, the two academics effectively shredded the conventional wisdom. Their data demonstrated that a modest increase in wages did not appear to cause any significant harm to employment; in some cases, a rise in the minimum wage even resulted in a slight increase in employment.

    Card and Krueger's conclusions have not necessarily made philosophical converts of Congress or the current administration. Attempts to raise the federal minimum wage - led by Senators Edward M. Kennedy on the left and Rick Santorum on the right - have made little headway over the past few years. And the White House went so far as to temporarily suspend the obligation of businesses with U.S. government construction contracts to pay so-called prevailing wages (that is, whatever is paid to a majority of workers in an industry in a particular area) during the rebuilding after Hurricane Katrina. David Card, who seems nothing short of disgusted by the ideological nature of the debates over the wage issue, says he feels that opinions on the minimum wage are so politically entrenched that even the most scientific studies can't change anyone's mind. "People think we're biased, partisan," he says. And he's probably right. While Card has never advocated for or against raising the minimum wage, many who oppose wage laws have made exactly those assertions about his research. Nonetheless, in Krueger's view, he and Card changed the debate. "I'm willing to declare a partial victory," Krueger told me. Some recent surveys of top academics show that a significant majority now agrees that a modest raise in the minimum wage does little to harm employment, he points out.

    If nothing else, Card and Krueger's findings have provided persuasive data, and a degree of legitimacy, to those who maintain that raising the minimum wage, whether at the city, state or federal level, need not be toxic. The Economic Policy Institute, which endorses wage regulations, has succeeded recently in getting hundreds of respected economists - excluding Card and Krueger, however, who choose to remain outside the debate - to support raising the federal minimum to $7 an hour. That probably would have been impossible as recently as five years ago. Even Wal-Mart's president and C.E.O., Lee Scott, recently spoke out in favor of raising the minimum wage. It wasn't altruism or economic theory or even public relations that motivated him, but a matter of bottom-line practicality. "Our current average hourly wage for workers is $9.68," Lee Culpepper, a Wal-Mart spokesman, told me. "So I would think raising the wage would have minimal impact on our workers. But we think it would have a beneficial effect on our customers."

    What a Higher Minimum Wage Can Mean to Those Making It

    One evening in Santa Fe, I sat down with some of the people Wal-Mart is worried about. Like Louis Alvarez, a 58-year-old cafeteria worker in the Santa Fe schools who for many years helped prepare daily meals for 700 children. For that he was paid $6.85 an hour and brought home $203 every two weeks. He had no disposable income - indeed, he wasn't sure what I meant by disposable income; he barely had money for rent. Statistically speaking, he was far below the poverty line, which for a family of two is about $12,800 a year. For Alvarez, an increase in the minimum wage meant he would be able to afford to go to flea markets, he said.

    I also met with Ashley Gutierrez, 20, and Adelina Reyes, 19, who have low-paying customer-service and restaurant jobs. By most estimates, 35 percent of those who make less than $7.25 an hour in the U.S. are teenagers. A few months ago, Reyes told me, she was spending 86 hours every two weeks at two minimum-wage jobs to pay for her car and for college. Gutierrez, also in school, was working 20 hours a week at Blockbuster video for the minimum wage. People like Alvarez and Gutierrez and Reyes were the ones who spurred two city councilors in Santa Fe, Frank Montaño and Jimmie Martinez, to introduce the living-wage ordinance. "Our schools here don't do so well," Montaño told me, explaining that he believed higher-wage jobs would let parents, who might otherwise have to work a second job, spend more time with their children. (At the same time working teenagers like Reyes would have more time with their parents.) For Santa Fe residents who were living five or six to a room in two-bedroom adobes, Montaño said he hoped a higher minimum wage might put having their own places to live at least within the realm of possibility.

    Montaño was confident - perhaps too confident, as it would turn out - that businesses would become acclimated to higher payroll costs. He has run a restaurant and a tour-bus company himself, and he knew that the tight labor market in Santa Fe had pushed up wages so that many entry-level workers were already earning more than $8 an hour. "The business owners believe that government, especially at the local level, should not dictate to business, so to them it was a matter of principle," Montaño says. It was to him too. "We knew that other communities were watching what we were doing," he explains. He and his colleagues on the council were already receiving help from Paul Sonn at the Brennan Center in New York. "I knew that their involvement meant that they saw this as something that was important nationally," Montaño says. "As we got our foot in the door in terms of this ordinance being applied to the private sector," he surmised, that would give the living-wage network the ammunition to help other communities across the country do likewise. "I always knew, early on," Montaño says, "that if Santa Fe enacted such an ordinance, that it likely would go to court, and that if it passed the legal test, it would be the kind of ordinance that other communities would copy." The problem, at least from Montaño's perspective, was getting it enacted in the first place.

    The Moral Argument Carries the Day in Santa Fe

    Santa Fe's City Council asked nine residents, representing the interests of labor and management, to join a round table that would settle the specifics of the proposed living-wage law - how high the wage would be, for instance, and how soon it would be phased in. Some members of the round table, like Al Lucero, who owns a popular local restaurant, Maria's New Mexican Kitchen, found the entire premise of a city wage law objectionable. "I think the minimum wage at $5.15 is ridiculous," Lucero told me. "If the state were to raise it overall, to $7 an hour or $7.50 an hour, I think that would be wonderful. I think we need to do it." But $9 or $10 or $11 was too high, in his view - and it would put Santa Fe at a disadvantage to other cities in the state or region that could pay workers less. Also, there were the free-market principles that Frank Montaño had anticipated: "They were trying to push and tell us how to live our lives and how to conduct our business," says Lucero, who employs about 60 people.

    Not surprisingly, Lucero's opponents on the round table saw things in a different light. For example, Carol Oppenheimer, a labor attorney, viewed the proposed law as a practical and immediate solution. "I got involved with the living-wage network because unions are having a very hard time," she told me. She assumed that local businesses could manage with higher payrolls. Yet after only a few meetings of the task force, both sides dug in, according to Oppenheimer.

    It was then that the living-wage proponents hit on a scorched-earth, tactical approach. "What really got the other side was when we said, 'It's just immoral to pay people $5.15, they can't live on that,"' Oppenheimer recalls. "It made the businesspeople furious. And we realized then that we had something there, so we said it over and over again. Forget the economic argument. This was a moral one. It made them crazy. And we knew that was our issue."

    The moral argument soon trumped all others. The possibility that a rise in the minimum wage, even a very substantial one, would create unemployment or compromise the health of the city's small businesses was not necessarily irrelevant. Yet for many in Santa Fe, that came to be seen as an ancillary issue, one that inevitably led to fruitless discussions in which opposing sides cited conflicting studies or anecdotal evidence. Maybe all of that was beside the point, anyway. Does it - or should it - even matter what a wage increase does to a local economy, barring some kind of catastrophic change? Should an employer be allowed to pay a full-time employee $5.15 an hour, this argument went, if that's no longer enough to live on? Is it just under our system of government? Or in the eyes of God?

    The Rev. Jerome Martinez, the city's influential monsignor, began to throw his support behind the living-wage ordinance. When I met with him in his parish, in a tidy, paneled office near the imposing 18th-century church that looks over the city plaza, Martinez traced for me the moral justification for a living wage back to the encyclicals of Popes Leo XIII and Pius XI and John Paul II, in which the pontiffs warned against the excesses of capitalism. "The church's position on social justice is long established," Father Jerome said. "I think unfortunately it's one of our best-kept secrets."

    I asked if it had been a difficult decision to support the wage law. He smiled slightly. "It was a no-brainer," he said. "You know, I am not by nature a political person. I have gotten a lot of grief from some people, business owners, who say, 'Father, why don't you stick to religion?' Well, pardon me - this is religion. The Scripture is full of matters of justice. How can you worship a God that you do not see and then oppress the workers that you do see?"

    I heard refrains of the moral argument all over Santa Fe. One afternoon I walked around the city with Morty Simon, a labor lawyer and a staunch supporter of the living wage whose wife is Carol Oppenheimer. "This used to be the Sears," Simon told me as we walked, pointing to boutiques and high-end chain stores. "And we had a supermarket over here, and there was a hardware store too." Simon came to Santa Fe 34 years ago as a refugee from New York, he said, and for him the unpretentious city he once knew was gone. The wealthy retirees and second-home buyers had come in droves, and so had the movie stars. Gene Hackman and Val Kilmer had settled here; Simon recently found out that someone had plans for a 26,000-square-foot house, apparently a new local record. For him, the moral component of the law, the possibility of regaining some kind of balance, was what mattered. "It was really a question of, What kind of world do you want to live in?" he said.

    Several Santa Fe councilors had, over the course of the previous year, come to Morty Simon's view that the wage ordinance presented an opportunity to stop the drift between haves and have-nots. Carol Robertson Lopez, for example, had initially opposed the living-wage law but changed her mind after 30 hours of debate. "We take risks, oftentimes, to benefit businesses," she told me, "and we take risks to benefit different sectors. I felt like this was an economic risk that we were taking on behalf of the worker." She acknowledged that some residents thought the city had started down a slippery slope toward socialism; jokes about the People's Republic of Santa Fe were rampant. But Robertson Lopez says that by the night of the vote she had few reservations. "I think the living wage is an indicator of when we've given up on the federal government to solve our problems," she says. "So local people have to take it on their own."

    The living-wage ordinance had its final hearing on Feb. 26, 2003, in a rancorous debate that drew 600 people and lasted until 3 a.m. The proposal set a wage floor at $8.50 an hour, which would increase to $9.50 in January 2006 and $10.50 in 2008. It would also regulate only businesses with 25 or more employees.

    It passed the City Council easily, by a vote of 7 to 1. A few weeks later, a group of restaurant and hotel owners filed suit in state court on the grounds that the living-wage ordinance exceeded the city's powers and was a violation of their rights under New Mexico's constitution. A judge suspended the wage law until a trial could resolve the issues.

    Businesses Fight Back

    To business owners in Santa Fe, the most worrisome aspect of the living-wage law is that the city has sailed into uncharted territory. Most of the minimum-wage campaigns in the U.S. have been modest increases of a dollar or a dollar and a half. The numerous state campaigns for 2006 will probably propose raises to between $6.15 and $7 and hour. (When San Francisco raised its minimum wage to $8.50 an hour in 2004 - indexed to inflation, it is now $8.82 - California's state minimum wage was $6.75, so the increase was 26 percent.) And even staunch supporters of a higher minimum wage accept that there is a point at which a wage is set so high as to do more harm than good. "There is no other municipality in the country that believes that $9.50 should be the living wage," says Rob Day, the owner of the Santa Fe Bar and Grill and one of the plaintiffs who sued the city. In fact, the most apt comparison would be Great Britain, which now has a minimum wage equivalent to about $8.80 an hour. "They have minimum wages that are Santa Fe level," says Richard Freeman, a Harvard economist. And at least for the moment, he says, "they have lower unemployment than we do."

    As the lawsuit against the city progressed, though, Europe wasn't even a distant consideration. The focus was on the people of Santa Fe. I read through a transcript of New Mexicans for Free Enterprise v. City of Santa Fe one day this fall in a conference room at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, the white-shoe law firm in Midtown Manhattan that defended, pro bono, Santa Fe's right to enact the living-wage ordinance. In many respects, the trial, which took place over the course of a week in April 2004, was an unusual public exchange on profits, poverty and class in America. Paul Sonn, the lawyer at the Brennan Center at New York University who wrote the Santa Fe ordinance, had enlisted Sidney Rosdeitcher, a partner at Paul, Weiss, to be lead counsel for Santa Fe's defense. Rosdeitcher told me that before the trial began, he wasn't convinced that there were many factual issues in dispute; as he saw it, the living-wage controversy was about the law and, in particular, whether Santa Fe had a legal "home rule" authority, under the provisions of the New Mexico constitution, to set wages, even for private industry. Nevertheless, several low-wage workers took the stand to relate the facts, as they saw them, of what the wage increase would do to improve their quality of life. The Rev.

    Jerome Martinez took the stand as an employer of 65 people in his parish and Catholic school. And a number of restaurant owners, in turn, explained how the new law could ultimately force them out of business.

    The plaintiffs - the New Mexicans for free enterprise - were not unsympathetic: the restaurateurs who took the stand, like Rob Day or Elizabeth Draiscol, who runs the popular Zia Diner in town, opened their books to show that their margins were thin, their costs high, their payrolls large. They cared about their employees (providing health care and benefits), trained unskilled workers who spoke little or no English, gave regular raises and paid starting salaries well above $5.15. They had built up their businesses through an extraordinary amount of hard work. Draiscol testified that her restaurant, for instance, had $2.17 million in annual revenue in the fiscal year of 2003. Though her assets were substantial - a restaurant can be valued at anywhere from 30 to 70 percent of its annual revenues, and Draiscol said that Zia had been appraised at 66 percent of revenues, or about $1.4 million - she earned a salary of $49,000 a year. Draiscol testified that the living wage would raise her payroll, which accounted for 55 to 65 employees (depending on the season), by about $43,192 a year. Rob Day put the expenses of a living-wage increase even higher. In addition to labor costs, he estimated that the price of goods would go up as his local suppliers, forced to pay employees higher wages themselves, passed along their expenses to the Santa Fe Bar and Grill.

    Rosdeitcher showed that the restaurants had made serious errors overestimating their costs. Still, the increase in expenditures was not negligible. Over the past few years, a variety of experts have tried to perfect the science of predicting what will happen to a community in the wake of a minimum-wage change, and one of those experts, Robert Pollin, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, served as the expert witness on behalf of Santa Fe. Pollin projected that the living wage would affect the wages of about 17,000 workers. About 9,000 of those workers would receive raises because of the ordinance, he said; the rest would receive what he called "ripple effect" increases - which meant that those making, say, $8.50 or more before the raise would most likely receive an additional raise from their employers to reflect their job seniority. Pollin calculated that wage increases would cost businesses a total of $33 million. And to pay for those amounts, restaurants and hotels and stores would probably need to raise prices between 1 and 3 percent. The question, therefore, was whether business owners were willing to raise prices or make less in profits. In the trial, Pollin cited an obscure 1994 academic experiment in which several economists had set a different price within the same restaurant for a fried-haddock dinner. In varying the price of the haddock between $8.95 and $10.95, the researchers' goal was to find out whether variations in cost affected demand in a controlled environment. As it turned out, they didn't. Customers ordered the haddock at both $8.95 and $10.95.

    Results From the Santa Fe Experiment

    That the city of Santa Fe has effectively become a very large fried-haddock-dinner experiment is difficult to deny. A state court judge ruled in favor of the city soon after the trial, allowing the living-wage ordinance to take effect in June 2004; recently, the judge's decision was affirmed by a state appellate court, giving the city, and its living-wage advocates, a sweeping victory. Many business owners have found these legal losses discouraging. This fall, not long after I visited the city, the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce sent a note to its members to gauge their opinion on the $8.50 living wage and the hike on Jan. 1 to $9.50. Some members reported that they had no trouble adjusting to the first raise and supported a further increase. (Some of these owners, whose high-end businesses employ skilled workers, paid more than $8.50 to begin with.) Others insisted that they were not averse to a state or federal raise in the minimum wage but that Santa Fe's citywide experiment had put local businesses at a competitive disadvantage: companies could move outside the city limits or could outsource their work to cheaper places in the state. But most respondents opposed the law. The living wage had forced them to raise prices on their products and services, which they feared would cut into business.

    To look at the data that have accumulated since the wage went into effect is to get a more positive impression of the law. Last month, the University of New Mexico's Bureau of Business and Economic Research issued some preliminary findings on what had happened to the city over the past year and a half. The report listed some potential unintended consequences of the wage raise: the exemption in the living-wage law for businesses with fewer than 25 employees, for instance, created "perverse incentives" for owners to keep their payrolls below 25 workers. There was some concern that the high living wage might encourage more high-school students to drop out; in addition, some employers reported that workers had begun commuting in to Santa Fe to earn more for a job there than they could make outside the city.

    Yet the city's employment picture stayed healthy - overall employment increased in each quarter after the living wage went into effect and was especially strong for hotels and restaurants, which have the most low-wage jobs. Most encouraging to supporters: the number of families in need of temporary assistance - a reasonably good indicator of the squeeze on the working poor - has declined significantly. On the other hand, the city's gross receipts, a reflection of consumer spending and tourism, have been disappointing since the wage went into effect. That could suggest that prices are driving people away. Or it could merely mean that high gas and housing prices are hitting hard. The report calculates that the cost of living in Santa Fe rose by 9 percent a year over the past two and a half years.

    Rob Day of the Santa Fe Bar and Grill sees this as the crux of the matter. In his view, the problem with Santa Fe is the cost of housing, and there are better ways than wage regulations - housing subsidies, for example - to make homes more affordable. In the wake of the wage raise, Day told me, he eventually tweaked his prices, but not enough to offset the payroll increases. He let go of his executive chef and was himself working longer hours. "Now in the matter of a year and a half, I think there is a whole group of us who thought, If we were going to start over, this isn't the business we would have gone into," he says.

    Al Lucero, the owner of Maria's New Mexican Kitchen, says that the living-wage battle has risked turning him into a caricature. Opponents backing the living wage "paint us as people who take advantage of workers," he told me. By contrast, Lucero sees himself as an upstanding member of the community who provides jobs (he has 60 employees) and had always paid well above the federal minimum. Other business owners said similar things but would not speak out publicly. They feared alienating customers. As some told it, they had started businesses with a desire to create wealth and jobs in a picturesque small city. Then they had awakened in a mad laboratory for urban liberalism.

    The Issue in Albuquerque

    Long after he did his influential research with David Card on the effect of minimum-wage raises, Alan Krueger says, he came to see that ultimately the minimum wage is less about broad economic outcomes than about values. Which is not to say that workers' values should trump those of owners. Rather, that when wealth is being redistributed from one party to another - and not, in the case of Santa Fe, from overpaid C.E.O.'s and hedge-fund managers but from everyday entrepreneurs who have worked long hours to succeed in their businesses - things can get complicated. Indeed, while it is tempting to see the wage disputes in Santa Fe and elsewhere as a reflection of whether one side is right or wrong, on either economic or moral grounds, they are, more confusingly, small battles in a larger war (and, in America, a very old war) over where to draw the line on free-market capitalism. On one side there is Al Lucero, on the other someone like Morty Simon or the economist Robert Pollin, who says: "The principled position is: 'Why should anyone tell anyone what to do? Why should the government?' I just happen to disagree with that. A minimally decent employment standard, to me, overrides the case for a free market."

    And yet, the fact that voters or elected politicians should decide who wins these battles, rather than economists or policy makers, seems fitting. During Albuquerque's living-wage campaign this past fall, Santa Fe - the smaller, wealthier, northern neighbor - served as a rallying point. But it was also a question mark: Was Santa Fe's experience repeatable? Was it even worth pointing to as an exemplar? In the final days of the Albuquerque effort, Jen Kern of Acorn told me she had little doubt that the wage victory in Santa Fe, like the one in San Francisco, was an indication that a battle for creating high base wages in America's cities, in addition to the states, could be won. But these were also rich cities, liberal cities - "la-la lands," as she put it. "I think with citywide minimums, if this is going to be the next era in the living-wage movement, it's got to look like it's winnable," Kern says. "The danger or the limitations of just having San Francisco and Santa Fe having passed this is that people in other parts of the country are going to say, 'Well, I'm not Santa Fe, I'm not San Francisco."' In Kern's view, a win "in a city like Albuquerque, which I think everyone thinks of as sort of a normal city," was a truer test.

    And it didn't pass that test. When the $7.50 ballot initiative lost by 51 percent to 49 percent on Oct. 4, it made many in the living-wage movement wonder how these battles will play out over the next year or two. One political consultant involved in the movement questioned whether the Albuquerque wage itself, at $7.50 an hour, had been set too high by Acorn to win broad support. Matthew Henderson of Acorn, who ran the day-to-day campaign, said he thought they were outspent by their opponents. Most likely, though, the outcome was determined by the actual grounds on which the battle was fought. The businesses that opposed the $7.50 wage, represented mainly by the Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce, challenged a small provision in the proposed living-wage law that would allow those enforcing a living wage to have wide "access" to a workplace. The campaigns soon began trading allegations through television ads and direct mailings about how far such access might go. And so the living-wage campaign had become a surreal fight over privacy (it would allow "complete strangers to enter your child's school," one mailing against the measure claimed) rather than wages. When I met with Terri Cole, the president and C.E.O. of Albuquerque's Chamber of Commerce, a few days before the vote, she acknowledged that the chamber opposed the living-wage law on philosophical grounds. But she said she saw the access clause as a legitimate grounds for a fight.

    Will It Play Nationally?

    In the aftermath of Albuquerque, Jen Kern took solace in the fact that 10 years after she visited the Library of Congress, and 10 years after she began working on living-wage campaigns, the opposition fought not on the economic merits or risks of a higher wage, but on a side issue like privacy. Still, a loss is a loss. It is possible that the Albuquerque wage campaign may still prevail, in effect: New Mexico's governor, Bill Richardson, has said he would consider a statewide raise this spring, presumably to $7 or $7.50, from $5.15, that would affect all New Mexicans. (It would, in all likelihood, leave Santa Fe's higher wage unaffected.) Yet such an act does little to clarify whether progressives can actually transform strong levels of voter support for higher wages into wins at the polls. Kristina Wilfore, the head of the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center, a progressive advocacy group, says that over the years there has been anywhere from a 2 to 5 percent increase in voter turnout specifically correlated with wage measures. "But people think it's some big panacea, and it's not," says Wilfore, who regards success as dependent on how well a local wage coalition (organized labor, grass-roots groups, church-based organizations) can work together at raising money and mobilizing voters.

    For specific candidates in a state or city where a wage measure is on the ballot, it can be similarly complicated. Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, told me that the local battles over living wages reflect the broader debate in the U.S. over health care, retirement security and an advancing global economy. "Every district is different," Emanuel says of the slate of Congressional races for 2006, "but there is not one where the living wage, competitive wages or health care doesn't play out. The minimum-wage issue, if it's on the ballot, is part of the economic argument."

    David Mermin of Lake Research Partners, who frequently conducts polls on minimum-wage issues, told me that the dollar level of a wage proposal is important, though it can vary from place to place. ("People have different feelings about what's a lot of money," he says.) But he has found that quirks can emerge. An increase to $6.15 sometimes doesn't poll as well as an increase to $6.75, which can generate more intensity and broader support from voters. Mermin also says that wage measures have had success in recent years, Albuquerque notwithstanding, not because Americans feel differently but because campaigners are getting smarter about stressing morals over economics. And when handled adroitly, a wage platform can motivate the kind of voters who are difficult to engage in other ways: younger voters, infrequent voters, low-income urban voters. His research, Mermin adds, shows that most people who vote for the minimum wage know it's not going to affect their lives tomorrow: "It's not like fixing the health-care system, or repairing the retirement system," he says. "It doesn't rise to that level directly. And if you list it in 10 issues, it doesn't pop out in priority. But when it is on the ballot, it crystallizes a lot of things people feel about the economy and about people who are struggling." In his experience, voters seem to process these measures as an opportunity to take things into their own hands and change their world, just as Morty Simon did.

    Still, as an endgame, many in the living-wage movement see the prize not in a series of local victories in 2006 but in Congressional action that results in a substantial increase in the federal minimum wage - and even better - one that is indexed to inflation, so that such battles about raising the wage don't need to be fought every few years. The long-run trajectory, Paul Sonn told me, is for cities and states to create enough pressure to ultimately force a raise on the federal level. Or to put it another way, the hope is that raising wages across the U.S. will ultimately demonstrate to voters and to Washington lawmakers both the feasibility and the necessity of a significantly higher minimum wage. In the meantime, Sonn says, cities like Santa Fe play an important role in policy innovation, "really as sort of laboratories of economic democracy." Richard Freeman of Harvard echoes this point. "If you go back, a lot of the New Deal legislation, good or bad, came about because there was a lot of state legislation," Freeman says. Policies from New York or Wisconsin were adapted into the federal system of laws. "A lot of it came from state variations in the past, and I think we'll see a lot more of this in the next few years. The things that work the best might be adopted nationally."

    Of course, it also seems plausible that any kind of national coherence on economic - or moral - matters may have ended long ago. Just as the voters of states and cities have sorted themselves politically into red and blue, and into pro- and anti-gay marriage, in other words, they are increasingly sorting their wage floors and (perhaps soon) their health-care coverage. This trend may produce not progressive national policies but instead a level of local self-determination as yet unseen. Or as Freeman puts it, "Let Santa Fe do what it wants, but let's not impose that on Gadsden, Ala." That wouldn't make a federal increase in the minimum wage insignificant, but it would make it something of a backdrop for major population centers. As Robert Reich says, "The reality is, even if the wage were raised to $6.15, it would not be enough to lift a family out of poverty." And as Jen Kern notes, even a federal minimum wage that goes up to $7.25, which is the proposal from the Senate Democrats and which probably isn't going anywhere until 2008, doesn't approach what it now costs to live in some cities.

    This was why, in December, Kern and Acorn were considering the prospects for laying the groundwork for living-wage ordinances in other cities. And it's why, also in December, Paul Sonn was helping to write an ordinance for Lawrence Township, N.J., aimed at forcing the city's big-box retailers like Wal-Mart to pay a higher wage (more than $10 an hour) and to contribute a larger share of employee benefits. Last month, Sonn also pointed out to me that Santa Cruz, Calif., was considering plans to introduce a measure that would establish a minimum wage of $9.25 an hour.

    It wasn't quite Santa Fe's level, but close. And that suggested that the small New Mexican city, to the delight of its living-wage advocates and the chagrin of many business owners, was no longer just an experiment. Rather, it had already become something best described, for better or for worse, as a model.

    Jon Gertner is a contributing writer for the magazine.

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January 17, 2006

  • Baby Websites








    John Klicker for The New York Times

    Luke Seeley with his father, Gordon. Luke, 22 months old, has two Web Sites in addition to an e-mail address

    January 15, 2006
    Web Sites for the Brave New Electronic B@by
    By SARAH KERSHAW
    Dispatch from the future:

    FROM: Carter Kohl, 34 inches, 30 pounds, 17 months.

    TO: Friends and family.

    MESSAGE: Feel free to contact me. Even though I cannot read just yet, you can still send me e-mail. My parents will read it to me and will help me respond to all your messages. In advance, thanks for getting in touch. I'll be reading and replying back to you before you know it!

    YOUNG Carter may not know it, but along with a galloping number of tiny citizens, he is already wired. Despite his limited lexicon, featuring the words fish and light (pronounced "ish" and "ite"), Carter possesses his own e-mail address and an inbox filling up with messages from family and fans.

    Luke Seeley, 22 months, has two Web sites of his own, including lukeseeley.com, a domain his father purchased soon after an ultrasound showed that his first child was a boy, four months before the baby was born. Given his more advanced age, Luke, who like Carter also has an e-mail address (luke@lukeseeley.com), possesses a slightly larger vocabulary, which includes computer, mouse and Google, said Gordon Seeley, his father. Luke "knows his animals," Mr. Seeley added, and understands that mouse has two different meanings: something small that moves things on a bright computer screen and something small that devours cheese and lives in terror of cats.

    Carter and Luke are pioneers in the latest technobaby twist to hit the Web, as parents snap up Web sites and e-mail addresses in the names of the next generation, long before their children can read, eat solid food or, in some cases, have even left the womb.

    "It's like owning a piece of real estate online for him," said Mr. Seeley, 34, who lives in Vancouver, Wash., and specializes in Internet sales for an advertising firm. "By the time he's a teenager and he's really into the Internet, who knows what's going to be left in terms of domains?"

    The motivation, parents and other experts say, is akin to securing a good street address in a fast-developing city a decade early, so the children do not have to live on virtual Main Street, stuck when they eventually develop the motor skills to log on, with an obscure domain name like lukeseely.ce, or a pedestrian e-mail address like lukeseeley@hotmail.

    With many free e-mail providers like Hotmail and Yahoo, the user typically has to sign on regularly to keep the accounts active. And, really, who has time when you are teething?

    "There is a little bit of squatting, for lack of a better term, in trying to gather up some of these better domain names," said Kevin Kohl, Carter's father, who lives in Pennsylvania, holds a master's degree in information science and built the family Web site.

    Mr. Kohl said he is considering buying Carter his own domain, instead of just the e-mail address he now has on the family site, which he did not want published to shield his family's privacy. But he has decided to wait at least, he said, until Carter "was old enough to start using the computer and understand what the Internet was."

    It is impossible to say exactly how many preliterate children possess their own e-mail accounts and Web sites, but companies that sell domain names and e-mail accounts say the trend is increasingly common. It is the latest expression of baby obsession in cyberspace, following the explosion over the last few years of Web logs documenting a child's every milestone and similar family Web sites filled with photographs.

    "Any life in transition, in a positive transition, that seems to be when people make the Internet their own," said Marci Hansen, the marketing director for Dotster, which owns three services that sell Internet domains. One, Namezero.com, one of the country's largest domain providers, markets heavily to parents, newlyweds, college students and retirees in the belief that people reaching a major milestone - marriage, graduation, retirement - will want to document it online.

    Ms. Hansen said her company was looking into how e-mail addresses, domain names and help in building web sites for babies could become gifts for expectant parents.

    Dotser's average prices, which reflect those of other domain providers, are $15 annually for a domain and $10 for an e-mail account at the domain, with additional costs for extra e-mail addresses

    Needless to say, this has all been met with some annoyance, especially among the weary childless, who can easily overdose on baby gaga.

    "Why would anyone do that?" asked Donna M. Stewart, an aspiring artist who lives in Seattle and heard about the baby e-mail fad from a friend. "That's like getting e-mail for your dog."

    Ms. Stewart, who has a dog, added that while it seemed understandable to post photographs on a Web site, "nobody's going to actually e-mail the baby." She added, "I just thought that's absurd."

    (She confessed, though, that she sometimes sends e-mail messages to friends from the point of view of her dog, a mixed-breed shepherd, whom she declined to name.)

    But for those looking for e-mail addresses or Web sites in their children's names, it's a dog-eat-dog domain world, and the sites are selling rapidly.

    A quick search on www.namezero.com, on whose home page you can type in a name to see what Web sites are still available, shows that unless you have an unusual name, many of the coveted dot-com, dot-net and dot-org sites are spoken for.

    Beyond these familiar extensions, there are a fast-growing number of new ones, including dot-es, which stands for españa, or Spain, and is being marketed to Hispanics and does not require Spanish citizenship. There are many other country extensions, like dot-uk, for residents of Britain, and dot-ca, for Canadians. (Ms. Hansen noted that her kitchen contractor, a United States citizen, turned out to have a dot-to e-mail address, which stands for the country of Tonga and is what is known as an "open extension.")

    On a list of 46 possible Web sites the only Smith domain still available is Smith.org.cn, which is only open to Chinese citizens (dot-cn stands for China). For Browne there are a few more options, including Browne.la, which stands for Laos but is open to Americans and popular with residents of Los Angeles and Louisiana, and Browne.md, which has been marketed heavily to doctors but is also popular with Maryland residents.

    Nima Kelly, a vice president of one of the country's largest domain providers, GoDaddy.com, bought four domains for her 11-year-old daughter two years ago.

    "People are moving away from free accounts, their name at Hotmail, or John Doe at Aol.com," she said. "What's happening is that if you don't have a personalized e-mail address, it's seen as having a lack of credibility."

    Ms. Kelly, who lives in Phoenix, went a step further than most parents for her daughter, Mary Margaret. She bought marymargaretkelly.com of course ("I was nervous that it would be taken," she said) but also purchased two "devious" domains in her daughter's name.

    It was an attempt, she said, to head off evil high school forces, future jilted ex-boyfriends or other potential enemies, who might buy profane domains devoted to skewering poor Mary Margaret. The domain names are too devious to print.

    With less cynicism many parents say their motive in all this is driven by something other than a quest for URL cool: In the Internet Age, written diaries with locks of baby hair pasted on the pages and meticulously documented first words are fast being replaced by online baby journals and blogs; photo albums by digital pictures posted on Web sites, which can be viewed moments after birth; and congratulation cards and letters to new parents by e-mail messages.

    So if a baby has an e-mail address, and people do write to him, he has a virtual time capsule waiting, messages from future friends and family, bulletins from the past written long before he even knew he was reachable online.

    "Hello, little Carter," an old friend of his mother's e-mailed the baby soon after he was born. "I have been friends with your mommy for a long, long time. She is so terrific! I remember back when we used to play on the playground in fifth grade with Jessica and Maria and Tracey and Jordan ... all us girls had on one T-shirt over the other in bright fluorescent colors because it was cool. We even went to New York City twice!!"

    Copyright 2006The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top

December 29, 2005

December 27, 2005

  • An Iraqi resident collects human bones at a site in Kerbala, 270 km (160 miles) south of Baghdad, December 27, 2005. Iraqi officials said they found the skeletal remains of 31 people in what they described as a mass grave in the Shi'ite holy city of Kerbala. REUTERS/Mushtaq Mohamad

    Iraq Shiites Talk With Kurds; Grave Found By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press Writer
    1 hour, 11 minutes ago



    The Shiite religious bloc leading Iraq's parliamentary elections held talks Tuesday with Kurdish leaders about who should get the top 12 government jobs, as thousands of Sunni Arabs and secular Shiites protested what they say was a tainted vote.

    Meanwhile, workers in the Shiite holy city of Karbala uncovered remains believed to be part of a mass grave dating to a 1991 uprising against Saddam Hussein.

    The talks between the majority Shiites and the Kurds were seen as part of an effort to force the main Sunni Arab organizations to come to the bargaining table. All groups have begun jockeying, and the protests are widely considered to be part of an attempt by Sunni Arabs to maximize their negotiating position.

    The discussions come at a critical time for Iraq, with the United States placing high hopes on forming a broad-based coalition government that will provide the fledgling democracy with the stability and security it needs to allow American troops to begin returning home.

    Sunni Arabs formed the backbone of Saddam's government, and the Bush administration hopes to pull them away from the insurgency that has ravaged the country with daily bloodshed.

    Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, leader of the Shiite religious coalition dominating the current government, traveled to the northern Kurdish city of Irbil for the meeting with Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdish region.

    "Today, we held preliminary consultations," al-Hakim said at a joint news conference with Barzani. "All the details need to be studied and we need to evaluate the previous alliance and study its weaknesses and strengths. Then we will try to include the others."

    A Kurdish coalition that includes Barzani's Kurdish Democratic Party and President Jalal Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan is now the junior partner in a government led by al-Hakim's United Iraqi Alliance.

    Preliminary results from the Dec. 15 vote have given the United Iraqi Alliance a big lead, but one unlikely to allow it to govern without forming a coalition with other groups.

    Final results are expected early next month, but the Shiite religious bloc may win about 130 seats in the 275-member parliament — short of the 184 seats needed to avoid a coalition with other parties.

    The Kurds could get about 55, the main Sunni Arab groups about 50 and the secular bloc headed by former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a Shiite, about 25.

    "Our goal is to have a partnership government that enjoys a wide base of support," al-Hakim said.

    Asked about claims by Sunni Arab groups and secular Shiites that the Dec. 15 poll was tainted by fraud, al-Hakim said "we have agreed on this with our brothers in the Kurdish coalition. It is impossible to annul the elections results or to hold new elections. We don't accept this."

    More than 10,000 people, some carrying photos of Allawi, demonstrated in central Baghdad in favor of a government that would give more power to Sunni Arabs and secular Shiites. Marchers chanted "No Sunnis, no Shiites, yes for national unity!"

    They are demanding that an international body review more than 1,500 complaints, warning they may boycott the new legislature. They also want new elections in some provinces, including Baghdad.

    Two Sunni Arab groups and Allawi's Iraqi National List have threatened a wave of protests and civil disobedience if fraud charges are not properly investigated.

    But the United Nations has rejected an outside review, and al-Hakim said his bloc and the Kurds also were against it.

    The Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq considers 35 of the complaints serious enough to change some local results. It said it began audits Tuesday of ballot boxes taken from about 7,000 polling stations in Baghdad province.

    "This audit is not a random sampling of boxes or a re-count. It is a targeted review of specific ballot boxes taken from about 7,000 polling stations the IECI opened across Baghdad," the commission said, adding it was "in keeping with the IECI's policy of taking all complaints seriously and of conducting exhaustive investigations where warranted."

    Meanwhile, the American military said two U.S. pilots died in a helicopter accident in western Baghdad on Monday night. The accident was under investigation; the military said no hostile fire was involved. At least 2,172 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

    In the Shiite holy city of Karbala, municipal workers doing maintenance work uncovered remains that police believed were part of a mass grave thought to date back to 1991, when Saddam's regime put down a Shiite uprising in the south.

    The remains — discovered Monday — were sent for testing Tuesday in an effort to identify the bodies, said Rahman Mashawy, a Karbala police spokesman. He did not say how many bodies were found, and the police claim could not be independently verified.

    Human rights organizations estimate that more than 300,000 people, mainly Kurds and Shiite Muslims, were killed and buried in mass graves during Saddam's reign, which ended when U.S.-led forces toppled his regime in 2003. Saddam and seven co-defendants are now on trial for the deaths of more than 140 Shiites after a 1982 attempt on Saddam's life in the town of Dujail, north of Baghdad.

    Sen. Arlen Specter (news, bio, voting record), R-Pa., visiting Iraq on Tuesday, said he met with the chief judge overseeing Saddam's trial. Specter said he was disappointed in how the court has allowed the former leader "to dominate" the trial.

    "You have a butcher who has butchered his own people, a torturer who has tortured his own people," Specter said. "The evidence ought to be presented in a systematic way, which would show that there's been quite an accomplishment in taking (Saddam) out as opposed to letting him be a bluster-bun and control the proceedings."

    Specter also said a U.S. general told him that recently announced U.S. troop reductions had been in the works since April and that more are on the way.

    ___

    Associated Press reporters Mariam Fam, Jason Straziuso in Baghdad and Yahya Barzanji in Irbil contributed to this report

December 26, 2005

  • "We are grossly wasting our energy resources and other precious raw materials as though their supply was infinite. We must even face the prospect of changing our basic ways of living. This change will either be made on our own initiative in a planned and rational way, or forced on us with chaos and suffering by the inexorable laws of nature." - Jimmy Carter, 1974





































  • Life of Pi




    Canadian author Yann Martel holds a copy of his novel Life Of Pi.
    Photo: Supplied

    How do you picture the Life of Pi?
    December 17, 2005

    Yann Martel introduces a unique competition to find an illustrator for a new edition of his best-selling modern classic.

    THE WRITING AND TELLING of stories is an inherently social act. You don't whisper a story to a glass of water, you whisper it, eventually, into someone's ear. Stories should be shared.
    When Life of Pi, my story of a 16-year-old boy named Pi stranded at sea with a Bengal tiger, won the 2002 Man Booker Prize, I was stunned.
    Now that The Times in Britain, The Age in Melbourne and my publishers, Canongate and Text, are launching a competition to illustrate a new edition of Life of Pi, I'm excited: it's another way of sharing the story.

    Once you put the story out there, it's up to the reader what happens next. How it is interpreted is no longer your affair. I loved the cover picture by Andy Bridge for the first edition as soon as I saw it D, and I told all my foreign publishers that they should take a look at it.Illustrations can only enhance the reader's experience.

    There is a wonderful tradition of complementing literature with dramatic images and I believe that images will complement the imagination of the reader of Life of Pi. They will give the book an added quality, not only the aesthetic of the story but also something visual.

    For people reading the future edition there will not only be a platform of words for their imagination to jump from, but illustrations, too.
    That's what is so exciting about the competition, to see what the people who enter will bring to it and how they will see the book.

    HOW TO ENTER
    The Age and Text Publishing, publisher of Yann Martel's internationally acclaimed novel Life of Pi, in association with The Times and Canongate Books UK and The Globe and Mail and Knopf Canada, are launching a competition to illustrate a new edition of Yann Martel's Booker Prize-winning novel.

    ROUND 1
    Amateur and professional artists are invited to submit one illustration of a scene of their choice from the book. This can be in any size, format or medium. The deadline for submissions is midnight on January 31, 2006.
    From these entries the panel of judges will create a shortlist of up to 15 artists (up to five from each participating newspaper).
    The shortlisted illustrators will be notified by February 16, 2006. Their names will be announced and their illustrations printed in The Age (and will also be published online at www.theage.com.au), The Times and The Globe and Mail prior to publication of the book.

    ROUND 2
    The shortlisted artists will then be invited to submit three completed pieces of artwork for final consideration, along with some sketches that demonstrate their vision for the book as a whole.

    The final book is expected to feature up to 40 illustrations. Each shortlisted artist (with the exception of the winner) will receive an award of $Cdn500, following receipt of their artworks and sketches and after the final judging takes place.

    THE WINNER
    The final judging panel will include Yann Martel and senior representatives of the publishing houses and the newspapers.
    The winner will be entitled to receive an advance of £5000 against a 2 per cent royalty payable on the British, Canadian and Australian hardcover editions of the book.

    The aim is to publish the illustrated hardback edition of Life of Pi in Canada (Knopf Canada), Britain (Canongate Books), and Australia (Text Publishing) to start, with the possibility of publication to follow in other countries. Life of Pi is published in more than 40 territories worldwide.

    HOW TO ENTER
    Australian entries should be emailed as a JPG file to pi@theage.com.au or sent to Life of Pi Competition, The Age, Locked Bag 14433, Melbourne, Vic 8001. Entries cannot be acknowledged, and will be returned only if requested at the time of submission and if correct return packaging and postage is supplied. The Age is not responsible for any lost entries, nor is Text Publishing. Entries must be clearly labelled with the artist's name, address and telephone number. Entries must be received by midnight (EST) on January 31, 2006.
    Terms and conditions are in today's Public Notices.



     







    Nietzsche



    Comments Welcome


    The signs of corruption.--Consider the following signs of those states of society which are necessary from time to time and which are designated with the word "corruption." As soon as corruption sets in anywhere superstition becomes rank. and the previous common faith of a people becomes pale and powerless against it. For superstition is second-order free spirit: those who surrender to it choose certain forms and formulas that they find congenial and permit themselves some freedom of choice. Whoever is superstitious is always, compared with the religious human being, much more of a person; and a superstitious society is one in which there are many individuals and much delight in individuality...


    Second, a society in which corruptions spreads is accused of exhaustion... But what is generally overlooked is that the ancient national energy and national passion that became gloriously visible in war and warlike games have now been transmuted into countless private passions and have merely become less visible. Indeed, in times of "corruption" the power and force of the national energies that are expended are probably greater than ever and the individual squanders them as lavishly as he could not have formerly when he was simply not yet rich enough. Thus it is precisely in times of "exhaustion" that tragedy runs through houses and streets, that great love and great hatred are born, and that the flame of knowledge flares up into the sky.


    Third, it is usually said... that such times of corruption are gentler and that cruelty declines drastically, compared with the old, stronger age which was more given to faith. All I concede is that cruelty now becomes more refined and that its older forms henceforth offend the new taste; but the art of wounding and torturing others with words and looks reaches its supreme development...The men of corruption are witty and slanderous; they know of types of murder that require neither daggers nor assault; they know that whatever is said well is believed.


    Fourth, when "morals decay" those men emerge whom one calls tyrants: they are the precursors and as it were the precocious harbingers of individuals... In these ages bribery and treason reach their peak, for the love of the newly discovered ego is much more powerful now than the love of the old, used-up "fatherland"... Individuals--being truly in-and-for-themselves-- care, as is well known, more for the moment than do their opposites, the herd men... The times of corruption are those when the apples fall from the tree: I mean the individuals, for they carry the seeds of the future and are the authors of the spiritual colonization and origin of new states and communities. Corruption is merely a nasty word for the autumn of a people.



    from Nietzsche's The Gay Science, s. 23, Walter Kaufmann transl




     







    Tragedy in Jersey City, New Jersey



    Emergency Vehicle Falls Into River Killing Two

    December 26, 2005 2:06 p.m. EST


    Ayinde O. Chase - All Headline News Staff Writer


    Jersey City, NJ (AHN) - Two Jersey City police officers driving in an emergency management services (EMS) vehicle plunged into the Hackensack River Sunday, while crossing an open drawbridge in heavy rain and fog.


    The vehicle was crossing Jersey City's Hackensack River Bridge, also called the Lincoln Highway Bridge, when authorities report the driver made the fatal crossing.


    Investigators believe the driver of the truck apparently didn’t realize the bridge was in the up position.


    Jersey City police spokesman Stan Eason says the officers had been sent to a call to help direct traffic away from the drawbridge, which was not operating properly.


    The vehicle was found 45 feet under water. Jersey City police officials confirmed the two victims were department members, however, have not released their names.


    Unconfirmed reports have the bridge’s warning lights either not working or too dim to see clearly in the stormy weather.

    A Coast Guard spokesman says the bridge's hydraulic lift had been elevated to allow a tugboat to pass below when the EMS vehicle was crossing.


     







    Jersey City, Politicians and The Law



    I was also born in Jersey City, New Jersey. My father served as Mayor of Jersey City from 1963 until 1971. I can testify to the fact that my father had a deep and abiding respect for law and order, which is more than I can say about the Justice Department as it was run by John Mitchell and the Nixon Administration.


    PRESIDENT BUSH: I AM THE LAW!





    By Richard ReevesFri Dec 23, 8:12 PM ET



    JERSEY CITY, N.J. -- This is where I grew up, and this is where I learned about politicians and the law, so nothing surprises me in President Bush's declarations that he has the right and duty to ignore laws about spying on his fellow citizens.


    Frank Hague was the mayor here when I was in grammar school. He was the mayor for 30 years but, good or bad as he was, mostly bad, he will always be remembered for one thing. It happened when he wanted to get working papers for a couple of 14-year-olds, and an official told him that was not legal. You had to be 16. Said Hague: "Listen, here is the law: I am the law!"


    President Nixon said the same thing about secret bombings and burglaries: "It's legal if the president says it's legal."


    Now George W. Bush is saying he is the law because he is the only president we have. He has, in fact, become a Nixonian figure, alone in the White House talking to the same people day after day, and fewer and fewer of them. He does not like to talk to members of Congress because he might let slip what he is actually doing in Iraq or listening in on phone calls. He likes to appoint judges, but he does not want to listen to them because they might make him stop doing things he wants to do.


    What, then, is the purpose of having judges forbidden to judge? That was the question raised by the resignation of federal Judge James Robertson from the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Court, the body charged with issuing warrants for electronic eavesdropping on the domestic calls and messages of Americans. He quit after it was revealed, by The New York Times, that wiretapping and other surveillance was going ahead, by order of the president, without warrants of any kind. Robertson's role, unwittingly, was a cover for breaking the law.


    All administrations, in my experience, lie on some matters of national security. Then they lie about the lying, as President Bush did a year ago when he said: "Any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretaps, it requires -- a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court order before we do so."


    Not true. Like Nixon, who preferred to be in a circle of one, Bush can't stand the idea of governance slowed and scrutinized by checks and balances. This president has now broken the silence and some of the deception by announcing that he authorized warrantless eavesdropping -- and claims that his deception saved the lives of thousands of American lives threatened by new acts of terrorism.


    That may be true. These are times that try men's souls -- and times that are changing at exponential speed. Terrorism is real and frightening, and the president is charged with the responsibility of protecting his people. This is a different kind of war and has to be fought in different ways, particularly when it is waged, on both sides, by exploiting quantum leaps in communication technology.


    But the United States cannot win (and preserve the individual freedoms that made this a great nation) by relying on one man or a few dozen. These latest revelations of technique, danger and deception show that the time has come for national debate and dialogue about many dangers, not on more secrecy and lying. The White House, I assume, is doing what it thinks necessary -- legal or not -- but the Congress is not, either because it is being lied to or is derelict in its duties.


    The times call for a robust debate by elected officials everywhere, particularly in the Senate and House, on the checks and balances necessary to fight this war without giving up the freedoms we are trying to protect. Otherwise, the United States will continue its drift toward becoming a lawless police state with regular elections



     


     







     



    December 24, 2005


    Spy Agency Mined Vast Data Trove, Officials Report




    WASHINGTON, Dec. 23 - The National Security Agency has traced and analyzed large volumes of telephone and Internet communications flowing into and out of the United States as part of the eavesdropping program that President Bush approved after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to hunt for evidence of terrorist activity, according to current and former government officials.


    The volume of information harvested from telecommunication data and voice networks, without court-approved warrants, is much larger than the White House has acknowledged, the officials said. It was collected by tapping directly into some of the American telecommunication system's main arteries, they said.


    As part of the program approved by President Bush for domestic surveillance without warrants, the N.S.A. has gained the cooperation of American telecommunications companies to obtain backdoor access to streams of domestic and international communications, the officials said.


    The government's collection and analysis of phone and Internet traffic have raised questions among some law enforcement and judicial officials familiar with the program. One issue of concern to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which has reviewed some separate warrant applications growing out of the N.S.A.'s surveillance program, is whether the court has legal authority over calls outside the United States that happen to pass through American-based telephonic "switches," according to officials familiar with the matter.


    "There was a lot of discussion about the switches" in conversations with the court, a Justice Department official said, referring to the gateways through which much of the communications traffic flows. "You're talking about access to such a vast amount of communications, and the question was, How do you minimize something that's on a switch that's carrying such large volumes of traffic? The court was very, very concerned about that."


    Since the disclosure last week of the N.S.A.'s domestic surveillance program, President Bush and his senior aides have stressed that his executive order allowing eavesdropping without warrants was limited to the monitoring of international phone and e-mail communications involving people with known links to Al Qaeda.


    What has not been publicly acknowledged is that N.S.A. technicians, besides actually eavesdropping on specific conversations, have combed through large volumes of phone and Internet traffic in search of patterns that might point to terrorism suspects. Some officials describe the program as a large data-mining operation.


    The current and former government officials who discussed the program were granted anonymity because it remains classified.


    Bush administration officials declined to comment on Friday on the technical aspects of the operation and the N.S.A.'s use of broad searches to look for clues on terrorists. Because the program is highly classified, many details of how the N.S.A. is conducting it remain unknown, and members of Congress who have pressed for a full Congressional inquiry say they are eager to learn more about the program's operational details, as well as its legality.


    Officials in the government and the telecommunications industry who have knowledge of parts of the program say the N.S.A. has sought to analyze communications patterns to glean clues from details like who is calling whom, how long a phone call lasts and what time of day it is made, and the origins and destinations of phone calls and e-mail messages. Calls to and from Afghanistan, for instance, are known to have been of particular interest to the N.S.A. since the Sept. 11 attacks, the officials said.


    This so-called "pattern analysis" on calls within the United States would, in many circumstances, require a court warrant if the government wanted to trace who calls whom.


    The use of similar data-mining operations by the Bush administration in other contexts has raised strong objections, most notably in connection with the Total Information Awareness system, developed by the Pentagon for tracking terror suspects, and the Department of Homeland Security's Capps program for screening airline passengers. Both programs were ultimately scrapped after public outcries over possible threats to privacy and civil liberties.


    But the Bush administration regards the N.S.A.'s ability to trace and analyze large volumes of data as critical to its expanded mission to detect terrorist plots before they can be carried out, officials familiar with the program say. Administration officials maintain that the system set up by Congress in 1978 under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act does not give them the speed and flexibility to respond fully to terrorist threats at home.


    A former technology manager at a major telecommunications company said that since the Sept. 11 attacks, the leading companies in the industry have been storing information on calling patterns and giving it to the federal government to aid in tracking possible terrorists.


    "All that data is mined with the cooperation of the government and shared with them, and since 9/11, there's been much more active involvement in that area," said the former manager, a telecommunications expert who did not want his name or that of his former company used because of concern about revealing trade secrets.


    Such information often proves just as valuable to the government as eavesdropping on the calls themselves, the former manager said.


    "If they get content, that's useful to them too, but the real plum is going to be the transaction data and the traffic analysis," he said. "Massive amounts of traffic analysis information - who is calling whom, who is in Osama Bin Laden's circle of family and friends - is used to identify lines of communication that are then given closer scrutiny."


    Several officials said that after President Bush's order authorizing the N.S.A. program, senior government officials arranged with officials of some of the nation's largest telecommunications companies to gain access to switches that act as gateways at the borders between the United States' communications networks and international networks. The identities of the corporations involved could not be determined.


    The switches are some of the main arteries for moving voice and some Internet traffic into and out of the United States, and, with the globalization of the telecommunications industry in recent years, many international-to-international calls are also routed through such American switches.


    One outside expert on communications privacy who previously worked at the N.S.A. said that to exploit its technological capabilities, the American government had in the last few years been quietly encouraging the telecommunications industry to increase the amount of international traffic that is routed through American-based switches.


    The growth of that transit traffic had become a major issue for the intelligence community, officials say, because it had not been fully addressed by 1970's-era laws and regulations governing the N.S.A. Now that foreign calls were being routed through switches on American soil, some judges and law enforcement officials regarded eavesdropping on those calls as a possible violation of those decades-old restrictions, including the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires court-approved warrants for domestic surveillance.


    Historically, the American intelligence community has had close relationships with many communications and computer firms and related technical industries. But the N.S.A.'s backdoor access to major telecommunications switches on American soil with the cooperation of major corporations represents a significant expansion of the agency's operational capability, according to current and former government officials.


    Phil Karn, a computer engineer and technology expert at a major West Coast telecommunications company, said access to such switches would be significant. "If the government is gaining access to the switches like this, what you're really talking about is the capability of an enormous vacuum operation to sweep up data," he said.






     







    Irving Berlin




    Everett Collection
    Irving Berlin at the piano with Fred Astaire, left, Ann Miller and Peter Lawford in 1948


    Cary Conover for The New York Times

    The town house on Beekman Place where Berlin lived for 42 years. Now the Luxembourg House, it has been the site of an annual sing-along of Berlin's "White Christmas" since 1982


     


    December 23, 2005
    His Manhattan
    Dreaming of Irving Berlin in the Season That He Owned
    By GLENN COLLINS

    Irving Berlin's New York was a world of Broadway babies, teeming matinees, entrances at the Imperial, exits at the St. James, joyful noise at the New Amsterdam and civic veneration for his great mentor, the showman George M. Cohan.

    And it still is.

    It's not just that the 1954 movie "White Christmas,"highlighting Berlin's definitive musical statement on the splendor of the holidays, is playing - as it must, on Christmas Day - on television. And it is no surprise that a steadfast group of carolers will be singing that classic tomorrow night, as they have done for more than 20 years, outside 17 Beekman Place, the five-story town house that Berlin inhabited for 42 years.

    After all, he was the nation's songwriter, and vestiges of his long sojourn in Manhattan are everywhere, a fact that is celebrated in a sumptuous new book, "Irving Berlin's Show Business" (Harry N. Abrams). And thanks to exhibitions and a festival, New York will become Berlin Country in the coming months, far in advance of the centennial of the first of his 1,500 songs in 2007.

    His enduring prominence may seem improbable, since Berlin, the man who wrote "God Bless America," "Easter Parade," "Alexander's Ragtime Band," "Cheek to Cheek," "There's No Business Like Show Business," "Blue Skies" and "Puttin' On the Ritz" was born 117 years ago. His six-decade career, from 1907 to 1966, spanned sheet music, the stage, recordings, radio, film and television, and for millions his canon continues to evoke powerful emotions.

    "He hasn't had a hit song since 1966 with 'An Old-Fashioned Wedding,' but these days you can't go to many places in Manhattan without bumping into him," said David Leopold, author of the new book. "We all know his songs, and they are all part of who we are."

    And so it is the moment for Irving Berlin in the season that he owned.

    "This time of year is especially his," said Mary Ellin Barrett, Berlin's 79-year-old daughter, who lives in Manhattan and has helped guard his legacy. "His songs evoke so much feeling at this time when we like to be close to our families." Berlin also comes to mind in a time of war; he has the distinction of having created anthems not only for Christmas and Easter, but also for America itself.

    "God Bless America" returned to the Top 10 after Sept. 11, 2001, when Celine Dionrecorded it as the title track of a benefit album; it reached No. 1 on the Billboard chart in October 2001. The following year, the United States Postal Service released a commemorative Berlin stamp.

    Even Berlin's earning capacity seems remarkably undiminished from the time of his unimaginable fame in that era when the piano was the nation's home-entertainment center. The annual Forbes.com list of the rich and deceased claims that Berlin's works earned $7 million last year (tying two others among the departed, Johnny Cash and George Harrison). Berlin's privately held estate has never revealed its revenues.

    Beyond this, through more than six decades, the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of New York have received more than $10 million in royalties from "God Bless America" and other songs, thanks to Berlin's donation; last year the contribution was $500,000.

    That Berlin was a man of Manhattan cannot be doubted. "My father spent a lot of time in Hollywood, yes, but he always thought of himself as a New Yorker," Mrs. Barrett said. "The city was in his bones and his blood, and he always returned."

    "Everyone, regardless of age, knows five Berlin songs," said Mr. Leopold, a 40-year-old independent curator and archivist who has organized exhibitions on the works of Oscar Hammerstein, Moss Hart and George Kaufman, and who also wrote "Hirschfeld's Hollywood" (Harry N. Abrams, 2001), a compendium of Al Hirschfeld's film-related art.

    Mr. Leopold's Berlin book is a 240-page visual biography summoning up the songwriter's legacy in an assemblage of photographs, drawings, posters, set and costume designs, sheet music and album covers.

    The book is a companion to three exhibitions curated by Mr. Leopold. "Show Business: Irving Berlin's Broadway," organized for the New York Public Library, opened in San Francisco last July and arrives at the New York Public Library for the Performing Artson Feb. 14. This spring, the Film Society of Lincoln Center plans to hold a Berlin film festival.

    Another exhibition, "Show Business: Irving Berlin's Hollywood," will open at the James Michener Art Museum in Doylestown, Pa., in May. "Show Business: Irving Berlin's America" is to open in Washington in 2007 under the auspices of the Library of Congress.

    There is no time like the holiday present, however, to take a tour of the New York of Berlin, who emigrated from Russia at age 5, left home at 13 to sing in the city's streets and saloons, and began his celebrated journey down Tin Pan Alley in 1907. In fact, there is so much extant Berliniana that a comprehensive inventory would make for a punishingly long walk. Perhaps the most amiable place to embark on a tour of some prominent haunts is Gallagher's Steak House, the Runyonesque hangout at 228 West 52d Street that began as a speakeasy in 1927.

    Though favorites such as Lindy's, Dinty Moore's and the Cub Room of the Stork Club are all gone, Berlin - a steak fancier - "would have dinner at Gallagher's, and there was always someone else in the restaurant that he knew," Mrs. Barrett said.

    Thus legally fortified (hidden silver flasks at Gallagher's are no longer the essential accessories they were during deepest Prohibition), pilgrims might head east to Broadway, turning to salute the Broadway Theater, current home of "The Color Purple" - 1681 Broadway, at 53rd Street. There, in 1911, Will Archie and Helen Hayes sang Berlin's first stage duet, "There's a Girl in Havana."

    Stop at 799 Seventh Avenue, at 52d Street, the site of the Irving Berlin Music Company from 1933 to 1944, if only to note that it is now the Sheraton New York Hotel. Back then, Berlin's office was focused on musicals, including "Face the Music" and "As Thousands Cheer," and it handled the stunning popularity of "God Bless America." It remained his New York base when he turned his talents to Hollywood in the 1930's.

    Walk down to 1650 Broadway, at 51st Street. It was the home of Berlin's music business from November 1944 to 1963, right next to the Winter Garden Theater (now the Cadillac Winter Garden). The current home of "Mamma Mia!," the theater at 1634 Broadway between 50th and 51st Streets once featured Berlin's "Broadway Beauties of 1920." Summon up, for a moment, the frantic hurly-burly of 1920's Broadway, when 300 shows a year hit the boards, and envision the excitement and sense of occasion that made dressing up for the theater essential. Even in a time when Broadway production has ramped down to a saner pace, and T-shirts and blue jeans are more prevalent than furs, it is still a glorious throwback to walk among the bustling theaters just before curtain time.

    Wander, then, down to 1619 Broadway (the Brill Building), between 49th and 50th Streets, which once housed a favorite Berlin diversion: the Trans-Lux Newsreel Theater, a staple of the era that was the cable-news info crawl of its day. Although starting in the 1950's the Brill Building would be remembered as the center of doo-wop and pop music crafting, the real Tin Pan Alley in Berlin's early years centered on 28th Street between Fifth Avenue and Broadway.

    Fittingly, the place where the offices of Irving Berlin Inc. were situated from 1921 to 1933 (1607 Broadway, between 48th and 49th Streets) has been replaced by the Crowne Plaza Hotel, formerly the Holiday Inn Crowne Plaza. "That hotel chain," Mr. Leopold said, "was named for the movie 'Holiday Inn,' " the 1942 perennial starring Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire that, of course, showcased Berlin's "White Christmas." Not the least of Berlin's achievements was that this son of a cantor, born Israel Baline in a Russian village, created an imperishable idealization of a hallowed Christian tradition.

    Further south, there is the Palace Theater, on Seventh Avenue between 46th and 47th Streets. Berlin performed there as a vaudevillian during the week of Oct. 13, 1919, and first sang his own "Nobody Knows (and Nobody Seems to Care)."

    At the traffic island at West 46th Street in Times Square, you can give your regards to the bronze statue of George M. Cohan. The great showman championed Berlin early, and made him a member of the Friars Club in 1911. Berlin, who had been a pallbearer at the funeral of the man he revered, was the primary force behind the statue, Mr. Leopold said.

    The Music Box Theater, at 239 West 45th Street, was the only Broadway house built to accommodate the works of a songwriter, Mr. Leopold said. It was the home of Berlin's "Music Box Revue" from 1921 to 1925 and "As Thousands Cheer" in 1933. An exhibition in the lobby (closed for the moment) is a shrine to Berlin.

    In 1940, Berlin's "Louisiana Purchase" played at the Imperial Theater, at 249 West 45th Street. It was there, too, that Ethel Merman starred in "Annie Get Your Gun" in 1946; she also headlined there in "Call Me Madam" in 1950. Though Merman's huge stage presence derived from leather lungs and a powerhouse capacity to deliver Broadway belt, she was grateful to Berlin for roles in these shows, she said, because his lyrics "made a lady out of me" and "showed that I had a softer side."

    Stroll down the south side of West 44th Street, on the way to Sardi's (where Berlin used to wait for reviews), and look for the bronze plaque commemorating the American Theater Wing's Stage Door Canteen, a World War II servicemen's oasis of entertainment and refreshment. Berlin attended the canteen's opening in 1942, and that year his song "I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen" was designated the organization's official anthem.

    At 214 West 42nd Street is the New Amsterdam Theater, currently inhabited by "The Lion King," where Berlin's first Broadway show, "Watch Your Step," was presented on Dec. 8, 1914. Here, Berlin also contributed to the Ziegfeld Follies of 1916 - and 1918, 1919, 1920 and 1927.

    For extra course credit, true Berlin lovers must wander east to the Algonquin Hotel at 59 West 44th Street, that literary landmark where Berlin wrote the lyrics for "Alice in Wonderland" on hotel stationery for his 1924 "Music Box Revue."

    Two blocks to the north, a mostly forgotten little gem of Berliniana adorns the thoroughfare now dubbed Little Brazil Street. At 29 West 46th Street - a six-story building with weather-beaten marble columns over a Twin Donut shop and a Blimpie Base - Berlin lived from 1921 to 1926 in the rooftop apartment with its still-visible buildingwide picture window. For a time, he moved his business office there.

    Further north, and a bit to the east, is Paley Park on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Madison Avenues, the site of the Cub Room of the Stork Club, a favorite of Berlin's.

    Finally, Berlin's spectral presence is especially intense at Luxembourg House, 17 Beekman Place (at 50th Street). This town house was home to Berlin and his family from 1947 until he died in his sleep on Sept. 22, 1989, at 101. A plaque notes that Berlin "lived in this house for his last 42 years."

    "I especially remember Christmas and Thanksgiving in that house," Mrs. Barrett said, recalling that her father "had a movie projector, so he'd have friends for dinner and he'd show a movie. I thought it was so grand."

    As they have there every Christmas Eve since 1982, at 6:30 tomorrow night a hardy band will carol "White Christmas" and other Berlin favorites. The tradition began spontaneously when John Wallowitch, the Manhattan songwriter, pianist and cabaret performer, gathered four other Berlin worshipers in front of the house to sing "White Christmas."

    The house, incidentally, was where Berlin composed "Call Me Madam." That 1950 musical is a retelling of the commotion attending the appointment of the flamboyant hostess Perle Mesta as ambassador to Luxembourg.

    The house was bought by the government of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg after Berlin's death. "It was a complete coincidence, of course, but one we embrace," said Georges Faber, the consul general of Luxembourg. Mesta "is still remembered fondly in Luxembourg," he said, continuing, "We like to think that she brought the notion of glamour to our country."

    The carolers have returned to the house every year, and the group has grown. The second year, after the caroling, the singers, to their astonishment, were welcomed into the kitchen, where they were greeted by the 95-year-old Berlin. "He was standing there in his bathrobe and slippers, and it was so touching," Mr. Wallowitch said. "He kissed all the girls and hugged all the guys and said, 'This is the nicest Christmas present I ever got.' "

    Copyright 2005The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
     







    Frosty




    http://sillygirl.yafro.com/photos/2005/12/0


    Updated: 2:15 p.m. ET Dec. 20, 2005
    ANCHORAGE, Alaska - With the help of his kids and neighbors, Billy Ray Powers built more than just a snowman — they’ve dubbed his 16-plus-foot-tall creation “Snowzilla.”

    After using up all the snow in the family’s yard, they turned to neighbors’ yards and carried buckets on sleds. They hand-packed the snowman like an ice-cream cone.

    “It’s solid ice,” he said. “I put the arms in with my power drill.”

    It took a month to complete the project. It was too big to use buttons for its eyes, so Snowzilla gazes over the neighborhood from beer bottles.

    Powers says the project took on a life of its own as it got bigger and bigger. Now Snowzilla is attracting plenty of sightseers.

    “People stop by, and they’re just flabbergasted,” said neighbor Darrell Estes. “They walk up and knock on it to make sure it’s real snow, not Styrofoam.”



     


    Friday, December 23, 2005







    Marines in Iraq




    Staff Sgt. William Lee, the utilities chief with Marine Tactical Air Command Squadron 28 and a Dawson, Ill., native, stands next to the plastic bottle Christmas tree the Marines of MTACS-28 built at Al Asad, Iraq, Dec. 16, 2005.
    Photo by: Cpl. Cullen J. Tiernan

    AL ASAD, Iraq (Dec. 10, 2005) -- “Twas the night before Christmas, all were asleep, curled up in their racks. I looked all about, a strange sight I did see, no tinsel, no presents, instead a plastic bottle Christmas tree.”
    These words, from Andrea Schutz’s version of “Twas the night before Christmas,” bring the traditional holiday poem to the deserts of Al Asad, Iraq. Schutz, the key volunteer advisor for Marine Tactical Air Command Squadron 28, and the families of deployed Marines have been able to participate in the Christmas celebration here by making and sending Christmas ornaments for a water bottle Christmas tree Marines from MTACS-28 built.

    The Christmas tree consists of 4,130 water bottles. It stands more than 15 feet high. The entire squadron was involved in the collection of the water bottles. The Marines saved bottles and set up collection boxes throughout Al Asad.

    Family and friends made approximately 150 ornaments for the tree. Schutz said having her husband away, particularly during the holiday season, leaves a void and heaviness in her heart. But, she said the tree helps her connect with her husband thousands of miles away.

    “Marines were pulling 12-hour shifts, and then coming to help us,” said Staff Sgt. William Lee, the utilities chief with MTACS-28 and a Dawson, Ill., native. “I even had the physical conditioning platoon go on a run and pick up water bottles. After we collected the bottles, we had to cut, clean and peal the labels off them. It may not seem like much, but imagine cutting 2,500 bottles in one day.”

    The Marines learned the Commandant of the Marine Corps was coming to Al Asad, and they wanted to ensure the tree was finished and lit in time for him to see it. They said they had a problem getting the last strand to light. But, after troubleshooting by Lee, the problem was fixed and the lights hung just minutes before the commandant arrived.

    http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/ac95bc775efc34c685256ab50049d458/bad0dcea23e3c4d0852570d90073ba2c?OpenDocument&Highlight=2,christmas

    Snagged from:
    http://Marcus2427.yafro.com/photo/1033305







    Transit Strike Settlement




    Roger Toussaint
    http://www.straphangers.org/

    By CARL CAMPANILE and MARSHA KRANES
    Fri Dec 23, 6:00 AM ET

    Transit workers put the brakes on their strike only after state mediators covertly huddled with union and MTA officials at the New York Helmsley Hotel in a clandestine tete-a-tete steps away from the Grand Hyatt, where earlier talks stalled.


    Over a 29-hour period, the MTA's chief negotiator and a team of union bigs slipped unnoticed in and out of the hotel, and a series of small rooms that were rented by the three members of the state mediation panel.


    There they scarfed down pastrami sandwiches, talked strategy and met separately with mediators to hammer out an agreement that would end the crippling strike.


    Negotiators were so determined to keep the secret talks on the down low that when MTA Labor Relations Director Gary Dellaverson was confronted in the Helmsley by a Post reporter, he said, "I'm having an affair."


    The cloak-and-blabber occurred in three "ordinary hotel rooms" — furnished with two beds, a desk and several chairs — on the 33rd and 35th floors, an insider revealed.


    The rooms all had a view of the strike-driven chaos below on East 41st Street.


    Only when a truce seemed to be at hand — at 1 a.m. yesterday — did the two sides move back into the spotlight, returning to the media-packed Grand Hyatt to resume the first official talks since the start of the illegal strike.


    The Post first suspected crucial informal negotiations were under way at the Helmsley when a reporter recognized an MTA security official staked out in the hotel lobby Wednesday night.


    Those suspicions were confirmed at 11 p.m., when a weary Dellaverson was seen walking down the corridor on the 35th floor.


    After joking with the Post reporter, Dellaverson disappeared into Room 3501, right next to an ice machine, to meet with state mediators.


    Shortly after, union chief Roger Toussaint was spied ducking into the hotel with a trio of top advisers — TWU Secretary-Treasurer Ed Watt and lawyers Basil Paterson and Terry Meginnis.


    The three spoke with hotel security in the lobby and then took an elevator to the 35th floor.


    Soon after, Watt returned to the lobby to pick up food — pastrami sandwiches ordered from nearby Sarge's Deli by the TWU negotiators.


    On his return elevator ride to the 35th floor with the sandwiches, Watt acknowledged that union officials had been meeting with state mediators, and not talking directly with the MTA.


    The union negotiators had to order out. Room service had closed early because of the transit strike.


    The hotel manager made it a point to tell Toussaint why he wasn't getting room service — because workers these days needed more time to get home.


    "I was starving," Paterson later told The Post. "We hadn't eaten since breakfast, and you've got to keep up your strength during negotiations."


    At one point, Toussaint tried to move his negotiating team down to Harry's Bar, a restaurant off the hotel lobby, a Helmsley staffer reported.

    The union chief asked that a section of the restaurant be cordoned off so he could have complete privacy with his advisers, the staffer said.

    Toussaint was given the thumbs-down and told it was a public area, the staffer said.

    Dellaverson left the hotel shortly before midnight — along with his security detail.

    Toussaint left soon after.

    At 1:30 a.m., he was spied returning to the Grand Hyatt, a block and a half away.

    Not long after that, it was disclosed that for the first time since the strike, the MTA and union had resumed face-to-face negotiations under the supervision of the state Public Employment Relations Board.

    The state mediators checked out of the Helmsley at midday yesterday — after their chief, Richard Curreri, announced that a truce had been reached.

    Their use of the Helmsley for high-powered negotiations "was kept very quiet," said a hotel staffer, who noted, "Even we were kept in the dark."

    The hotel — where rooms are considerably cheaper than at the Grand Hyatt — also was used by the MTA to house its security staffers, a source noted.

    The last offer made by the MTA to the TWU called for salary increases of 3, 4 and 31/2 percent over three years — with an additional 1/2 percent available that could be added to one of the three years.

    It also made Martin Luther King Day a paid holiday.

    The MTA also agreed to keep the retirement age at 55 for union members but wanted new hires to contribute 6 percent of their wages toward their pensions. Employees now contribute 2 percent.

    In announcing the truce, the state mediators suggested an alternative — that union members contribute to their health-care coverage instead of the pension.

    There's currently no deductible in their health-care package.

    carl.campanile@nypost.com



     







    Iraq



    IRAQ: THE WAR IS COMING HOME





    By Richard ReevesFri Dec 16, 8:13 PM ET



    LOS ANGELES -- There are many costs the United States must pay for blundering into Iraq, and they cannot all be calculated in billions of dollars. Two of them are America's loss of confidence in itself and a drift back to isolationism more profound than before the World Trade Center attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.


    "Preoccupied with war abroad and growing problems at home, U.S. opinion leaders and the general public are taking a decidedly cautious view of America's place in the world," begins the summary of national surveys taken through last month by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press in collaboration with the Council on Foreign Affairs in New York.


    "Opinion leaders have become less supportive of the United States playing 'a first among equals' role among the world's leading nations. ... As the Iraq war has shaken the global outlook of American influentials, it has led to a revival of isolationist sentiment among the general public."


    A striking 42 percent of poll respondents among the general public agreed with this statement: "The United States should mind its own business internationally and let other countries get along as best they can on their own."


    That is about the highest number in recent decades for the "isolation" index used in national polling -- higher than it was after the war in Vietnam, higher than it was after the end of the Cold War. Among 520 opinion leaders, whose attitudes are traditionally more internationalist than those of the public, the percentage who say they believe America must be the "single world leader" or be "the most assertive of the leading nations" has dropped by 10 to 20 percentage points when compared with polls taken in 2001 -- just before Sept. 11.


    (The study counts as "influentials" government officials, foreign affairs experts, military, religious, scientific and news media leaders. I was among those questioned for 30 minutes as part of the "influential" section.)


    Among the numbers I found significant was this one: 66 percent of the public respondents answered yes to the question, "Is the U.S. less respected than in the past?" Three-quarters of them cited the war in Iraq as a major factor in their answers. Among the influentials, 87 percent said the war in Iraq was essentially the reason the world is losing respect for the United States. The sharpest break in the answers of the public and the leaders was on the question of whether U.S. support of Israel was a major factor in global discontent with American policy. Thirty-nine percent of the public said yes, but the number in the influential group was 64 percent.


    A majority of both the public and influentials, however, do agree that bringing democracy to Iraq is a worthy goal. The problem is that more than two-thirds of both groups believe we will fail in that attempt. On the question of torture, "ordinary" folks and elites separate. The public split evenly on whether the use of torture may sometimes be necessary in questioning terrorist suspects. The influentials overwhelmingly answered no to such questions. The public also supports strict use of visas to keep more foreign students out of the United States. Influentials say current restrictions go too far and are hurting the country.


    There were many more interesting results concerning public opinion in the surveys: Support for the United Nations is dropping; only 44 percent see free-trade agreements, particularly the North American Free Trade Agreement, as being good for the United States, and 84 percent, statistically just about everyone, agreed with the statement that protection of American jobs should be a major and long-term objective of American policy. Pluralities of both the public and influentials results listed "luck" as the major reason there has not been a major terrorist incident in the country since Sept. 11.


    All interesting, but the bottom line, as I read it, is that the most important reason for getting American troops out of Iraq as soon as possible is not what is happening on the ground there but what is happening here at home. Good or bad, successful or a disaster, the war is beginning to tear apart our country.





     







     


    Top 25 tunes of 2005


    Herald Staff Writer

    The writing is on the wall. Actually, it's being broadcast across the side of a giant blimp hovering over the entire Western hemisphere. The message reads: "Albums are dead!"


    That's right, technology is pushing the music industry back 50 years. Digitally downloaded singles are the 45s of today - long plays be damned. Frustrated music lovers, sick of dropping $18 for an album featuring one hit and 60 minutes of filler, have struck back.


    Blank CDs, which consumers use to assemble their own 80-minute listening experience, outsell the discs issued with music and liner notes. Portable MP3 players are the new Walkman. Free downloads can be found on official band Web sites, thousands of semi-legal MP3 blogs and cyberspace hangouts like MySpace.com. Songs can be purchased for approximately a buck each from iTunes, Walmart.com and other online music superstores.


    So, in keeping with the times, I submit a list of songs rather than albums. What does Top 25 Tunes of 2005 mean? Simply that these are my favorites of the year. In other words, I don't care how many times Fergie was heard singing about her "humps" and "lovely lady lumps" - that sickly ditty is not on my list. And Kanye West is overrated . . . There, I said it.


    1. "My Doorbell," the White Stripes


    Jack White is upset that she won't come around. But he expresses his dismay with the dignity of a king. White's not on his knees. And he's not singing while gazing at his shoes. He's got his chin up, chest out, stiff upper lift. The striking combo of piano and drums is the ideal combo to drive the message deep into her heart.


    "Take back what you said little girl and while your at it take yourself back, too," White growls.


    Yeah, there are cracks that reveal he's been saddened, but our hero refuses to beg. He might have blood in his eyes, but no tears.


    2. "Push the Button," Sugababes


    As sexy, catchy and smart as Destiny's Child, the United Kingdom's top girl group shines like Clark Griswold's roof on this bouncy shout out to some schmuck who doesn't realize it's time to bust a move. "If you're ready for me boy / You better push the button and let me know / Before I get the wrong idea and go / Your gonna miss the freak that I control."


    3. "Another Sunny Day," Belle & Sebastian


    It plays like a curious potion that goes straight to your head. The vivid, disjointed details, the riddle-like references, the crystal backing vocals . . . It's a sonic escape that invites the listener to project his own feelings, create his own plot, dictate the overall tone of the piece. What exactly is going on here? I don't know but it sounds important, perhaps even life affirming; possibly life threatening. It's a pop song one can return to over and over. Because lines such as "I heard the Eskimos remove obstructions with tones, dear," never lose their intrigue.


    4. "I Found Out," Nathaniel Mayer


    Gritty garage rock with rawhide vocals from 1960s, Detroit-based, soul singer who was rediscovered by the good folks at Fat Possum records. Mayer sounds old, mean and wise on this impassioned cover of John Lennon's acerbic dismissal of Christianity, Eastern gurus, his parents and hard drugs.


    5. "I May Hate Myself in the Morning," Lee Ann Womack


    The sweetest ode to drunk dialing ever recorded, this country tearjerker lovingly recalls Sammi Smith's version of "Help Me Make it Through the Night."


    6. "Be Mine," Robyn


    Stuttering beats dart in and out of the forefront, razor-sharp strings rise and fall, a woman under the influence of unrequited love struggles to free herself. The spoken-word bridge adds a campy-but-cool cinematic touch.


    7. "Are You Sincere," Bobby Bare


    From "The Moon was Blue," the comeback album of the year, this plays like the ideal soundtrack for a lovers' slow dancing in an empty, dimly lighted saloon after closing time. The angelic chorus of "Bobby, Bobby, Bobby" that floats through the speaker is priceless.


    8. "Save Me a Saturday Night," Neil Diamond


    A compassionate, schmaltz-free, love song from the man behind "Solitary Man," "Girl You'll Be a Woman Soon" and garbage like "You Don't Bring Me Flowers." Thank production genius Rick Rubin for forcing Diamond to finally deliver the goods again.


    9. "Touch It," Busta Rhymes


    Sparse yet slamming bass lines courtesy of Swiss Beatz frame hilarious (and highly graphic) flow by Busta. Oh, yeah, and a memorable spoken-word chorus is intoned by what sounds to be the prostitute from the flick "Full Metal Jacket" . . . You know, the line famously sampled by 2 Live Crew on their smash "Me So Horny."


    10. "Not on Top," Herman Dune


    A delicious dose of melancholy from a group of witty French men who sing in English - in fact, the lead singer does this Kermit the Frog thing that actually works, at least to these ears. The protagonist of the song is a 27-year-old who "feels like he'll never get his (expletive) together . . . There's 67 better ways to make some sense, yeah whatever." A sharp, clear, savory guitar lick rings after each verse.


    11. "Hollaback Girl," Gwen Stefani


    Stefani's bratty vocals backed by the sharpest hooks heard in some time - this one actually deserved all the airplay it enjoyed. I actually caught myself singing along to this one in the car one day - apologies to the lady driving next to me.


    12. "Tell Ol' Bill," Bob Dylan


    The hit documentary "No Direction Home," its Top 20 soundtrack, and the best-selling memoir "Chronicles Vol. 1," have made this another big year for his royal Bobness. Somehow this fresh recording from the "North Country" movie soundtrack snuck by the masses. "I try to find one smiling face to drive the shadows from my head," croaks Dylan over an graceful, mountain music melody.


    13. "Casimir Pulaski Day," Sufjan Stevens


    A young man buries his girlfriend after she succumbs to cancer and then recalls, vividly, the experiences that defined their relationship. Smart touches include the low-key banjo and poignant trumpet on this graceful dirge that might induce a manly tear.


    14. "A Nervous Tic Motion of the Head," Andrew Bird


    The song starts slowly on acoustic guitar, the singer is watching a History Channel round table discussion about "Why are we alive?" This ignites a stirring violin, a Spaghetti Western whistle and we're swept away through the cosmos of our mind for the next four and a half minutes.


    15. "You Owe Me One," ABBA


    It's right up there with "Dancing Queen," and who doesn't love "Dancing Queen?" Originally recorded in 1982 but mysteriously shelved, this forward-thinking production with pop perfect lyrics finally has been officially outed as a bonus track on the reissue of "The Visitors" album. Cherish the line: "I need a rest from our daily little dramas."


    16. "Hung Up," Madonna


    The back beat is a hypnotic shakedown that is causing discotheques worldwide to drip with sweat and sex. Madonna's stone-cold delivery of the love jones lyrics is good for the libido. But what really sells this single is the swirling electronica effect that recalls the hook to Del Shannon's golden oldie "Runaway."


    17. "Girl," Beck


    Break dance beats, left-field sonic colorings and lyrics that would make Allen Ginsberg smile. Beck is the man.


    18. "Twenty," Robert Cray


    The venerable ax man has become quite the soul singer, especially on this epic swan song dedicated to a soldier killed in Iraq - the ballad burrows deep without sounding like a stump speech, maybe someone should play it for Howard Dean.


    19. "You Only Live Once," The Strokes


    Shimmering guitar, danceable bass and a striking opening line - "Some people think they're always right" - delivered with spot on shades of disdain and ambivalence.


    20. "Downpressor Man," Sinead O'Connor


    An Irish firebrand (is that redundant?) covering reggae legend Peter Tosh? You bet. O'Connor's highly spiritualized rage does this freedom song justice.


    21. "The Hours," Gene Serene


    Euro-chic Serene sheds her armor of charms and laments the time she invested in a relationship just to be "the other girl" - dig the icy, '80s synth beat.


    22. "Oh No, Not You Again," Rolling Stones


    Sir Mick delivers a juicy F-bomb on the first verse across kiss-and-run guitar licks by Keith Richards and Ron Wood that make this desirably nasty in an "Under My Thumb" kind of way. The Stones still rock, people.


    23. "Some of Us Fly," Merle Haggard (with Toby Keith)


    Hag's craggy vocals and Keith's clean baritone are like fine whiskey to fresh water on this autumnal yet unrepentant ballad penned by the country music legend.


    24. "O Sailor," Fiona Apple


    "Why'd you do it?" she pleads with the grief of a woman who is hurt - hurt, but determined to persevere. All the while, Apple pounds out a melody of beauty and fortitude on piano.


    25. "A Love Song," Sarah Silverman


    People either love or loathe this sexy, plucky and completely politically incorrect comedian. Silverman performs the tune "A Love Song" during her new stand-up documentary "Jesus is Magic," which played locally at Burns Court Cinema in Sarasota last week.


    Wade Tatangelo, features writer/music critic, can be reached at 745-7051 or wtatangelo@


    HeraldToday.com. His blog, "In Tune with Wade," can be found at http://blogs.bradenton.com.



     


    Thursday, December 22, 2005







    Transit Strike Ends




    James Estrin/The New York TimesA transit union member swept the A train subway station at 34th Street after returning to work on Thursday afternoon

    December 22, 2005
    State Mediators' Plan Clears Way to Resolve 60-Hour Ordeal
    By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
    and SEWELL CHAN

    On the third day of a citywide transit strike that has left millions without subway and bus service, union members began returning to work this afternoon, ending a 60-hour walkout that caused much hardship but also put on display the creativity and resilience of New York commuters.

    Union leaders ordered an end to the strike, the first in 25 years, early this afternoon after state mediators brokered a deal with transit officials.

    Limited subway and bus service could resume later tonight, though normal service might not be restored until early Friday morning, officials said.

    "We have an enormous system," Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said at a City Hall press conference. "It can't be turned on or off with a flip of a switch." "This was really a very big test for our city and I think it's fair to say we passed the test with flying colors," the mayor said. "We did what we had to do to keep the city running and running safely." The order to return to work came after executive board of the Transit Workers Union, Local 100, voted 38 to 5 with two abstentions to accept a preliminary framework of a settlement as a basis to end the walkout.

    The Metropolitan Transportation Authority had already agreed to the framework, which was devised by state mediators after all-night negotiations with the union and the authority.

    "We thank riders for their patience and forbearance," Roger Toussaint, the president of the union, said outside union headquarters this afternoon. "We will be providing various details regarding the outcome of this strike in the next several days."

    A few minutes earlier, one of the executive board members, George Perlstein, who said he had voted against the settlement plan, angrily told reporters that the union had not achieved its goals.

    "We got nothing," he said. "Absolutely nothing."

    On its Web site, the union claimed victory and told members to "Hold your head high when you report to work."

    "In the face of an unprecedented media assault, the average New Yorker supported the TWU and blamed the MTA for the strike," the union said in a statement.

    Even as workers began returning to work, Gov. George E. Pataki said penalties against union members and leaders for the illegal walkout would stand. "There is a lesson to be learned from this: no one is above the law. You break the law and the consequences are real," he said at a press conference at Rockefeller Center.

    "They cannot be waived. They will not be waived."

    But a short time later, noting the need for both sides to complete their negotiations, Justice Theodore T. Jones of the State Supreme Court adjourned until Jan. 20 a hearing on possible fines and jail terms for union leaders under the Taylor Law prohibiting strikes by public employees. The hearing was originally scheduled for this morning and later delayed till 4 p.m.

    The strike forced New Yorkers, who are heavily dependent upon public transportation, to walk, bike, hitchhike and endure traffic jams as early as 3:30 a.m. to get into Manhattan for work. Weary commuters welcomed the end of the strike.

    "I'm relieved," Jennifer Stephens, 29, a publicist who lives in West New York, N.J., and works in downtown Brooklyn, said at Grand Central Terminal this afternoon. "I can't believe they went on strike to begin with."

    Ms. Stephens said the strike had forced her to take three days off work, and said, "I didn't know what was going to happen. I didn't have any more days I could take off." She added that she had not been able to shop for Christmas. "It was frustrating. It put my life on hold. I wasn't able to get anything done."

    Workers received word of the strike's end in the middle of the afternoon.

    At the Casey Stengel bus depot on Roosevelt Avenue, across from Shea Stadium in Queens, about 100 picketing workers looked surprised after a union official at the site got a call on a cellphone, then picked up a megaphone and announced that the strike was over. "If you're on for a 4 o'clock shift, you have to go to work," the official said.

    There was some confusion among workers, who didn't have their work uniforms with them and had questions about the end of the walkout.

    "I feel like we lost if we go back to work without a contract," said Fazlu Miah, 43, of Queens, a bus driver who works out of the depot.

    In a statement, Lawrence G. Reuter, president of New York city Transit, said that restarting the system was "complicated," and would take between 10 and 18 hours for subways - and "somewhat" less than that for buses.

    "As employees report to duty, an assessment is made to determine what level of service can be provided with the personnel available," the statement said. "By the time the first trains are ready to roll, all 468 subway stations will be opened, but service levels will be ramped up incrementally."

    He said the system would have to undergo thorough safety inspections as well.

    Word of a possible end to the strike began filtering out earlier in the day and was made officially announced by state mediators.

    "In the best interests of the public, which both parties serve, we have suggested, and they have agreed, to resume negotiations while the T.W.U. takes steps toward returning its membership to work," Richard A. Curreri, the lead state mediator, said at a news conference this morning.

    However, he noted that a final contract agreement would still take some work. "While these discussions have been fruitful, an agreement remains out of the parties' reach at this time," he said. "It is clear to us, however, that both parties have a genuine desire to resolve their differences."

    The return-to-work agreement, said several people close to the negotiations who insisted on anonymity because of the sensitive stage of the talks, would give every side some of what it asked for.

    It would allow Mr. Pataki to save face because the final negotiations would not take place until the strikers return to work, the people said, and it would apparently allow the Mr. Toussaint, the union's president, to save face because, they believe, the authority's pension demands - which are at the crux of the deadlock - have been significantly scaled back.

    Mr. Curreri and two other mediators were appointed by the state's Public Employment Relations Board on Tuesday afternoon, after the union declared a strike at 3 a.m. that day and the authority said the talks had reached an impasse.

    Mr. Curreri, the board's director of conciliation, invited two veteran mediators - Martin F. Scheinman, a longtime arbitrator who has negotiated many labor agreements, and Alan R. Viani, the former chief negotiator at D.C. 37, the city's largest municipal workers union - to join him.

    All three met with both sides for hours at a time on Wednesday and into the night. The authority's chairman, Peter S. Kalikow, and Mr. Toussaint both participated in the talks on Wednesday and early this morning.

    The news was an abrupt change from Wednesday's developments, when a war of rhetoric surrounding the strike entered a louder and more contentious phase, with Mr. Toussaint demanding that thorny pension issues be removed from the table before the strikers returned to work. But Governor Pataki joined Mayor Bloomberg in saying that the transit workers must end the strike before negotiations could resume, contradicting the M.T.A.'s earlier position that it would talk anytime.

    In addition to disagreements over pensions, the union and the M.T.A. have also had a difficult time on health care benefits. The transportation authority had originally demanded that future transit workers contribute 2 percent of their pay toward health premiums. It reduced that demand to 1 percent several days before the strike deadline, then dropped it altogether, just hours before the strike deadline. Current workers do not pay premiums for the union's basic health plan.

    Mr. Toussaint's union has repeatedly said he would not agree to a contract that treated future workers worse than current workers - on pension or health insurance.

    Several people close to the negotiations said they expected the two sides to discuss proposals to have the union agree to have all workers, current and future, pay health premiums

    Repeatedly saying that he wants to beat back the wave of concessions demanded by managements across the country, Mr. Toussaint has also insisted that he would not agree to a contract that required all workers to pay health premiums.

    Mr. Toussaint had attacked the mayor and the governor Wednesday for what he called the use of "insulting and offensive language," apparently referring to the mayor's characterization of the strike by the city's 33,700 subway and bus workers as "thuggish" and "selfish."

    In a speech that belied the union's tenuous position - it is already being fined $1 million a day - Mr. Toussaint seemed to cast the conflict in a social-justice context. In describing the struggle of his largely minority union, he invoked the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks, saying: "There is a higher calling than the law. That is justice and equality."

    The transit strike, the first in a quarter century, began at 3 a.m. Tuesday after negotiations between the union and the transit authority broke down over the authority's last-minute demand that all new transit workers contribute 6 percent of their wages toward their pensions - up from the 2 percent that current workers pay.

    The authority has said it needs to rein in its soaring pension costs. Mr. Toussaint has argued that, under state law, it is illegal for the authority to insist on including a pension demand as part of a settlement.

    Reporting for this article was contributed by Steven Greenhouse, Vikas Bajaj, Matthew Sweeney, Corey Kilgannon, Michael Cooper, Janon Fisher, Thomas J. Lueck, Jesse McKinley, Colin Moynihan, Fernanda Santos and Shadi Rahimi.

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