Thursday, May 17, 2012

Stress Relief

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012




Being in control of your life and having realistic expectations about day-to-day challenges are the keys to stress management, which is perhaps the most important ingredient to living a happy, healthy and rewarding life.

- Marilu Henner, (born April 6, 1952, American actress, producer and author)


I also think stress is related to control.  When you're in charge of your life, you tend not to care about losing  control of things that don't really matter like traffic jams.

- Marilu Henner


Are you overworked and dog tired?  Are you feeling stressed from the demands of your job or from family responsibilities and financial burdens?  Need to get out of the rat race - at least temporarily?  Here's a suggestion from Number 16,  It won't solve all your problems but it will provide you with some relief from stress.  It is absolutely free and it has no harmful side effects or undesirable consequences.  Just click the following link.  Then get ready to sit back and relax for two minutes.  Take your hands off your computer keyboard and mouse.  Calm yourself!

http://www.donothingfor2minutes.com/


The Do Nothing For 2 minutes website was created by British entrepreneur Alex Tew and developer Ben Dowling.  Tew, who also created the Million Dollar Homepage, stated his reasons for creating the Do Nothing For 2 Minutes page:

I had been thinking how we spend every waking minute of the day with access to an unlimited supply of information.  I also read somewhere that there is evidence that our brains are being re-wired by the Internet because we get a little dopamine kick every time we check our e-mail or Twitter or Facebook and there's a new update.  So we're all developing a bit of ADD, which is probably not great in terms of being productive.


- Joanne

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Toronto Confidential: May 15, 2012

        
                                                   @ http://www.aviewoncities.com

TORONTO CONFIDENTIAL
Issue No. 1
               
Welcome to Toronto Confidential, a new feature on Number 16 where there will be insights and comments on life in Toronto.   If you are looking  for news and trivia about T.O,, this is for you.  

TTC DISORGANIZED DURING SUBWAY SHUTDOWN
I am a strong supporter of public transit and I use the TTC frequently.  Every month I purchase a Metropass.  That is why I become dismayed when I witness the TTC's shortcomings.  I bring them to the public's attention so that the TTC will rectify its problems and provide better service.

Last Tuesday, May 9th, there was a subway shutdown between the Islington and Jane stations due to a passenger injury. Subway patrons were told that there would be shuttle buses arriving to take us to our destination.  I heard this announcement at the Islington station and it occurred just after 5 p.m., at the peak of rush hour.  What ensued was pandemonium.

There were no signs instructing passengers where to get the shuttle buses.  There were no TTC employees directing people.  I finally asked a TTC employee where we should go to get a shuttle bus and he told us to go outside the station.  By this time, the crowd of confused subway riders had become larger.  The station was filling up rapidly.

We all went outside to the street to find a shuttle bus.  After waiting there for a short time, someone called out that the shuttle buses were arriving inside the station at a bus bay.  The crowd quickly headed back to the station.  The bus bay was so crowded that I could barely move. I felt really claustrophobic and I couldn't wait to get out of the station.

This is the second time I have experienced such disorganization at the Islington station.  I realize that accidents and delays happen, but why doesn't the TTC get employees to the scene immediately when people need direction, especially during rush hour?

* I really wish the TTC would stop referring to its patrons or passengers as "customers."  "Customers" is a misnomer because The Toronto Transit Commission is a public system.  The people of Toronto and Ontario pay taxes and taxes to operate it.  We are not customers.  How can we be customers when we ourselves own the system and support it?  This is not nitpicking,  Language matters!  Speaking of language, have you noticed that the automated voice on the TTC public address system, exhorts riders to "stand clear of doors?"  What ever happened to the definite article as in "the doors?"  

PICASSO EXHIBIT IN TORONTO
Attention art lovers!  The Art Gallery of Ontario is presenting a major exhibition of Picasso works until August 26, 2012.  It is called  Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musee National Picasso, Paris.  If you live in Toronto or if you plan to visit this summer, this is a great opportunity feast your eyes on the works of a great artist.

The exhibit consists of more than 150 highlights from the vast collection of the Musee National Picasso which is undergoing major renovations.  Toronto is the final stop and the only Canadian venue on a tour that has included Madrid, Abu  Dhabi, Tokyo, Helsinki, Moscow and St. Petersburg, Seattle, Richmond, San Francisco and Sydney.


NUMBER 16'S 
3 SIMPLE, AFFORDABLE JOYS OF TORONTO
Walk in High Park: What a great place to have a picnic or a pleasant walk.  Enjoy all four seasons there. Gaze at the geese and swans on Grenadier Pond.

Enjoy a baseball game at Christie Pits:  Pack a lunch and sit on the hill as you watch the Toronto Maple Leafs of the Intercounty Baseball League.  There is no admission charge.

Take the ferry to the Toronto Islands.  Ride your bike or just explore the islands.  Take a walk on the boardwalk or lie on the beach.



Christopher Plummer
FEATURED TORONTO-BORN PERSONALITY
Acclaimed actor Christopher Plummer was born in Toronto on December 13, 1929.  He was raised in the Montreal area (Senneville, Quebec) and is a great-grandson of Canadian Prime Minister Sir John Abbott through his mother, Isabella Mary Plummer (nee Abbott).  Known for his portrayal of Captain von Trapp in The Sound of Music, Plummer is also recognized for his magnificent theatre performances, particularly in Shakespearean roles.  He has also played John Barrymore in a one-man stage show on the life and times of the famed actor.

For his role in the film Beginnings, Plummer won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.  At the age of 82, he became the oldest actor ever to receive an Oscar.

DID YOU KNOW?
Toronto's City Hall was once located in the current St. Lawrence Market building.  From 1845 until 1899, the seat of City Council Chamber was located on the second floor of the Market.  It is now the City's Market Gallery.  There are old historical photographs of Toronto there and you can view the old Mayor's chair.  If you are interested in the city's history, it is well worth seeing.

- Joanne

Sunday, May 6, 2012

The Great Willie Mays


SUNDAY, MAY 6, 2012


Maybe I was born to play baseball.  Maybe I truly was.   
Willie Mays
The Say Hey Kid turns 81 years old today.  Born William Howard Mays, Jr. on May 6, 1931 in Westfield, Alabama, near Birmingham, Willie Mays was the son of a steelworker.  His father, Willie Sr.(known as "Cat" Mays because of his quickness), played centre field in the local semi-pro Birmingham industrial league.  His mother, Annie Satterwhite, had been a high school track star. With such an athletic background, young Willie took to baseball with ease.  By the time he was 13, he was playing on a semi-professional team called the Gray Sox.

Willie's professional career began in 1947 when he played briefly for the Chattanooga Choo-Choos in Tennessee while school was out for the summer.  He returned to Alabama and joined the Birmingham Black Barons, the local Negro League franchise.

In 1947, while Willie Mays was playing centre field for the Black Barons, Jackie Robinson succeeded in breaking baseball's colour barrier.  After Robinson's success, major league scouts attended Negro League games in search of gifted African-American players.  One such scout for the New York Giants noticed Willie at a Black Barons game.  He provided an enthusiastic report on Mays to the Giants organization.  As a result, the New York Giants signed Willie as an amateur free agent in 1950.  He was offered a $4,000 bonus and $250 a month salary to play for their minor league team, the Trenton Giants of Trenton, New Jersey.

Willie played his very first major league game on May 25, 1951.  The 20-year-old was  batting a sizzling .477 for the Giants' AAA affiliate, the Minneapolis Millers, when he was called up to the Big Show.  Giants manager Leo Durocher asked him if he could hit .250 for the team and the up-and-coming centre fielder told Durocher that he was capable of doing so.  Was he ever right!

Willie Mays more than exceeded expectations during his first season in the majors.  His batting average was  .274.  He slugged 20 home runs and knocked in 68 RBIs.  In addition, Willie was chosen the National League's Rookie of the Year in 1951 and the Giants appeared in the 1951 World Series.

Here is how Durocher described his talented young player:

He could do the five things you have to do to be a superstar: hit, hit with power, run, throw and field.  And he had that other ingredient that turns a superstar into a super superstar.  He lit up the room when he came in.  He was a joy to be around.

In 1952, with the United States involved in the Korean War, Willie Mays was drafted by the U.S. Army He missed most of the 1952 season and the entire 1953 season due to military service. When he returned to the Giants in 1954, Mays was on fire!  He led the league with a robust .345 batting average, hammered 41 home runs and was chosen as the National League Most Valuable Player.  The biggest impression he made, however, was in the 1954 World Series in which the New York Giants faced the Cleveland Indians.

In Game One of that '54 Series at the Polo Grounds in New York, Willie Mays made one of the the most memorable plays in major league baseball history. His  incredible feat of athleticism, immortalized as "The Catch," was an off-the-shoulder running catch of a Vince Wertz fly ball.  With his back turned away from the infield, Mays nabbed Wertz's long drive near the outfield wall..  It was the eighth inning and the game was tied 2-2 with Cleveland runners on first and second base..  Willie's catch preserved the 2-2  tie and the contest went into extra innings.  The Giants scored three runs in the tenth inning to win the game 5-2.  New York then defeated Cleveland in the next three games, sweeping the Series four games straight.

To watch a video of Willie's famous catch (September 29, 1954), click on the link below.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUK9lG-7HTc

During the 1955, 1956 and 1957 seasons in New York, Willie Mays continued to perform well.  In 1956, he slammed 36 homers and stole 40 bases.  In 1957, he was awarded the first of his 12 consecutive Gold Gloves.  After the '57 season, the New York Giants moved west to San Francisco.and Mays began a new chapter of his career in California.  He spent over 14 years in the City by The Bay and became a fixture there.

Willie finished his first season in San Francisco with a career-high .357 batting average and he was named team captain before the start of the 1960 season.  With Mays leading the charge, the Giants captured the National League pennant in 1962.  They were defeated 4 games to 3 in the World Series, however, by the New York Yankees

The 1965 season was a memorable one for Willie Mays.  He won his second MVP award and hit a career-high 52 home runs.  On September 13, 1965, Willie hit his 500th major league home run.  Four years later, he reached another milestone in his career when he smashed his 600th homer off San Diego Padres pitcher Mike Corkins in September of 1969.

During his time with the San Francisco Giants, Willie became close friends with teammate Bobby Bonds.  He became the godfather of Bobby's son, Barry Bond, who was disgraced in a well-publicized steroids scandal.   Bobby died on August 23, 2003 at the age of 57 of complications from lung cancer and a brain tumor.

In May of 1972, 41-year-old Willie Mays was traded to the New York Mets for pitcher Charlie Williams and $50,000.  Mays played a season and a half  (133 games) for the Mets and finished his career in the Big Apple.  He retired after the 1973 campaign and the Mets hounoured him with a Willie Mays Night on September 25th, 1973- but it was not over yet!  The New York Mets, under manager Yogi Berra,  made it to the World Series that year.  Their American League opponents were the Oakland Athletics.

The 1973 October Classic was Willie's fourth as a major league player.  The others were 1951 and 1954 (with the New York Giants) and 1962 (with the San Francisco Giants).  The 42-year-old slugger recorded the final hit of his career in Game 2 of the '73 World Series but the Oakand A's went on to prevail over the Met in seven games.  Willie Mays made his final major league appearance in that Series.

As any baseball fan knows, baseball is a game of statistics and Willie Mays had some very impressive ones.  Willie ended his career with 660 home runs and a lifetime batting average of .302.  In 22 major league seasons, he collected 1,903 RBIs and 3,283 hits.  He hit more than 50 home runs in both the 1955 and 1965 seasons.

Mays was criticized for continuing to play when he was over the age of 40 and clearly past his prime.  In defending his decision to keep on playing, he said, "You know, a lot of people said when I was 40, I should quit, but I don't think so.  You should play as long as you can and as long as you enjoy the game.  In '73, I wasn't enjoying the game, so I quit in May.  I retired, and they wouldn't let me retire.  So I finished up in the World Series.  But I say to players: Play as long as you can, because you only have one chance."

Willie Mays is one of the greatest baseball players of all time.  He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979, his first year of eligibility, with 95% of the votes cast.   During his career, he amassed 12 Gold Gloves, participated in four World Series and played in 24 All-Star games.  Boston Red Sox legend Ted Williams once said, "They invented the All-Star Game for Willie Mays."

Happy Birthday, Willie Mays!  You were born to play baseball.  You truly were.


END NOTES

* Willie Mays has been married twice.  He wed Margherite Chapman on February 14, 1956 and they adopted a son, Michael, born in 1959.  The couple divorced in the early 1960s and Willie married Mae Louise Allen on November 27, 1971.

* No one knows exactly how Willie acquired his nickname, the "Say Hey Kid."  "Say Hey" was apparently a phrase he used to attract the attention of someone whose name he did not know.  According to one story, sports journalist Jimmy Cannon came up with the nickname because when Mays first arrived in the big leagues, he was not familiar with everyone's name.  Willie was quoted as saying, "You see a guy, you say, 'Hey man.  Say hey, man.  Ted was the 'Splinter.'  Joe was 'Joltin' Joe.'  Stan was 'The Man.'  I guess I hit a few home runs, and they said there goes the "Say Hey Kid.'"  According to another story, Barney Kremenko of the New York Journal heard Willie call out, "'Say Who, 'Say What,' 'Say Where,' 'Say Hey.'" and dubbed him "The Say Hey Kid" in 1951.

* Willie Mays bats right and throws right.  Baseball Reference.com lists his height at 5 '10'".

*  It's interesting to note that Willie Mays failed to hit a home run in any of the four World Series in which he played.  He won only one World Series ring (the 1954 Series against Cleveland).

*  Willie was in the on-deck circle when Bobby Thomson hit "the shot heard 'round the world" on October 3, 1951.  With Thomson's home run, the Giants defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers to win the National League pennant.  The Giants went on to the World Series but were defeated 4 games to 2 by the New York Yankees.  In Game One of the '51, Willie Mays was part of the first all-black outfield in major league baseball history.  That outfield was comprised of Willie, Hall of Famer Monte Irvin and Hank Thomspson.

* The San Francisco Giants retired Mays' number 24.  The address of their stadium, AT&T Park, is 24 Willie Mays Plaza.  A huge statue of the centre fielder stands in front of the main entrance of the ballpark.

* On February 10, 2010, Willie Mays appeared on "The Daily Show" with Jon Stewart.


- Joanne

Friday, May 4, 2012

Joanne's Journal: May 4, 2012



FRIDAY, MAY 4, 2012














JOANNE'S JOURNAL
Edition No. 7

Quote of the Day

One would need to be already wise, in order to love wisdom.

- Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805), German dramatist and poet
From On the Aesthetic of Man [1795]

The subject for today's musings is wisdom.  Wisdom is the cornerstone of philosophical thought and the word "philosophy" is derived from the Greek word "philosophos" meaning lover of wisdom. According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the first known use of term "philosopher" occurred in the 14th century.

Since owls are associated with wisdom, it is only fitting that the link between owls and wisdom goes back at least to ancient Greece, the home of great ancient philosophers such as Socrates and Plato.  The theme of the helpful, prophetic and wise owl occurs in Aesop's Fables and in Greek mythology and folklore.  For example, Athena, the Goddess of Wisdom for whom the city of Athens was named, was so impressed with the owl's stately appearance that she honoured the nocturnal creature by making it her favourite bird.

For your enjoyment and edification, Number 16 presents some further quotes on wisdom.  Let's begin with this gem (pun intended) from the Hebrew Bible (Job 28:18).

No mention shall be made of coral, or of pearls: for the price of wisdom is above rubies. 

We shall return to ancient Greece with this astute observation from the playwright Euripides.  He points out that wisdom and cleverness are not exactly the same.  Wisdom, he reminds us, requires much more than a quick wit, intelligence and cunning.  One can be clever but unwise.  That's why some of the cleverest people make some poor choices.

Mere cleverness is not wisdom.

- Euripides (c.485-c. 406 B.C.), Greek dramatist
From Bacchae

ROSES AND THORNS



ROSES
TO: Margaret McCain, philanthropist and former Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick, for donating $10 million to Toronto's Centre  for Addiction and Mental Health.  McCain, the widow of New Brunswick food mogul Wallace McCain, stated that the money will be used to create the Margaret and Wallace McCain  Centre for Child, Youth and Family Mental Health.  Bravo!  I hope it inspires some other exceedingly wealthy citizens to make similar donations.

TO:  The Toronto Transit Commission for finally renovating and cleaning up its subway washrooms.  They were an absolute, filthy disgrace, especially the one at Yonge and Bloor.  It's about time that more attention is being paid to keeping them clean.  Why did it take the TTC so long, though?  We sure could use some more public washrooms on the subway lines too.



THORNS
TO: Nicolas Sarkozy, President of France, for pandering to the extreme right-wing, anti-immigrant and xenophobic elements in his country. Sarkozy hope to gain their support in his bid for re-election.  His opportunistic bid to court the far-right, however, doesn't seem to be paying off.  In fact, it appears to have backfired on him. His chances of holding on to power in France's run-off election on Sunday, May 6 are fading.  Although Socialist Francois Holland's lead in the polls is narrowing, Sarkozy's actions have cost him the support of Centrist Framcois Bayrou who will vote for Hollande.  Far-right candidate Marine Le Pen also refuses to endorse Sarkozy and intends to cast a blank ballot.

TO: The Canadian government for giving such speedy approval to Conrad Black's application for a one-year temporary resident permit.  Although Prime Minister Stephen Harper denies that the former media baron was given special treatment, there is the  perception is that he was treated differently than others due to his wealth and his ties to Conservatives in high places. Although Conrad Black is not a violent criminal, he has been convicted of fraud and obstruction of justice.  The United States is deporting him now that he has completed his time in a Florida prison.  With much fanfare, he renounced his Canadian citizenship in 2001 in order to accept a British peerage.

The Montreal-born Black has made some highly derogatory comments about the country of his birth.  Now he is eager to return to Canada and talks of the possibility of regaining his Canadian passport.  He should be treated the same as anyone else who has renounced Canadian citizenship.  Conrad Black is the perfect example of a clever person who lacks wisdom.














Baseball

How about those Baltimore Orioles?  It's still early in the season but the O's have really impressed under the stewardship of Buck Showalter who recently won his 1,000th game as manager.

When is Toronto Blue Jays manager John Farrell going to take Adam Lind out of  the fourth spot in the batting order?  Edwin Encarnacion is hitting like a house on fire.  He should be in that fourth spot right now. He is hitting .320 with 9 home runs.  Adam Lind, on the other hand, is hitting .193 with one home run.  It just does not make sense for Lind to remain in the cleanup spot.  He provides little protection for Jose Bautista and his record against left-handed pitchers is so bad that Farrell hasn't even been putting him in the lineup when the Blue Jays face a left-handed starting pitcher.  My intention is not to pick on Adam Lind.  He has worked hard to develop into a decent defensive first baseman and I respect him for that.  Yet he is a detriment to the team when he bats fourth.

Hockey

I'm really not a big supporter of any of the teams remaining in the NHL playoffs.  Wouldn't it be strange, though,, if the Phoenix Coyotes should happen to win the Stanley Cup?.  NHL Commissioner for Life, Gary Bettman, would have to present hockey's Holy Grail to a team owned by the National Hockey League.  How long can the Coyotes remain in limbo when a beautiful new arena is being built for them in Quebec City?

- Joanne

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Some thoughts on Earth Day


SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 2012





Let me enjoy the earth no less
Because the all-enacting Might
That fashioned forth it loveliness
Had other aims than my delight.

- Thomas Hardy (1840-1928), English novelist and poet
From Let me Enjoy [1910]


Today is Earth Day and for those who care about the environment, these are discouraging time.  Right wing governments such as Stephen Harper's here in Canada and rabid Republicans in the United States are doing  their best to scuttle most of the protective measures on the environment.  Yet, we have to keep trying to protect our home planet.  We owe it to ourselves and to future generations.  Every day should be Earth Day.  

I recognize the right and duty of this generation to develop and use our natural resources, but I do not recognize the right to waste them, or rob by wasteful use, the generations that come after us.

- Theodore Roosevelt
26th President of the United States


Why should I care about future generations?  What have they ever done for me?

- Groucho Marx  (1890- 1977), American comedian and film star?


There would be very little point in my exhausting myself and other conservationists themselves in trying to protect animals and habitats if we weren't at the same time raising young people to be better stewards.

-Dr. Jane Goodall, ethologist and anthropologist


We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors.  We borrow it from our children.

- Native American proverb






I wish the term "tree hugger" didn't have such a negative connotation.  It is often used in a derogatory, condescending and patronizing way.  Why should caring about the environment be ridiculed?  It should be lauded.  Being called a "tree hugger" should be regarded as a badge of honour.


When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world.

- John Muir (April 21, 1838 - December 24, 1914), Scottish-born American naturalist, conservationist and author


Now there is one outstandingly important fact regarding Spaceship Earth, and that is that no instruction book came with it.

- R. Buckminster Fuller (1895 -1983), American designer and architect
From Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth [1969]


And this our life, exempt from public haunt,
Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
Sermons in stones, and good in everything

- William Shakespeare
From Ass You Like It, Act 2, Scene 1


The earth does not argue,
Is not pathetic, has no arrangements,
Does not scream, haste, persuade,
threaten, promise,
Makes no discrimination, has no
conceivable failures,
Closes nothing, refuses nothing,
shuts none out.

- Walt Whitman (1819-1892), American poet
From A Song of the Rolling Earth [1881]


Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names streets after them.

- William E. "Bill" Vaughan (1915-1977), American columnist and author



- Joanne

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Lucrezia Borgia: Was she really wicked?


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 2012




Today marks the 532nd anniversary of the birth of Lucrezia Borgia, the reputed femme fatale of the Italian Renaissance.  Born in the town of Subiaco, near Rome, on April 18, 1480.  Lucrezia was the daughter of a cardinal of the Church and his concubine.  Her father, Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia, became Pope Alexander VI on August 11, 1492 when Lucrezia was 12 years old.  It has been alleged that he used bribery to win his election to the papacy.

The Borgias were of Spanish origin and Rodrigo Borgia was born at Xactiva, near Valencia.  His birth name was Roderic Llancol de Borja but it was later changed it to its Italian form.   Rodrigo's parents were Jofre Lancol and Isabella Borja, sister of Cardinal Alfonso Borja,   In 1455, Alfonso Borja was elevated to the papacy as Pope Callixtus III, making Rodrigo the nephew of a pope.

Rodrigo studied law in Bologna and after his uncle became pope, the young man was ordained a deacon.   His rise in the ecclesiastic ranks was rapid.  In 1456, at he age of 25, he was created Cardinal-Deacon of San Nicola in Carcera.  The following year, in an act of shameless nepotism, he was appointed vice-chancellor of the Holy Roman Church.  Rodrigo was ordained a priest in 1468 and by 1471, he was consecrated bishop and appointed Cardinal-Bishop of Albano.

Although a man of the cloth who had taken a vow of celibacy, Rodrigo was a notorious womanizer.and he sired many children.  One of his mistresses, Vannozza dei Cattanei, was Lucrezia's mother.  Vanozza was an Italian noblewoman, born in 1442 in In Mantua.  She moved to Rome where she was the landlord of several inns.  Her connection to Rodrigo Borgia, with whom she also had three sons (Giovanni, Cesare and Gioffre) began in 1470.  Rodrigo openly acknowledged the children as his own and devoted himself to them.

Alexander VI's family meant everything to him.  He loved his children very deeply.  All the historians agree on that about him.  His love of his children was so excessive that it led him to many of his worst mistakes, particularly with Lucrezia, certainly his favourite.


- Richard Drake, Ph.d,, University of Montana


Pope Alexander VI  (Rodrigo Borgia)


Before she was three years old, Lucrezia Borgia was removed from her mother's house and raised by a cousin of her father.  The young, golden-haired Lucrezia received an education in music, poetry and the reading of the classics.  She later lived for a time with her father's mistress, Giulia Farnese, who had replaced Vanozza in his affections. Giulia gave birth to a daughter, Laura, half-sister to Lucrezia, in 1492, the year Rodrigo became Pope Alexander VI.

Many believe Lucrezia was a depraved and nefarious woman.  She was alleged to have spiked the wine of her enemies with poison at elaborate dinner parties.   It was even rumoured that she possessed a hollow ring in which she stored the poison.  There was also speculation that she had incestuous relationships with both her brother Cesare and her father.  Was she the personification of evil or was she the victim of slander?  Were the tales about her really true?

It can be argued that Lucrezia was merely a pawn.  Her defenders contend that her family took advantage of her loyalty and used her to further their ambitions.  She married three times, each time to to advance the political and territorial agenda of the power-hungry Borgias.  Her fist husband was Giovanni Sforza of dAragona, Lord of Pesaro.  Alexander VI arranged the marriage in order to forge an alliance with Sforza's powerful Milanese family.  The couple were married by proxy on June 12, 1493 and the official nuptials took place in a lavish ceremony at the Vatican in 1494.  Lucrezia was a child bride of just 13 years old and the groom, born in 1466, was 26 or 27 years old.

This union with Giovanni Sforza eventually became a political liability to the Borgias.  They no longer needed any ties to the Sforza family of Milan.  In search of a more favourable union, Alexander allied himself with Naples while Milan joined forces with the French.  A frightened Giovanni fled Rome in disguise.  Alexander then declared that his daughter's marriage had not been consummated and was, therefore, invalid.  He sought an annulment on the grounds that Sforza was impotent and offered Giovanni all of Lucrezia's dowry as part of the agreement.  Sforza responded by accusing Lucreza of incest with her father and brother.  The Sforza family urged him to accept a deal, threatening to withdraw their protection of his life if he refused.  In December of 1497, having little choice and  fearing the loss of his fiefdom of Pesaro, Giovanni Sforza signed both a confession of impotence and the documents of annulment.

In June of 1497, while waiting for the annulment to be finalized, Lucrezia secluded herself in a convent San Sisto for a time.  Her retreat to a convent only served to intensity the scandal and there were rumours that Lucreza had hidden there to conceal a pregnancy.  It is known that a child named Giovanni Borgia was born in 1498.  The parentage of the mysterious child, known to historians as the "infans Romanus" (Child of Rome). remains unclear to this day.  It was thought by some that the Giovanni was the result of a liaison between Lucrezia and Pope Alexander's messenger, Pedro Caleron, also known as Perotto.

In February of 1498, Perotto was murdered.  His body and that of a maid, Pantasilea, were found in the Tiber River.  In 1501, two contradictory papal bulls were issued.  The first recognized Giovanni as the son of Cesare Borgia, conceived prior to his marriage (Cesare wed in 1499 and the child was born in 1498)..  The second papal bull, which remained secret for several years, declared him to be the child of Pope Alexander VI.  After Alexander's death, Giovanni stayed with Lucrezia for awhile and was acknowledged as her half-brother.

Soon after the annulment of Lucrezia's marriage, Pope Alexander VI arranged a second marriage for his daughter, this time to 17-year-old Alfonso of Aragon, an illegitimate son of Alfonso II of Naples.  The young Alfonso was Duke of Bisceglie, an important principality within the Kingdom of Naples.

Lucrezia and Alfonso wed in 1498.  Although the marriage had been arranged, Lucrezia was clearly content with her new husband.  She gave birth to a son on November 1, 1499 and named him Rodrigo, after her father.  The couples' happiness, however, was short-lived.  Their problems began when Lucrezia's brother, Cesare, allied himself with France through his marriage to the French princess Charlotte d'Albret on May 10, 1499.  This alliance did not bode well for Alfonso as King Louis XII of France had claims on both Naples and Milan.  Cesare Borgia became one of the French king's prominent generals and a commander of the papal armies.  He used French force to capture the lands of Romagna, located near the Papal States.

In July of 1500, while visiting Lucrezia's family, Alfonso was wounded on the steps of St. Peter's Basilica by a group of armed men.  He was brought into the Vatican apartments where a distraught Lucrezia tended to him.  While recovering from the assassination attempt, he was strangled to death, allegedly by one of  his brother-in-law Cesare's henchmen.

After Alfonso's assassination, Alexander left Rome to campaign against the Colonnas, a powerful Italian noble family.  During his absence, 21-year-old Lurezia was left to administer the Vatican and the Church.  It is fascinating to think that this young woman was the de facto ruler of the Holy See.  Upon his return, the Pope was anxious to marry off Lucrzia again.  This time Cesare Borgia made the selection for his sister's third and final husband.  He chose 24 year-old widower Alfonso d'Este, Prince to the duchy of Ferrara, a city-state bordering on Cesare's province of Romagna.  Ferrara is located in present-day northern Italy,

Alfonso d'Este agreed to the union in return for a sizable dowry and the revocation of his papal tax.  He wed 21-year-old Lucrezia Borgia on December 30, 1501 and they settled in a luxurious palace in Ferrara. where Alfonso was a great patron of art.  It was for him that Giovanni Bellini painted his magnificent The Feast of the Gods in 1514.  Bellini's student, the artist Tiziano Vecelli (known in English as Titian), also created portraits for the Duke of Ferrara..  In 1529, about a decade after Lucrezia's death, Alfonso created the most impressive art gallery of his era.  It was referred to as his camerino d'alabastro (small alabaster room).

The union of Lucrezia and Alfonzo endured for over 18 years and the couple had six known children together.  Neither partner, however, was faithful to the marriage.  Lucrezia had an affair with her brother-in-law, Francesco Il Gonzago, Marquess of Mantua, as well as a relationship with the poet Pietro Bembo, although it is not known for certain whether the relationship with Bembo was more than platonic. What is known is that they exchanged some very beautiful love letters to each other.

Lucrezia's affair with brother-in-saw Francesco ended abruptly when he contracted syphilis.  As for the poet Bembo, he left Ferrara for Venice and by 1505, his association with Lucrezia had ended.  Although they continued to correspond with each other from time to time until the final years of Lucretia's life, their letters became more formal and there is no evidence that they ever saw each other again.

During her latter years in Ferrara, Lucrezia Borgia was well-liked and respected.  There is every indication that the Duchess was a model citizen.  Her flamboyant and controlling father, Pope Alexander VI, died on August 18, 1503 at the age of 72.  He and Cesare became ill with fever a few days after dining with Cardinal Adriano Corneto (on August 6).  Although Cesare recovered, Alexander did not.  He made a confession and the last rites were administered to him.  He was apparently quite repentant before his passing.

Despite Alexander's misdeeds, Lucrezia stood by her father and never denounced him.  Neither did she denounce her brother Cesare.  She suffered another loss when her son Rodrigo passed away in August of 1512 at the age of 12.  Lucrezia herself did not enjoy a long life.  She was only 39 years old when she died in the city of Ferrara.  Her death, on June 24, 1519, came from complications giving birth to her last child, Isabella Maria d'Este.  Isabella Maria died on June 14, 1519, ten days before the passing of her mother. Alfonso, Duke of Ferrara outlived his wife by many years and died on October 31, 1534 at the age of 58.

There is not enough knowledge of the historical Lucrzia to categorically confirm or deny whether she was complicit in the criminal activities of her father and brother.  The allegations of poisoning, of which centred on Lucrezia, were made by enemies of the Borgias and have never been substantiated.  Lucrezia Borgia was certainly no saint but neither was she evil incarnate.  It must also be remembered that she lived at a time when women were expected to remain in the background and they were considered inferior and untrustworthy.  According to Professor Richard Drake of the University of Montana, Lucrezia was not the most depraved woman who ever lived, but the most unfortunate.


- Joanne

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Edward John Smith: Captain of Titanic


THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 2012




When anyone asks how I can best describe my experience in nearly 40 years at sea, I merely say, uneventful.  Of course there have been winter gales , and storms and fog the like, but in all my experience, I have never been in any accident of any sort worth speaking about . . . I never saw a wreck and never have been wrecked, nor was I ever in any predicament that threatened to end in a disaster of any sort.

- Edward John Smith
Excerpt of an interview with Captain Smith in 1907 after he brought the Adriatic to New York on its maiden voyage


Who was Edward John Smith, the captain of the ill-fated Titanic?  What was the background of the man who commanded the famed ocean liner on its doomed maiden voyage?  To what extent was he responsible for one of the most horrific maritime disasters of all time?  Many people are not familiar with Smith's name.  They simply refer to some faceless captain of Titanic.  As the 100th anniversary of the sinking of Titanic draws near, it seems appropriate to explore the life and background of Captain Smith.  The 62-year old British naval reserve officer was closing in on retirement when he took command of the RMS Titanic in April of 1912.  He died in the tragic accident and his body was never recovered.

Edward John Smith was born in the town of Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, England on January 27. 1850 to  Edward  Smith, a potter, and his wife, Catherine.  The Smiths later became shopkeepers and young Edward attended Etruria British School.  At the age of 13, he went to Liverpool to start a seafaring career. In 1869, he apprenticed on a clipper ship called Senator Weber, owned by A. Gibson & Co., a  Liverpool company.

It was in 1880 that Smith joined the White Star Line as Fourth Officer.  He was given command of his first vessel, Republic, in 1887.  Through the years, he also commanded Coptic, Majestic, Baltic, Adriatic, Germanic and Olympic.  By the time he took charge of Titanic, Captain Smith had logged 46 years of experience on the sea, including captaining Majestic during the Boer War.  For his service during that war, King Edward VII awarded him the Transport Medal.

Regrettably, Smith's lengthy career was marred by some mishaps that happened under his command prior to the Titanic.  On February 16, 1899, while at New York pier, Germanic capsized as a result of an ice buildup in the vessel's rigging and superstructure.  On June 21, 1911, Titanic's slightly smaller sister ship, Olympic, was preparing for her maiden voyage when a tugboat, O.L. Hallenbeck, was sucked against her stern.  The reverse burst of Olympic's propeller caused serious damage to the tugboat.  White Star was sued for $10,000, but the case was eventually dismissed due to lack of evidence.

On September 20, 1911, less than a year before Titanic set sail, Olympic collided with the Royal Navy cruiser HMS Hawke in a narrow channel off the Isle of Wight.  The British war ship lost her prow (the forward part of a ship's bow).  As for Olympic, she managed to return to Southampton with one of her propeller shafts twisted.  The Royal Navy held Olympic responsible for the incident, contending that her huge size generated a suction that pulled Hawke into the larger vessel.

Despite the Hawke incident, White Star assigned command of Titanic to Captain Smith and continued to regard him as  a competent and experienced seaman.  The rapid increase in the size of ocean liners may have played a part in the previous mishaps that occurred under his command and the sinking of Titanic itself.  All of Smith's training skills and his vast experience at sea did not prepare him adequately for the advances in shipping and the sheer size of newer ships.

Captain Edward John Smith was a popular figure with a loyal clientele of passengers. Some voyageurs, particularly those of England's upper classes, would only cross the Atlantic on a ship that he captained.  Smith was well-liked by the management of White Star Line and by friends and colleagues.  They affectionately referred to him as E.J.  His salary was $6,250 per year and there was a "cash bonus" of $1,000 if any ship under his command were not damaged during the 12 months.  This was indeed a handsome sum in those days.

Captain Smith's personal life appeared to be very stable and content.  On January 13, 1887, he married 25-year-old Sarah Eleanor Pennington at St. Oswald's Church in Winwick.  Smith's wife preferred to be known by her second name, Eleanor, and she called her husband "Ted" or "Teddy."  The couple had one child, Helen Melville Smith, born on April 2, 1898 at 20 Alexandra Road, Waterloo, Litherland, near Liverpool.  Ted and his family eventually settled in Southampton on England's south coast, where the White Star office was situated.  They lived in a spacious two-gabled brick house named Woodhead,  Helen, known as "Mel," had just turned 14 years old when her father set forth on his fatal voyage on Titanic.

On April 10, 1912, the white-bearded Smith, wearing a bowler hat and a long overcoat, rode in a taxi from his home to the Southampton docks.  Shortly after12 noon, Titanic, the largest and most luxurious ship in the world set off for New York City.  Her maiden voyage got off to a shaky start.  As the grand ocean liner was leaving port, the suction caused the ropes of a docked ship nearby to break.  Tugboats were rushed to the scene in order to prevent a collision between the SS. New York and Titanic.

At about 11:40 p.m. on Sunday, April 14, 1912, Titanic struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic off the coast of Newfoundland.  A lookout had apparently sighted the iceberg and rang a warning bell three times.   He then telephoned Sixth Officer James Moody and alerted him to the situation, but it was too late to prevent the fatal disaster.  The ship sank for over two and a half hours, killing more than 1,500 people.

In "Titanic Research," an April 29, 2006 piece by Samuel Hepburn appearing in Encyclopedia Titanica, Hepburn ponders the question of how the Titanic could have unexpectedly discovered a solitary iceberg in its way.  He notes that the sworn testimony of Moody and Reginald Lee, another Titanic lookout, leaves the impression that only one iceberg was seen prior to the deadly collision.  He writes that "many people believe it to be improbable for the Titanic to have steamed deep into iceberg infested waters and suddenly find a single isolated iceberg dead ahead in its path."  Other icebergs, Hepburn points out, "should have been sighted earlier especially since we know that in the morning, after the sun came up, many icebergs were seen all around the area of the wreckage"

On the day of the disaster, Titanic received six ice warnings.  Unfortunately, the messages were all ignored by the wireless operator who was more concerned with transmitting passenger messages.  The weather was also a factor in the collision.  The moon was not out and the water was calm, making it difficult to spot the iceberg.  If the water had been less still, breakers would have formed around the iceberg, making it easier to see from a distance.

Captain Smith's final actions during the sinking of the ship remain uncertain and there is much speculation about the details of his death. Some historians maintain that Smith was on the bridge at 2:13 a.m. and that he went down with the ship.  Other sources, however, state that he went to the wheelhouse.  There are also sources that claim he was present in the radio room.  The stories vary and they conflict each other.  For example, some survivors of the disaster recalled having seen Smith on the ships's bridge and some claimed to have witnessed him jumping off the deck.

Just before 3.00 p.m., on Thursday, April 18, the following message was posted on the notice-board at the White Star office in Southampton.   The poignant words were from Eleanor, the wife of Captain E.J. Smith.

TO MY POOR SUFFERERS:
My heart overflows with grief for you all, and is laden with sorrow that you are weighed down with this terrible burden that has been thrust upon us all.  
May God be with us and comfort us all.
Yours in deepest sympathy
(Signed) Eleanor Smith

Captain Smith's widow remained in Southampton for a while after her husband's death.  She later relocated to London.  On April 28, 1931, she was run over by a taxi near her London home and died at the age of 70.  Helen Melville Smith married Captain John Gilbertson of Liverpool of Liverpool, England.  Gilbertson, the youngest captain in the British merchant navy, died of black water fever while returning from India on board his first command ship.

In 1922, Helen married Sidney Russell-Cooke, a stockbroker, at St. Mark's Church, Mayfair.  The couple had twins, a son named Simon and a daughter, Priscilla, born at Bellcroft, London on June 18, 1923.  Priscilla wed a lawyer, John Constantine Phipps, She died soon after of polio in Scotland on October 7, 1947.  Simon, who never married, was killed in battle during World War II on March 23, 1944.  Russell-Cooke, died in a hunting accident on July 30, 1930.

On July 29, 1914, Helen Melville Smith unveiled a statue of her father in Lichfield, England.  Its sculptor was Lady Kathleen Scott, widow of Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott.  The plaque beneath Captain Smith's memorial reads: Commander Edward John Smith RD, RDR. Born January 27, 1850, Died April 15, 1912, Bequeathing to his countrymen the memory and example of a great heart, a brave life and a heroic death. Be British. (There is an apocryphal story that Smith's last statement to his crew was, "Be British.")

In 1934, Helen moved to the quiet country village of Leafield, Oxfordshire and died there on August 18, 1973.  Mel was 75 years old at the time of her passing.  Since both of her children died childless, she left no descendants. Thus ended the progeny of Captain Edward John Smith.

END NOTE

Smith was a heavy cigar smoker.  In May of 2011, a cigar box he once owned sold for 25,000 pounds at a Liverpool auction.


- Joanne

Sunday, April 8, 2012

All About Easter Lilies



SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 2012




I have a great fondness for Easter Lilies and I get them every Easter. On this Easter Sunday, Number 16 presents some facts about this beautiful symbol of the season.  Their white, trumpet-shaped flowers represent hope and regeneration.  

* The Latin name for the Easter Lily is Lilium longiflor.  The Easter Lily is also known as the Bermuda lily.

*  Easter Lilies are native to the Ryukyu Islands of southern Japan.  They were discovered by famed plant explorer Carl Peter Thunberg and delivered to England in 1819.  Missionaries and sailors brought the lilies to Bermuda in 1853, hence the name Bermuda lily,  A virus destroyed the crop in 1898 and production moved to Japan.

*  Before the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, most of the Easter Lily bulbs were imported from Japan.

* A World War I soldier named Louis Houghton has been given credit for starting production of Easter Lilies in the United States.  Houghton carried a suitcase of lily bulbs with him to the southern coast of Oregon in 1919.  He gave them to friends when the supply was cut off after the attack on Pearl Harbor. The area along the California-Oregon boarder is now the "Easter Lily Capital of the World" and produces the vast majority of the bulbs grown in the world.

- Joanne

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

People want jobs. Unemployment is the number one issue

THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 2012



It's a recession when your neighbour loses his job:  it's a depression when you lose yours.

- Harry S. Truman (1884-1972), 33rd President of the United States
In Observer, April 13, 1958

So many politicians don't get it!  They just don't get it!  The number one priority is not debt.  It's not deficit reduction.  The number one priority is job creation.  This is not to trivialize fiscal irresponsibility.  It is to state categorically that job creation is the most important problem facing many countries around the world.

Rick Santorum, candidate for the Republican Party's nomination for president of the United States was quoted as saying that he "doesn't care what the unemployment rate is going to be."  Santorum later explained that he meant that the election was about something more basic - freedom.  For Santorum and other right-wing conservatives, freedom can be defined as less government.  Conservatives want to cut social programs and government jobs.

Severe austerity measures during times of economic slowdown, however, result in job losses and layoffs.  It's sure to create more misery.  How can you stimulate the economy by putting more people out of work?  It's simply not logical.

 Here's what Santorum and other conservatives, including Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper, don't seem to understand.  The unemployed can't wait.  They need jobs as soon as possible.  They have rent to pay and mortgages and children to feed.  How free are they if they can't pay the bills and put food on the table?  The unemployed can't afford to spend money to get the economy rolling.  People who fear losing their jobs are afraid to make new purchases.  They are reluctant to eat out at restaurants or join fitness clubs.  As a result, businesses are forced to close down and more employees lose their jobs.  This leads to slumping retail sales.more layoffs and less money in the government coffers.  It's a vicious cycle.

The unemployed cannot wait for the private sector to start hiring.  Government has to step in when necessary.  That's why U.S. President Barack Obama set forth his stimulus plan for the American economy and his American Jobs Act.  That's why Prime Minister Stephen Harper, a self-proclaimed fiscal conservative, brought forth Canada's Economic Action Plan, even though the stimulus plan went against his conservatives principles.  Government investment in infrastructure creates jobs.

in January of 2010, one year after Obama took office, the effects of the 2008 recession were being felt and the U.S. unemployment rate was quite high, about 9.7 percent.  According to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, the most recent unemployment rate (February 2012) is 8.3 percent.  There are 12.8 million unemployed .persons in the U.S.A.  That's unacceptably high.  Yet, under Barack Obama, the jobless rate has steadily decreased.  Obama's economic stimulus has been working.  It's a shame that the Republicans have blocked his American Jobs Act.

In Canada, the unemployment rate for February 2012 was 7.4 percent.  Canadians are being told that we must lower our expectations and that secure employment and decent pensions are things of the past.  We're being told that government spending must be reigned  in.  Yet the Conservative government has plenty of money to spend on building new prisons at a time when the crime rate is decreasing in Canada.  Don't worry, though.  Once more social and recreational programs are cut and more jobs are lost, they'll be plenty of people to fill those prisons.

The recession of 2008 was devastating.  Four years later, we're still feeling reeling from its effects.  Unemployment remains unacceptably high in North America and much of Europe.  A jobless recovery is not a real recovery.  Just ask the thousands of people seeking employment or those who can only find temporary and part-time jobs.



I grew up in the Thirties with our unemployed father.  He did not riot, he got on his bike and looked for work.  
-  Norman Tebbit (1931 -
British Conservative politician; Speech at Conservative Party Conference, October 15, 1981


What if the work isn't there?  What if employers are only laying off and not hiring?  Conservative politicians like Tebbit constantly urge us to be self-reliant and to pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps.  Although rioting is definitely not the solution, neither is complete individual self-reliance.  Self-reliance and individual responsibility are good qualities.  Sometimes, however, people genuinely need help.  When you are 52 years old and find yourself laid off, it's difficult to find another job, especially when employers are not hiring due to cutbacks.  It's also hard to find employment at a time when so many jobs are being lost due to technology. The private sector is cutting jobs, not creating them.  The so-called "trickle down" theory isn't working.

Prices are going up and the cost of living is continually increasing.  It' isn't easy for many families to keep up, even if family members have steady employment.  It's especially difficult for seniors on fixed incomes.  Too many people are falling behind or falling between the holes of our social safety nets.  What of our youth?  What of their future?  Who will offer them hope for steady employment and decent pensions?  Will we allow them to be the future without a future, a lost generation?

It's easy for many bankers, politicians and CEOs who live in ivory towers to ignore the concerns of the most vulnerable in our society. After all, bean counters only see numbers and statistics.  Their decisions, however, have a significant effect on human lives.  People need jobs and they need them now.  The gap between rich and poor is growing every day and the middle class is quickly disappearing.  That does not bode well for our society.

- Joanne

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

It's the first day of spring! Spring fever anyone?

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 2012




SPRING HAS SPRUNG!

A little Madness in the Spring
Is wholesome even for the King.

- Emily Dickinson


It's March 21st, also known as the vernal equinox.  Freshness and renewal are in the air.  It's time for spring cleaning and lighter clothing.  As the great American poet Emily Dickinson suggests, perhaps a little good-natured craziness is order.  Spring fever anyone? 


Emily Dickinson


THE SEASON OF ROMANCE

Of course, spring is also the time for romance.  It was the English poet, Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809 - 1892), who wrote:

In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to love.

That line was written by Tennyson in 1835 in his poem Locksley Hall.  It was published in his 1842 volume of poems.  Tennyson was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom during the reign of Queen Vistoria.  He was born in August of 1809 at Somersby, Lincolnshire and succeeded William Wordsworth as Poet Laureate in 1850.   (I would be remiss if I did not point out, Lord Tennyson, that a young woman's fancy also turns to love in the spring.)


Alfred, Lord Tennyson


Spring is necessary

 
Spring is necessary.  We all have to recharge our batteries.  The time for hibernation is over.  Awaken from your slumber.  Let there be light!

Is it so small a thing
To have enjoyed the sun,
To have lived light in the spring,
To have loved, to have thought, to have done;
To have advanced true friends, and
beat down baffling foes?

- Matthew Arnold (1822 -1888), British poet and social critic
From Empedocles on Etna {1852}


We need spring.  We need it desperately and usually, we need it before God is willing to give it to us.

- Peter John Gzowski (1934 - 2002), Canadian broadcaster
From Peter Gzowski's Spring Tonic [1979]


When spring came, even the false spring, there were no problems except where to be the happiest.  The only thing that could spoil a day was people and if you could keep from making engagements, each day had no limits.  People were always the limiters of happiness except for the very few that were as good as spring itself.

- Ernest Hemingway (1899 - 1961), American author
From A Moveable Feast


Spring will not be denied

Pablo Neruda

The circle of life contines and spring will not be denied.  The Chilean poet and politician, Pablo Neruda (104 - 1973) wrote:

You can cut all the flowers but you cannot keep spring from coming.


- Joanne

Monday, March 19, 2012

William Jennings Bryan and the Scopes Trial

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2012




Today is the 152nd anniversary of the birth of William Jennings Bryan, a politician of great prominence in American history.  Bryan was the Democratic Party's nominee for president three times - in 1896, 1900 and 1908 - and he was defeated all three times.  He is remembered for his outstanding oratory and for his role in the famous Scopes "monkey trial" of 1925.

William Jennings Bryan was born in Salem, Illinois on March 19, 1860.  In 1881, he delivered the validectory speech at his graduation from Illinois College in Jacksonville, Illinois.  The young man then studied law at Union Law School in Chicago (now known as Northwestern University School of Law).  While preparing for his bar exam in Jacksonville, he met Mary Elizabeth Baird and married her on October 1, 1884.  The couple had three children: Ruth Baird (born October 2, 1885), William Jennings Bryan Jr. and Grace.

Bryan practiced law in Jacksonville for a few years, but he and his family moved to Lincoln, Nebraska in 1887.  In Lincoln, he became involved in politics and was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Nebraska's Ist district in the Democratic landslide of 1890.  After winning re-election to Congress in 1892, Byron became a rising star in the Democratic Party.  He decided to run for the United States Senate in 1894.  His Republican opponent was John M. Thurston, the general counsel for the Union Pacific Railroad.  Although the Republicans won the state Legislature and elected Thurston to the Senate, the campaign provided Bryan with national exposure.

In July of 1896, at the Democratic Convention in Chicago, William Jennings Bryan made one of the most memorable speeches in American history.  His dramatic "Cross of Gold" speech mesmerized the audience at the convention.  His words addressed the controversy at the time concerning the coinage of silver. Jennings supported silver against the Gold Standard and he defended the interests of western farmers over the industrial East.  "Burn down your cities and leave our farms," he thundered, "and your cities will spring up again as if by magic.; but destroy our farms and the grass will grow in the streets of every city in the country. "  He ended his speech by declaring that "You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold," his arms outstretched in the form of a crucified Christ.

At the age of 36, William Jennings Bryan went on to win the Democratic nomination for president of the United States, becoming the youngest person ever nominated for the office.  During the campaign of 1896, he took four major railroad trips and gave stump speeches at every whistle stop.  According to The American Nation: A History of the United States Since 1865, Bryan made over 600 speeches, speaking directly to some five million people.  His amazing energy and his superb oratory, however, failed to win him the election for him.  The Republican candidate, William McKinley, was elected president with 51 percent of the vote to Bryan's 47 percent.

William Jennings Bryan had two more chances to become president, but he was defeated by McKinley again in 1900 and by William Howard Taft in 1908.  After supporting Woodrow Wilson for the presidency in 1912, Bryan was appointed Secretary of State when Wilson assumed office.  He served as Secretary of State during the early years of World War I, before the United States had entered the conflict.   He resigned in June of 1915 in protest over President's Wilson's handling of the Lusitania crisis, fearing that U.S. would be thrust into the war. 

On May 7, 1915, the Lusitania, a luxurious British ocean liner, had been torpedoed by a German U-Boat.  Nearly 1,200 passengers and crew were dead, including over 120 Americans.  The Germans claimed that the ship had been carrying munitions and was a legitimate target of war   Wilson, upset by the loss of life and the lack of German regard for freedom of the seas, sent a letter of diplomatic protest to the Germans.  The letter was signed by Secretary of State W.J. Byran.  When Germany's Foreign minister replied that sinking the ship was a valid action, Wilson decided to send another letter of protest.  Bryan refused to sign the second letter, concerned that Germany would break off diplomatic relations with the United States.  As it turned out, the U.S. did not officially enter the First World War until almost two years later, on April 6, 1917.
 
In the summer of 1925, William Jennings Bryan played a central role in one of the most spectacular trials in American history.  He was a prosecuting attorney in the case of John Thomas Scopes, a 24-year-old high school science teacher in Dayton, Tennessee who had been arrested for teaching the theory of evolution.  In March of 1925, the Tennessee legislature had passed a statute making it unlawful for any teacher in a publicly suported educational institution "to teach any theory that denies the story of the divine creation of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man descended from a lower order of animals."

Bryan, a believer in the literal interpretation of the Bible, had been asked to participate in the Scopes trial by the Christian Fundamentals Association.  Although he had not set foot in a courtroom for 30 years, he agreed to become a member of the prosecution.  Heading the defence in the Scopes case was 68-year-old Clarence Seward Darrow, America's most celebrated criminal lawyer, and an agostic. 

Clarence Darrow was a former labour lawyer who had switched to criminal law.  A staunch civil libertarian with a formidable reputation, it was Darrow who had defended "thrill" killers Leopold and Loeb in their 1924 trial for murdering 14-year-old Robert "Bobby" Franks.  It was he who had saved the two Chicago teengers from the death penalty.




The Scopes trial was dubbed "The Monkey Trial" and it began in Dayton on July 11, 1925.  Over 100 journalists converged on the small town, as well as thousands of curious vistors.  The Chicago Tribune set up its own radio transmission and the trial became the first in American history to be broadcast nationally.  A trio of schoolboys testified that John T, Scopes had indeed taught Darwin's theory of evolution at their school.  Since the judge, John T. Raulston,, would not permit scientists to testify at the trial, Clarence Darrow summoned William Jennings Bryan to the witness stand.  During the cross-examination, the wily Darrow tried his best to make Bryan seem foolish. 

The trial lasted for 12 days during one of hottest and driest Tennessee summers ever recorded.  Despite Darrow's efforts, Scopes was found guilty of violating the law and fined $100.  The Tennessee Supreme Court later overturned the conviction on the technicality that the jury, not the judge, should have determined the amount of the fine.  On Sunday, July 26, 1925, only five days after the end of the trial, Bryan died in his sleep during an afternoon nap in Dayton.  He was 65 years old at the time of his death.  Clarence Darrow returned to Chicago where he lived until his passing on March 13, 1938 at the age of 80.  The cause of Darrow's death was pulmonary heart disease. 

As for John T. Scopes, he went on to study geology at the University of Chicago.  While doing geological field work in Venezuela, he met and married his wife, Mildred, and was baptized a Roman Catholic.  Scopes eventually launched a career in the oil industry, first in Texas and then in Louisiana.  He retired in 1963 and died on October 21, 1970 at the age of 70.


John T. Scopes


William Jennings Byran's views cannot be easily labelled or pigeon holed.  He was a certainly a devout Presbyterian and a religious fundamentalist.  His fundamentalism was similar to that of the Tea Party faction of today's Republican Party.  Yet, Byran, if he were alive today, would eschew any association with the Tea Party.  He was a loyal Democratic with some progressive views for his era.

William Jennings Bryan was an outspoken critic of banks and railroads.  His support of women's suffrage helped to pass the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing American women the right to vote.  He was also a strong advocate of  graduated income tax and the regulation of child labour.  Throughout his life, Bryan campaigned for social and economic justice.  His nickname was "The Great Commoner."


These are the words of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his speech at a memorial to Bryan in 1934.

It was my privilege to know William Jennings Bryan when I was a very young man. Years later both of us came to the Nation's capital to serve under the leadership of Woodrow Wilson. Through this service and the intimate relations which ensued, I learned to know and to love him.

As we look back on those days—the many of us who are gathered here together who were his friends and associates in the Wilson Administration—I think that we would choose the word "sincerity" as fitting him most of all. It was that sincerity which brought to him the millions of devoted followers; it was that sincerity which served him so well in his life-long fight against sham and privilege and wrong. It was that sincerity which made him a force for good in his own generation and has kept alive many of the ancient faiths on which we are building today.

It was Mr. Bryan who said:

"I respect the aristocracy of learning, I deplore the plutocracy of wealth but I thank God for the democracy of the heart.

"Many years ago he also said:

"You may dispute over whether I have fought a good fight; you may dispute over whether I have finished my course; but you cannot deny that I have kept the faith."


- Joanne

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Irish wit, humour and folklore

SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2012




                 HAPPY ST. PATRICK'S DAY

The Irish are renowned for their wit and their humour.  On St. Patrick's Day, Number 16 is proud to present some of that fine Irish drollery.


IRISH WIT AND HUMOUR

An Irishman was asked if the Irish always answered one question with another.  'Who told you that?' he replied. 

- Niall Toibin
Irish comedian and actor, born November 21, 1929 in Cork


Did you hear about the Kerryman with the inferiority complex?  He thought he was only as good as everyone else.

- John Brendan.Keane (July 21, 1928 - May 30, 2002), Irish playwright and novelist from Listowel, County Kerry


St. Patrick brought Christianity to Ireland.  It's a pity the idea never caught on.

- Attributed to George Bernard Shaw (July 26, 1856 - November 2, 1950), Irish playwright, born in Dublin


A man who says his wife can't take a joke forgets that she took him.

- Attributed to Oscar Wilde (October 16, 1854 - November 30, 1900, Irish writer and poet, born in Dublin


I was travelling in County Mayo late one evening and stopped outside a little boarding house.  I knocked on the door and a second later the top floor window opened and a woman yelled down, "What do you want so late in the evening?  I asked, "Could I stay here for the evening?"  The woman yelled down to me, "YES!" and then closed the window.

- Hal Roach


A man buys a jigsaw puzzle with eight pieces.  Nine months later he has managed to put it all together and is delighted with himself.  He thinks he has done well because on the box it says "four to six years."

- Hal Roach


This fellow Casey went to the dentist.  He said to the dentist, "All my teeth are turning yellow.  What can I do?"  The dentist said, "Wear a brown tie."

- Hal Roach


Murphy found himself very late one night in London in the underground subway station.  He walked along to the escalator.  And on the escalator it is written, "Dogs must be carried on the escalator."  And he thought, "Where am I going to find a dog at this hour of the night?"

- Hal Roach

(Hal Roach, described as Ireland's international comedian and the King of Blarney, passed away recently.  He died on February 28, 2012 at the age of 84.  Roach was born in Waterford, Ireland.)


Reilly went to trial for armed robbery.  The jury foreman came out and announced, "Not guilty."  "That's grand," shouted Reilly.  Does that mean I can keep the money?"


- Source unknown


IRISH FOLKLORE

Two of the most famous characters in Irish folklore are leprechauns and banshees.  The word "leprechaun" is the Gaelic tern for shoemaker.  According to Leprechauns, Legends and Irish Tales by Hugh McGowan, the old book of Irish folklore tells us that a leprechaun  is "a tiny man, though not so small that he could hide under a mushroom or dance on a blade of grass."   Any further details?  Well, yes.  "His countenance is a mixture of crankiness and humour.  He has a pair of piercing black eyes which twinkle with mirth or mischief.  His nose is hooked and his mouth grins from ear to ear."

McGowan describes a banshee as "a spirit whose sad song warns of  imminent death.  She takes the shape of a beautiful girl dressed in flowing white and has siren quality which attracts the listener in spite of its sad prophecy.  She appears and disappears on dark windy nights and those who hear her chant know that a death will shortly follow."

- Joanne

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Bomb Iran? Stop and think!!!!

THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 2012


Mahmoud Ahmadinejad



What's said on the campaign trail, you know, those folks don't have a lot of responsibilities.  They're not commander-in-chief.  And when I see the casualness with which some of these folks talk about war, I am reminded of the costs involved in war.  I am reminded [of] the decision that I have to make in terms of sending our young men and women into battle and the impact that has on their lives, the impact it has on our national security, the impact it has on our economy.

- U.S. President Barack Obama
Press Conference, March 6, 2012


The United States has fought two costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Why then are some American politicians beating the drums of war against Iran?  Let me be clear.  The Iranian government is despicable.  Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is an anti-Semite and a Holocaust denier.  That does not mean, however, that the United States and its allies (including Canada) should be eager to go to war against the regime.

Thank goodness for the good sense and moderation of U.S. President Barack Obama.  I watched Obama's press conference last Tuesday with great interest.  Obama was asked about the situation concerning Iran and he spoke rationally and calmly.  He declared that "this is not a game" and that "there is nothing casual about it."

Obama simply said what needed to be said.  He emphasized that war should not be entered into lightly and the consequences should be carefully considered.  He stated that it was his belief that "we have a window of opportunity where this can still be resolved diplomatically." 

The Middle East is unpredictable and volatile.  As abhorrent as the Iranian regime is, Iran has not aggressively attacked or occupied any other country.  Why open a Pandora's Box and draw Middle East nations into an all-out military conflict?  Given the tensions in the region, that would be a recipe for disaster and possibly World War III.  As President Obama stressed, there is an opportunity to settle this conflict diplomatically.  Diplomacy should be given every chance to succeed.

It's a good thing that Obama won the 2008 election and not John McCain.  Remember when the Senator from Arizona sang "Bomb Bomb Bomb Bomb Bomb Iran."   It was a parody of the Beach Boys' song, "Barbara Ann" and it was not a joke.  Bombing another country is never something to joke about.  The incident was a reflection of McCain's hawkish mentality.  To watch a video of McCain singing about bombing Iran, click on the link below.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-zoPgv_nYg

It's worth remembering that the McCain mentality is shared by three out of the four remaining candidates seeking the Republican nomination for president - Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich.  The only exception is Ron Paul and Ron Paul does not have enough support to win the nomination.

- Joanne