WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2010
The media are absolutely buzzing about the announcement yesterday of the engagement of Prince William and Kate (soon to be known as Catherine) Middleton. The British press is salivating at the thought of covering this extravaganza. With Prime Minister David Cameron imposing his own brand of harsh Thatcherism, the British are sorely in need of some diversion. What better time for the pomp and ceremony of the impeding royal nuptials. The House of Windsor will put on a splendid show, although in this age of austerity, it will be necessary to tone it down somewhat. They’d better pray the outcome of this fairytale wedding will turn out far better than the disastrous outcome of the 1981 marriage of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.
Diana never became queen consort and Kate may have to wait quite a long time before she assumes the title of Queen Catherine. Prince Charles recently turned 62 years old. Queen Elizabeth is 84 and appears to be in good health. There is definitely longevity in her genes and If she lives as long as her mother, she will be 101 when she passes away. If that should happen, Charles will be about 78 or 79 years old when he finally ascends to the throne. His son, William, will be about 45 at that time.
Women named Catherine have played a prominent role in the history of the British monarchy. King Henry VIII must have really been partial to Catherines because three of his six wives shared that name – Catherine of Aragon, Catherine Howard and Catherine Parr. Henry, of course, fought to have his marriage to Catherine of Aragon dissolved so he could marry his second wife, Anne Boleyn. Catherine Howard (Wife Number 5) was Anne Boleyn’s first cousin. The two cousins shared a similar fate. They were both beheaded. Henry’s sixth and final wife, Catherine Parr, survived him. After the death of Henry VIII in 1547, Catherine Parr married Thomas Seymour, the brother of Henry’s second wife, Jane Seymour.
For those interested in Henry VIII and his wives, there is a far better television series than The Tudors. It is The Six Wives of Henry VIII, produced by the BBC. The Six Wives of Henry VIII consists of an episode for each wife. Keith Michell plays Henry in the series and his portrayal is superb. He was born to play the role. He looks and acts and laughs like Henry VIII. Jonathan Rhys Meyers, the actor who plays Henry in The Tudors, isn’t anywhere near as convincing. He doesn’t show Henry’s fun-loving side enough. His Henry is far too serious. Furthermore, Jonathan Rhys Meyers does not bear a physical resemblance to Henry in the least.
ON THIS DAY
Mary Tudor (Queen Mary I of England) died on November 17, 1558 at the age of 42. The Catholic Mary, daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, reigned from 1553 until 1558. If you discount the unfortunate Lady Jane Grey who reigned for a mere nine days in July of 1553, Mary I was really the first woman to rule as Queen of England. She earned the sobriquet of “Bloody Mary” because, during her reign, almost 300 religious dissenters were burned at the stake. On this day in 1558, Mary’s half-sister Elizabeth, the daughter of Henry and Anne Boleyn, ascended to the throne of England.
ON THIS DAY IN SPORTS
On November 17, 1987, George Bell became the first member of the Toronto Blue Jays to win the American League’s Most Valuable Player award. Will Jose Bautista do the same this year? Bell slugged 47 home runs during the 1987 season and drove in 134 RBIs. Bautista hit 54 homers this season and he had 124 RBIs. However, the conventional wisdom is that Bautista will not be named MVP because the Jays did not have a contending team this year. In 1987, the Blue Jays finished in second place in the American League East with 96 wins. In 2010, the Jays finished fourth in the AL East with 85 wins.
SPORTS
Hockey
The Toronto Maple Leafs ended an ugly eight-game losing streak yesterday by defeating the Nashville Predators by a score of 5-4 at the Air Canada Centre. The Leafs showed some grit by coming back to win the game after being down by a three-goal deficit in the first period.
Basketball
The woeful Toronto Raptors lost again yesterday. They were defeated 109-94 by the Washington Wizards. The Raptors have dropped two games in a row and eight of their last nine games. They play the Philadelphia 76ers tonight in The City of Brotherly Love.
Baseball
Congratulations to former Blue Jay Roy Halladay for winning the National League Cy Young Award yesterday. Halladay is only the fifth player to win a Cy Young in both the National and American leagues. Although Roy did not receive a World Series ring this year, he had a dream season in which he recorded 21 wins (including a perfect game) and an ERA of 2.44. He pitched in postseason play for the first time in his formidable major league career and threw a no-hitter in his first-ever playoff game. Now he adds another Cy Young to his list of achievements. Not too shabby, Doc. Not too shabby at all.
- Joanne
Welcome to Number 16, the fun website that focuses on words, language and literature. It also contains quizzes and opinion pieces. Number 16 is named after my favourite number. I am Joanne Madden and I'm from Toronto, Canada. To find out what I have written on any topic, use the search box directly below. For TV trivia, please check my other website, TV Banter (www.tvbanter.net).
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Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Louis Riel
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2010
For those interested in the life of one of the most charismatic, colourful and fascinating characters in Canadian history, I recommend two books. They are Riel: A Life of Revolution, Maggie Siggins, HarperCollins, 1994 and The Trial of Louis Riel by George Goulet.
ON THIS DAY
On November 16, 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state of the United States. This Canadian sends warm regards to all you Sooners out there. On the anniversary of your statehood, I salute you. By the way, you may want to check out my November 4, 2010 blog entry on Oklahoma’s own Will Rogers.
LANGUAGE CORNER
The name Oklahoma is derived from the Choctaw Indian words “okla” meaning "people" and “humma” meaning “red.”
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DIANA KRALL!
Canadian jazz artist, Diana Krall was born on November 16, 1964 in Nanaimo, British Columbia. She is one of my favourites.
To watch a video of Diana performing Cry Me a River, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9y1vGxPVAA
SPORTS
Saturday, November 13, 2010 was another dismal day for Toronto sports teams. The Toronto Maples Leafs lost to the Vancouver Canucks by a score of 5-3. Nazem Kadri suited up for the Leafs and Toronto Star columnist Damien Cox wrote that he “acquitted himself well.” It was not, however, enough to give the Leafs a victory. The Blue and White suffered their 10th defeat in 11 games.
The Toronto Raptors lost yet again, this time to the Miami Heat. They were outscored by the Heat 109 -11 in the Sunshine State. Former Raptor Chris Bosh only had 22 minutes of playing time due to foul trouble.
The only bright spot on the Toronto sports scene over the past weekend was the Toronto Argonauts. They defeated the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Ivor Wynne Stadium by a score of 16-13 to win the Eastern semi-final. They now advance to the Eastern final against the Alouettes in Montreal on Sunday, November 21. If they win that one, it’s on to Edmonton to play in Canada’s national football championship, the Grey Cup. Congratulations to the Argos.
- Joanne
He was a complex man, full of contradiction and angst, certainly, but what makes Louis Riel him so intriguing is that he managed to straddle two cultures, Native and white, and came as close to anyone to envisioning a sympathetic and equitable relationship between the two. That Canadians may someday achieve this vision remains Louis Riel’s legacy.Born October 22, 1844 at Red River Settlement (present-day Manitoba), Metis leader Louis Riel is certainly one the most controversial figures in Canadian history. Some call him insane, a murderer and a traitor. Others regard him as a hero and the “Father of Manitoba.” Today is the 125th anniversary of his death. On November 16, 1885, Riel was executed in Regina, Saskatchewan for high treason. The province of Manitoba now celebrates “Louis Riel Day” every third Monday of February.
- Maggie Sigggins
From Riel: A Life of Revolution
For those interested in the life of one of the most charismatic, colourful and fascinating characters in Canadian history, I recommend two books. They are Riel: A Life of Revolution, Maggie Siggins, HarperCollins, 1994 and The Trial of Louis Riel by George Goulet.
ON THIS DAY
On November 16, 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state of the United States. This Canadian sends warm regards to all you Sooners out there. On the anniversary of your statehood, I salute you. By the way, you may want to check out my November 4, 2010 blog entry on Oklahoma’s own Will Rogers.
LANGUAGE CORNER
The name Oklahoma is derived from the Choctaw Indian words “okla” meaning "people" and “humma” meaning “red.”
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DIANA KRALL!
Canadian jazz artist, Diana Krall was born on November 16, 1964 in Nanaimo, British Columbia. She is one of my favourites.
To watch a video of Diana performing Cry Me a River, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9y1vGxPVAA
SPORTS
Saturday, November 13, 2010 was another dismal day for Toronto sports teams. The Toronto Maples Leafs lost to the Vancouver Canucks by a score of 5-3. Nazem Kadri suited up for the Leafs and Toronto Star columnist Damien Cox wrote that he “acquitted himself well.” It was not, however, enough to give the Leafs a victory. The Blue and White suffered their 10th defeat in 11 games.
The Toronto Raptors lost yet again, this time to the Miami Heat. They were outscored by the Heat 109 -11 in the Sunshine State. Former Raptor Chris Bosh only had 22 minutes of playing time due to foul trouble.
The only bright spot on the Toronto sports scene over the past weekend was the Toronto Argonauts. They defeated the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Ivor Wynne Stadium by a score of 16-13 to win the Eastern semi-final. They now advance to the Eastern final against the Alouettes in Montreal on Sunday, November 21. If they win that one, it’s on to Edmonton to play in Canada’s national football championship, the Grey Cup. Congratulations to the Argos.
- Joanne
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Palindromes
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2010
QUOTE OF THE DAY
LANGUAGE CORNER
Today’s topic is palindromes. The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines a palindrome as “a word, verse, or sentence or a number that reads the same backward or forward.” According to Merriam-Webster, its first known use was circa 1629.
One of the most famous palindromes was purportedly uttered by Napoleon Bonaparte. It was in reference to his first sighting of the island of Elba where he was exiled in 1814. - Able was I ere I saw Elba. Another popular palindrome is Madam, in Eden I’m Adam. Here is a short list of even more palindromes.
Rats eat no evil star.
Panic in a Titanic, I nap.
Otto made Ned a motto.
Warsaw was raw.
Was it a car or a cat I saw?
We’ll let Dad tell Lew.
The number 1881 is a palindrome.
The words “level” and “racecar” and “kayak” are palindromes.
If you can’t get enough palindromes, you really should check out this website. It is an online journal called The Palindromist. It describes itself as “the world’s greatest palindrome magazine” and “A Journal For People Who WRITE – and read – Palindromes.” Click on the link below to view it.
http://www.realchange.org/pal/
Baseball
The Toronto Blue Jays parted ways with three players today. Edwin Encarnacion was claimed off waivers today by the Oakland Athletics. That means the Jays will have a new third baseman next spring. Although Encarnacion slugged 21 home runs this season, he made quite a few defensive errors. I was often critical of his play, but I have to say that his performance improved after he was sent down to the minors. However, I do not think he was ever the third baseman that the Jays need to compete in the American League East.
Relief pitcher Brian Tallett and backup outfielder Dewayne Wise both opted for free agency instead of a demotion to the Blue Jays’ Triple-A affiliate in Las Vegas.
Congratulations to Jose Bautista for winning a Silver Slugger award. He can add that to growing collection. He also won the Hank Aaron Award as the top slugger in the American League. Will he win American League Most Valuable Player honours? We’ll find out on November 23rd. In the meantime, all I can say is Jose for MVP.
- Joanne
QUOTE OF THE DAY
What is a cynic? A man who know the price of everything and the value of nothing.
- Oscar Wilde
From Lady Windermere’s Fan {1892}, Act III
LANGUAGE CORNER
Today’s topic is palindromes. The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines a palindrome as “a word, verse, or sentence or a number that reads the same backward or forward.” According to Merriam-Webster, its first known use was circa 1629.
One of the most famous palindromes was purportedly uttered by Napoleon Bonaparte. It was in reference to his first sighting of the island of Elba where he was exiled in 1814. - Able was I ere I saw Elba. Another popular palindrome is Madam, in Eden I’m Adam. Here is a short list of even more palindromes.
Rats eat no evil star.
Panic in a Titanic, I nap.
Otto made Ned a motto.
Warsaw was raw.
Was it a car or a cat I saw?
We’ll let Dad tell Lew.
The number 1881 is a palindrome.
The words “level” and “racecar” and “kayak” are palindromes.
If you can’t get enough palindromes, you really should check out this website. It is an online journal called The Palindromist. It describes itself as “the world’s greatest palindrome magazine” and “A Journal For People Who WRITE – and read – Palindromes.” Click on the link below to view it.
http://www.realchange.org/pal/
Baseball
The Toronto Blue Jays parted ways with three players today. Edwin Encarnacion was claimed off waivers today by the Oakland Athletics. That means the Jays will have a new third baseman next spring. Although Encarnacion slugged 21 home runs this season, he made quite a few defensive errors. I was often critical of his play, but I have to say that his performance improved after he was sent down to the minors. However, I do not think he was ever the third baseman that the Jays need to compete in the American League East.
Relief pitcher Brian Tallett and backup outfielder Dewayne Wise both opted for free agency instead of a demotion to the Blue Jays’ Triple-A affiliate in Las Vegas.
Congratulations to Jose Bautista for winning a Silver Slugger award. He can add that to growing collection. He also won the Hank Aaron Award as the top slugger in the American League. Will he win American League Most Valuable Player honours? We’ll find out on November 23rd. In the meantime, all I can say is Jose for MVP.
- Joanne
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Why I Wear a Poppy on Remembrance Day
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2010
Today is Remembrance Day in Canada and in other countries of the Commonwealth. It is known as Veteran’s Day in the United States. The Armistice that ended the First World War was signed on this day in 1918. It happened at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11 month. Here are my reflections on Remembrance Day and on war and peace.
Why I Wear a Poppy on Remembrance Day
Without equivocation, I believe that war is an abomination, a blight upon humanity. Yet every Remembrance Day, I wear a bright red poppy. Here's why. I wear a poppy to honour the memory of those who have suffered and died in war. I also wear it to remind myself of the folly and futility of war. Yes, war may sometimes be necessary to rid the world of a scourge such as Nazism. It may be the only recourse to overcome a madman like Adolf Hitler. However, there is no glamour in war, only hardship, poverty and death. It is not glorious and it is not adventurous. It is unspeakably brutal and it takes the lives of innocent people. It causes untold destruction and it cruelly separates families. It forces its victims away from their homes and into refugee camps. In times of war, the innocent are the most vulnerable and they always suffer the most.
I wear a poppy for those who died in the muddy trenches World War I. The “Great War” was an ugly and unnecessary war. When it began in August of 1914, many thought it would be a grand adventure and that the troops would be home by Christmas. They didn’t realize that such a great number of those eager, youthful combatants would never see their homes again. Sadly, those young people went to war and died because their countries were engaged in a battle for colonies and for military and economic superiority. What a waste of human potential!
I wear a poppy for the victims of World War II and Korea and Vietnam. I wear it for those who suffered under Nazism and fascism and for those who sacrificed their lives to end the reign of those cursed ideologies. I wear it for the victims of Stalin and Mao and all those who currently live under totalitarianism and dictatorship.
I wear a poppy to remember all the women who have been violated by soldiers during wartime. I wear it for the 6 million who perished in the Holocaust and for all the victims of genocide. I wear it for the 300,000 who died in Nanking in 1937 and I wear it for those who lost their lives when the deadly atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I wear it for the victims of Pol Pot and his killing fields. I wear it for the children of war, the babes in arms who begin their lives in poverty and horror. I wear it for the orphans and widows of war. They suffer because the military-industrial complex and arms dealers throughout the world have a vested interest in war. Without it, they would not be so affluent. Their money would be spent on education, health care and the alleviation of poverty.
I wear a poppy to remember the mistakes of history. This is an imperfect world and humans are imperfect creatures. Evil exists and it will take root and spread if we allow it to do so. The only answer is to educate the youth of the world so that they will not support another Adolf Hitler. We must make certain that young people are well-versed in history and that they know the truth about war, genocide and extremism of both the right-wing and the left-wing variety. They must be made aware that extremism leads to death, misery and totalitarianism.
I wear a poppy for the all the victims of terrorism and for their families. I wear it to remember those who perished on September 11, 2001. I wear it for all those who have been maimed and broken by war, both physically and psychologically. I wear it for those who lack basic human rights. I will not forget. On this November 11th and every November 11th, I will remember them all and I will hope for peace.
LANGUAGE CORNER
There are two words in the English language that have all five vowels in order (a e i o u). They are “abstemious” and “facetious.”
SPORTS
What is there but woe for long-suffering Toronto sports fans? The Leafs have just lost seven games in a row. The Florida Panthers defeated them last night by a score of 4-1. Where is their offence? It’s just not there. They have only one win in their last 11 games. The Toronto Raptors also lost yesterday to the Charlotte Bobcats by a score of 101-96. The game was played at the Air Canada Centre before a crowd of only 14,309. Take note, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.
- Joanne
Today is Remembrance Day in Canada and in other countries of the Commonwealth. It is known as Veteran’s Day in the United States. The Armistice that ended the First World War was signed on this day in 1918. It happened at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11 month. Here are my reflections on Remembrance Day and on war and peace.
Why I Wear a Poppy on Remembrance Day
Without equivocation, I believe that war is an abomination, a blight upon humanity. Yet every Remembrance Day, I wear a bright red poppy. Here's why. I wear a poppy to honour the memory of those who have suffered and died in war. I also wear it to remind myself of the folly and futility of war. Yes, war may sometimes be necessary to rid the world of a scourge such as Nazism. It may be the only recourse to overcome a madman like Adolf Hitler. However, there is no glamour in war, only hardship, poverty and death. It is not glorious and it is not adventurous. It is unspeakably brutal and it takes the lives of innocent people. It causes untold destruction and it cruelly separates families. It forces its victims away from their homes and into refugee camps. In times of war, the innocent are the most vulnerable and they always suffer the most.
I wear a poppy for those who died in the muddy trenches World War I. The “Great War” was an ugly and unnecessary war. When it began in August of 1914, many thought it would be a grand adventure and that the troops would be home by Christmas. They didn’t realize that such a great number of those eager, youthful combatants would never see their homes again. Sadly, those young people went to war and died because their countries were engaged in a battle for colonies and for military and economic superiority. What a waste of human potential!
I wear a poppy for the victims of World War II and Korea and Vietnam. I wear it for those who suffered under Nazism and fascism and for those who sacrificed their lives to end the reign of those cursed ideologies. I wear it for the victims of Stalin and Mao and all those who currently live under totalitarianism and dictatorship.
I wear a poppy to remember all the women who have been violated by soldiers during wartime. I wear it for the 6 million who perished in the Holocaust and for all the victims of genocide. I wear it for the 300,000 who died in Nanking in 1937 and I wear it for those who lost their lives when the deadly atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I wear it for the victims of Pol Pot and his killing fields. I wear it for the children of war, the babes in arms who begin their lives in poverty and horror. I wear it for the orphans and widows of war. They suffer because the military-industrial complex and arms dealers throughout the world have a vested interest in war. Without it, they would not be so affluent. Their money would be spent on education, health care and the alleviation of poverty.
I wear a poppy to remember the mistakes of history. This is an imperfect world and humans are imperfect creatures. Evil exists and it will take root and spread if we allow it to do so. The only answer is to educate the youth of the world so that they will not support another Adolf Hitler. We must make certain that young people are well-versed in history and that they know the truth about war, genocide and extremism of both the right-wing and the left-wing variety. They must be made aware that extremism leads to death, misery and totalitarianism.
I wear a poppy for the all the victims of terrorism and for their families. I wear it to remember those who perished on September 11, 2001. I wear it for all those who have been maimed and broken by war, both physically and psychologically. I wear it for those who lack basic human rights. I will not forget. On this November 11th and every November 11th, I will remember them all and I will hope for peace.
LANGUAGE CORNER
There are two words in the English language that have all five vowels in order (a e i o u). They are “abstemious” and “facetious.”
SPORTS
What is there but woe for long-suffering Toronto sports fans? The Leafs have just lost seven games in a row. The Florida Panthers defeated them last night by a score of 4-1. Where is their offence? It’s just not there. They have only one win in their last 11 games. The Toronto Raptors also lost yesterday to the Charlotte Bobcats by a score of 101-96. The game was played at the Air Canada Centre before a crowd of only 14,309. Take note, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.
- Joanne
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
TUDESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2010
NOTE TO READERS OF NUMBER 16
If you are a fan of old television shows and you think you have a good knowledge of them, why don't you test that knowledge. I invite you to go to my other website and do my quiz. It consists of ten questions. I hope you have fun with it. Click on http://www.tvbanter.net/.
- Joanne
NOTE TO READERS OF NUMBER 16
If you are a fan of old television shows and you think you have a good knowledge of them, why don't you test that knowledge. I invite you to go to my other website and do my quiz. It consists of ten questions. I hope you have fun with it. Click on http://www.tvbanter.net/.
- Joanne
Monday, November 8, 2010
Margaret Mitchell and Gone With the Wind
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2010
In 1926, Mitchell left the Atlanta Journal to tend to an injured ankle. She wound up writing an epic novel of the Civil War. The book that Margaret Mitchell wrote "in a week moment" became an instant success and earned a Pulitizer Prize for its relucant scribe. Gone With the Wind was initially titled Another Day and then Tomorrow is Another Day. Its feisty heroine was originally called Pansy O'Hara. Thank goodness, that name was changed to Scarlett. Imagine Rhett and Pansy. Ugh!
In August of 1949, Margaret Mitchell was struck by a car while crossing Peachtree Street in Atlanta with her husband, John Marsh. The couple were on their way to see the British film A Canterbury Tale at The Peachtree Art Theatre. Mitchell never regained consciousness and died five days later on August 16, 1949. She was 48 years old.
I first read Gone With the Wind as a teenager and I was captivated by the sweeping saga of the Old South and the adventures of the headstrong Scarlett O'Hara and that dashing rogue, Rhett Butler. As the years passed, I developed some serious qualms abut the novel. It seems to sympathize with the system of slavery in the South and portrays it in a positive light. I find this very disturbing. I know Gone With the Wind isn't Uncle Tom's Cabin but . . .
To watch a video of Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O’Hara in the acclaimed 1939 movie version of Gone With the Wind (it won 10 Academy Awards), click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUzNiY0FgVE
Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula was born on this day in 1847. He was born Abraham Stoker in Clontarf, Dublin, a coastal suburb just north east of Dublin city in Ireland. Stoker had a keen interest in the theatre and worked as a journalist an drama critic for the Dublin Evening News. In 1878, he married Florence Balcombe, the former girlfriend of fellow Irishman Oscar Wilde. The couple moved to London where Stoker became manager of actor Henry Irving's Lyceum Theatre.
Although Bram Stoker wrote several works of fiction and non-fiction, he is renowned as the author of the classic 1897 Gothic horror novel, Dracula, and will be forever remembered as the father of vampire fiction. He died in London on April 20, 1912 at the age of 64. Were he alive today, I can't help wondering what he would think of the vampire books and movies that are so popular with contemporary youth, especially the Twilight series.
To watch a video of the trailer for the 1931 film Dracula, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Nfmh178L98
LANGUAGE CORNER
Here is a sentence that uses all 26 letters of the alphabet.
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
SPORTS
Football (CFL)
The Toroto Argonauts gained playoff momentum by winning a "nothing game" in Montreal yesterday. They rolled passed the Alouettes at Molson Stadium by a score of 30-4 to finish the 2010 season with a 9-9 record. Now they have a playoff date with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Ivor Wynne Stadium on Sunday
One thing is certain. The Argos will need solid, dependable quatterbacking if thy want to get past the Tabbies, the kind not provided by their regular quarterback. Cleo Lemon has not played well this season, to say the least. After starting the game in Montreal yesterday, he was replaced by Dalton Bell. Bell completed 16-of- 27 passes for 229 yards. With the Argos leading 27-4, Burlington native Danny Branagan came into the game and became the first Canadian quarterback to play for the Argos in years.
Baseball
The Toronto Blue Jays parted ways with closer Kevin Gregg on Thursday. The 32-year-old right-handed pitcher was given a $750,000 (U.S.) buyout. Gregg had a record of 37 saves in 43 chances this season. His ERA was 3.51. That's not a bad record and Gregg's performance during the latter part of the season improved. However, I do not think he will ever be the closer the Blue Jays need to compete in the playoffs and the World Series. The Jays have not ruled out his return in 2011.
- Joanne
In a week moment, I have written a book. . .Well fiddle-dee-dee, Scarlett O’Hara. Today is the 110th anniversary of the birth of Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind. Margaret Mitchell was born on November 8, 1900 in Atlanta, Georgia. As a child, she was enthralled by the harrowing tales told to her by elderly survivors of the American Civil War. Known as Peggy Mitchell, she grew up to become a features writer for the Atlanta Journal.
- Margaret Mitchell, in a 1935 letter, a year before the 1936 publication of Gone With the Wind.
In 1926, Mitchell left the Atlanta Journal to tend to an injured ankle. She wound up writing an epic novel of the Civil War. The book that Margaret Mitchell wrote "in a week moment" became an instant success and earned a Pulitizer Prize for its relucant scribe. Gone With the Wind was initially titled Another Day and then Tomorrow is Another Day. Its feisty heroine was originally called Pansy O'Hara. Thank goodness, that name was changed to Scarlett. Imagine Rhett and Pansy. Ugh!
In August of 1949, Margaret Mitchell was struck by a car while crossing Peachtree Street in Atlanta with her husband, John Marsh. The couple were on their way to see the British film A Canterbury Tale at The Peachtree Art Theatre. Mitchell never regained consciousness and died five days later on August 16, 1949. She was 48 years old.
I first read Gone With the Wind as a teenager and I was captivated by the sweeping saga of the Old South and the adventures of the headstrong Scarlett O'Hara and that dashing rogue, Rhett Butler. As the years passed, I developed some serious qualms abut the novel. It seems to sympathize with the system of slavery in the South and portrays it in a positive light. I find this very disturbing. I know Gone With the Wind isn't Uncle Tom's Cabin but . . .
To watch a video of Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O’Hara in the acclaimed 1939 movie version of Gone With the Wind (it won 10 Academy Awards), click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUzNiY0FgVE
Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula was born on this day in 1847. He was born Abraham Stoker in Clontarf, Dublin, a coastal suburb just north east of Dublin city in Ireland. Stoker had a keen interest in the theatre and worked as a journalist an drama critic for the Dublin Evening News. In 1878, he married Florence Balcombe, the former girlfriend of fellow Irishman Oscar Wilde. The couple moved to London where Stoker became manager of actor Henry Irving's Lyceum Theatre.
Although Bram Stoker wrote several works of fiction and non-fiction, he is renowned as the author of the classic 1897 Gothic horror novel, Dracula, and will be forever remembered as the father of vampire fiction. He died in London on April 20, 1912 at the age of 64. Were he alive today, I can't help wondering what he would think of the vampire books and movies that are so popular with contemporary youth, especially the Twilight series.
To watch a video of the trailer for the 1931 film Dracula, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Nfmh178L98
LANGUAGE CORNER
Here is a sentence that uses all 26 letters of the alphabet.
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
SPORTS
Football (CFL)
The Toroto Argonauts gained playoff momentum by winning a "nothing game" in Montreal yesterday. They rolled passed the Alouettes at Molson Stadium by a score of 30-4 to finish the 2010 season with a 9-9 record. Now they have a playoff date with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Ivor Wynne Stadium on Sunday
One thing is certain. The Argos will need solid, dependable quatterbacking if thy want to get past the Tabbies, the kind not provided by their regular quarterback. Cleo Lemon has not played well this season, to say the least. After starting the game in Montreal yesterday, he was replaced by Dalton Bell. Bell completed 16-of- 27 passes for 229 yards. With the Argos leading 27-4, Burlington native Danny Branagan came into the game and became the first Canadian quarterback to play for the Argos in years.
Baseball
The Toronto Blue Jays parted ways with closer Kevin Gregg on Thursday. The 32-year-old right-handed pitcher was given a $750,000 (U.S.) buyout. Gregg had a record of 37 saves in 43 chances this season. His ERA was 3.51. That's not a bad record and Gregg's performance during the latter part of the season improved. However, I do not think he will ever be the closer the Blue Jays need to compete in the playoffs and the World Series. The Jays have not ruled out his return in 2011.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Guy Fawkes Day
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2010
Remember, remember, the 5th of November
The Gunpowder Treason and plot ;
I know of no reason why Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot.
Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes,
'Twas his intent.
To blow up the King and the Parliament.
Three score barrels of powder below.
Poor old England to overthrow.
By God's providence he was catch'd,
With a dark lantern and burning match
Holloa boys, Holloa boys, let the bells ring
Holloa boys, Holloa boys, God save the King!
Hip hip Hoorah !
Hip hip Hoorah !
A penny loaf to feed ol' Pope,
A farthing cheese to choke him.
A pint of beer to rinse it down,
A faggot of sticks to burn him.
Burn him in a tub of tar,
Burn him like a blazing star.
Burn his body from his head,
Then we'll say: ol' Pope is dead.
- Traditional British Guy Fawkes Day chant
ON THIS DAY
Okay Sixteeners, come along with me to the England of 1605 and we’ll travel to another world (at least from the point of view of most countries in the 21st century). We'll visit another era with different sensibilities, a time when there was no freedom of religion in England. Roman Catholics could not openly practise their faith. They were bound by law to attend the services of the Church of England. Catholic Masses had to be celebrated in secret. Those who refused to attend Anglican services faced fines, imprisonment and the confiscation of their property.
In November of 1605, James I was the King of England. James was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots who had been executed in 1587 for plotting against her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I of England. James arrived from Scotland in 1603 to ascend to the English throne after the death of the childless Elizabeth. Against this backdrop, a group of Catholics concocted a plot to blow up the Parliament buildings with gunpowder and kill James I and his family. Their purpose was to restore a Catholic monarch to the throne.
The plot was thwarted when Guy Fawkes (also known as Guido Fawkes) was caught with the gunpowder. The conspirators had stockpiled the explosives in a secret place beneath the House of Lords. In the early hours of November 5, 1605, authorities, acting on a tip from an anonymous letter, searched Westminster and discovered Guy Fawkes guarding over the gunpowder. Fawkes was arrested, questioned and tortured. On January 31, 1606, he faced execution. He dramatically jumped from the scaffold from which he was to be hanged and broke his neck.
Guy Fawkes Day is commemorated in England every November 5th with bonfires and fireworks. The unfortunate Guy Fawkes is burned in effigy. Although Fawkes is forever linked with the Gunpowder Plot, he was not the leader or the driving force. It was a man named Robert Catesby who really set the plot in motion. British historian Antonia Fraser points this out in an excellent book on the Gunpowder Plot entitled Faith and Treason: The Story of the Gunpowder Plot. I recommend it
To watch a video about Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot, click on the link below.
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7235458-guy-fawkes-night-november-5-still-celebrated-around-the-world
LANGUAGE CORNER
“Dreamt” is the only word in the English language that ends in “mt.”
SPORTS
REST IN PEACE, SPARKY ANDERSON
Yesterday, baseball lost a great one. George “Sparky” Anderson died at the age of 76 at his home in Thousand Oaks, California. He suffered from dementia.
Sparky was one of the best managers in the game. He led Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine to two World Series victories in 1975 and 1976. He won a third World Series in 1984 as manager of the Detroit Tigers and became the first manager in the history of Major League Baseball to win the championship of both the National League and the American League. Tony La Russa later accomplished the same feat.
Sparky Anderson retired from managing at the end of the 1995 season with 2,194 wins to his credit and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown in the year 2000. He wears the cap of the Cincinnati Reds in his Hall of Fame portrait.
Sparky had a strong connection to Canada. He spent six seasons playing minor-league ball here. In 1956 and 1958, he played for the Montreal Royals, the Triple-A affiliate of the Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1958, the feisty second baseman helped the Royals win their final International League title. Sparky also played four seasons for the Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League. It was Leafs owner Jack Kent Cooke who noticed his abilities and encouraged him to become a manager.
At the end of the 1963 season Sparky Anderson retired as a player. In 1964, at the age of 30, he made his managerial debut with Toronto. Even though the team had a record of 80-72, he was fired. In 2007, Sparky Anderson was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.
Sparky acquired his nickname in the minors due to his spirited play. We’ll miss the man with the shock of white hair and the rugged face.
- Joanne
Remember, remember, the 5th of November
The Gunpowder Treason and plot ;
I know of no reason why Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot.
Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes,
'Twas his intent.
To blow up the King and the Parliament.
Three score barrels of powder below.
Poor old England to overthrow.
By God's providence he was catch'd,
With a dark lantern and burning match
Holloa boys, Holloa boys, let the bells ring
Holloa boys, Holloa boys, God save the King!
Hip hip Hoorah !
Hip hip Hoorah !
A penny loaf to feed ol' Pope,
A farthing cheese to choke him.
A pint of beer to rinse it down,
A faggot of sticks to burn him.
Burn him in a tub of tar,
Burn him like a blazing star.
Burn his body from his head,
Then we'll say: ol' Pope is dead.
- Traditional British Guy Fawkes Day chant
ON THIS DAY
Okay Sixteeners, come along with me to the England of 1605 and we’ll travel to another world (at least from the point of view of most countries in the 21st century). We'll visit another era with different sensibilities, a time when there was no freedom of religion in England. Roman Catholics could not openly practise their faith. They were bound by law to attend the services of the Church of England. Catholic Masses had to be celebrated in secret. Those who refused to attend Anglican services faced fines, imprisonment and the confiscation of their property.
In November of 1605, James I was the King of England. James was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots who had been executed in 1587 for plotting against her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I of England. James arrived from Scotland in 1603 to ascend to the English throne after the death of the childless Elizabeth. Against this backdrop, a group of Catholics concocted a plot to blow up the Parliament buildings with gunpowder and kill James I and his family. Their purpose was to restore a Catholic monarch to the throne.
The plot was thwarted when Guy Fawkes (also known as Guido Fawkes) was caught with the gunpowder. The conspirators had stockpiled the explosives in a secret place beneath the House of Lords. In the early hours of November 5, 1605, authorities, acting on a tip from an anonymous letter, searched Westminster and discovered Guy Fawkes guarding over the gunpowder. Fawkes was arrested, questioned and tortured. On January 31, 1606, he faced execution. He dramatically jumped from the scaffold from which he was to be hanged and broke his neck.
Guy Fawkes Day is commemorated in England every November 5th with bonfires and fireworks. The unfortunate Guy Fawkes is burned in effigy. Although Fawkes is forever linked with the Gunpowder Plot, he was not the leader or the driving force. It was a man named Robert Catesby who really set the plot in motion. British historian Antonia Fraser points this out in an excellent book on the Gunpowder Plot entitled Faith and Treason: The Story of the Gunpowder Plot. I recommend it
To watch a video about Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot, click on the link below.
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7235458-guy-fawkes-night-november-5-still-celebrated-around-the-world
LANGUAGE CORNER
“Dreamt” is the only word in the English language that ends in “mt.”
SPORTS
REST IN PEACE, SPARKY ANDERSON
Yesterday, baseball lost a great one. George “Sparky” Anderson died at the age of 76 at his home in Thousand Oaks, California. He suffered from dementia.
Sparky was one of the best managers in the game. He led Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine to two World Series victories in 1975 and 1976. He won a third World Series in 1984 as manager of the Detroit Tigers and became the first manager in the history of Major League Baseball to win the championship of both the National League and the American League. Tony La Russa later accomplished the same feat.
Sparky Anderson retired from managing at the end of the 1995 season with 2,194 wins to his credit and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown in the year 2000. He wears the cap of the Cincinnati Reds in his Hall of Fame portrait.
Sparky had a strong connection to Canada. He spent six seasons playing minor-league ball here. In 1956 and 1958, he played for the Montreal Royals, the Triple-A affiliate of the Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1958, the feisty second baseman helped the Royals win their final International League title. Sparky also played four seasons for the Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League. It was Leafs owner Jack Kent Cooke who noticed his abilities and encouraged him to become a manager.
At the end of the 1963 season Sparky Anderson retired as a player. In 1964, at the age of 30, he made his managerial debut with Toronto. Even though the team had a record of 80-72, he was fired. In 2007, Sparky Anderson was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.
Sparky acquired his nickname in the minors due to his spirited play. We’ll miss the man with the shock of white hair and the rugged face.
- Joanne
Thursday, November 4, 2010
WILL ROGERS, SON OF OKLAHOMA
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2010
QUOTES OF THE DAY
Today I present to you three quotes from the American humourist and showman, Will Rogers.
William Penn Adair Rogers was born on November 4, 1879 in what is now Oklahoma. He was a comedian, a cowboy, a social commentator and a vaudeville performer. He wrote a syndicated newspaper column and was a popular radio personality during the 1930s with a weekly Sunday show.
A man of many pursuits, Will Rogers was a lecturer and a world traveller. He became an advocate of the aviation industry and a friend of Charles Lindbergh.
Will Rogers died in a plane crash in Alaska on August 15, 1935 while accompanying famed aviator Wiley Post on a flight. The two men got caught in poor weather and lost control of the plane. It crashed into a lagoon near Port Barrow and both men perished. Will Rogers was 55 years old and he was "Oklahoma's favourite son."
To hear the voice of Will Rogers on the radio talking about unemployment, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SY1KYaCYh4M
LANGUAGE CORNER
To my knowledge, there are four words in the English language that do not rhyme with any other words. These four words are:
1. orange
2. purple
3. silver
4. month
Isn’t it interesting that three of the four words are names of colours?
NOTE : If you can think of any other words that do not rhyme with anything, I’d certainly like you to contact me.
SPORTS
Hockey
The Toronto Maple Leafs have lost the services of captain Dion Phaneuf for at least a month due to injury. Phaneuf has a deep laceration on his left leg. The Leafs played well last night, but they still lost 5-4 in a shootout to the Washington Capitals.
- Joanne
QUOTES OF THE DAY
Today I present to you three quotes from the American humourist and showman, Will Rogers.
Everything is funny as long as it is happening to somebody else.
- Will Rogers
Illiterate Digest (1924), “Warning to jokers: lay off the prince”
Politics has got so expensive that it takes lots of money to even get beat with.
- Will Rogers
Syndicated newspaper article (June 28, 1931)
Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life trying to save.
- Will Rogers
Letter in The New York Times (April 29, 1930)
William Penn Adair Rogers was born on November 4, 1879 in what is now Oklahoma. He was a comedian, a cowboy, a social commentator and a vaudeville performer. He wrote a syndicated newspaper column and was a popular radio personality during the 1930s with a weekly Sunday show.
A man of many pursuits, Will Rogers was a lecturer and a world traveller. He became an advocate of the aviation industry and a friend of Charles Lindbergh.
Will Rogers died in a plane crash in Alaska on August 15, 1935 while accompanying famed aviator Wiley Post on a flight. The two men got caught in poor weather and lost control of the plane. It crashed into a lagoon near Port Barrow and both men perished. Will Rogers was 55 years old and he was "Oklahoma's favourite son."
To hear the voice of Will Rogers on the radio talking about unemployment, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SY1KYaCYh4M
LANGUAGE CORNER
To my knowledge, there are four words in the English language that do not rhyme with any other words. These four words are:
1. orange
2. purple
3. silver
4. month
Isn’t it interesting that three of the four words are names of colours?
NOTE : If you can think of any other words that do not rhyme with anything, I’d certainly like you to contact me.
SPORTS
Hockey
The Toronto Maple Leafs have lost the services of captain Dion Phaneuf for at least a month due to injury. Phaneuf has a deep laceration on his left leg. The Leafs played well last night, but they still lost 5-4 in a shootout to the Washington Capitals.
- Joanne
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2010
QUOTE OF THE DAY
Some people consider November to be hauntingly beautiful. I have also heard it referred to as the “death month”. I suppose it is necessary to go through the sombreness of November to get to the brightness of Christmas.
I try to make the best of November, but I’m still glad it only lasts for 30 days instead of 31.
ON THIS DAY
Marie-Antoinette was born on November 2, 1755. She was Austrian, not French, and she never said, “Let them eat cake.” Her name at birth was Maria Antonia Josepha Johanna von Hapsburg-Lothringen and she was the Archduchess of Austria. She was born at the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, Austria, the fifteenth child of the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I and his wife Empress Maria Theresa. Marie-Antoinette was only 37 years old when she was executed by guillotine in Paris on October 16, 1793. The place of her execution is now known as the Place de la Concorde.
All the publicity, the attention, the interviews, the photographs, were too much for me.
- Johnny Vander Meer (describing how he felt about all the attention he received after throwing his second no-hitter)', AP Wire, 1939
Baseball’s Johnny Vander Meer was born on November 2, 1914 in Midland Park, New Jersey. His nickname was The Dutch Master. Vander Meer was a left-handed pitcher and for most of his career he played for the Cincinnati Reds (1937-1949, served in the Navy from 1944-45)). He is the only pitcher in major league history to pitch no-hitters in two consecutive starts. On June 11, 1938, the southpaw pitched a no-hitter for the Reds against the Boston Braves at Crosley Field in Cincinnati. Four nights later, on June 15, he pitched another no-hitter against the Brooklyn Dodgers in the very first night game at Ebbets Field. Vander Meer won 15 games in that 1938 season. He won the most games of his career in 1942 when he recorded 18 victories.
John Samuel Vander Meer played his final game on May 7, 1951 and died in Tampa, Florida on October 6, 1997 at the age of 82. The cause of death was an abdominal aneurysm. His record of two consecutive no-hitters is not likely to be broken any time soon.
MIDTERM ELECTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES
Our neighbours south of the border go to the polls today in crucial midterm elections. The Democrats are not expected to do well. I realize I am not an American citizen, but what happens in the United States affects Canada and the rest of the world. On that basis, I feel quite entitled to express my opinion.
I don’t agree with the politics of the Tea Party movement at all. It can’t be dismissed because it is a populist movement and many Americans support it. However, their ideas and their powerful hatred of government repulse me. We just don’t have the same view of the world.
Let’s begin with the name of this right-wing grass roots movement. The Boston Tea Party was certainly a protest against a tax, but it was a tax imposed by Britain – not the Thirteen Colonies. Tea Partiers complain about the high deficit and government spending. However, it was the “conservative” government of George W. Bush that put the United States in such deep debt with its spending on war and on tax cuts for the most wealthy.
Tea Partiers are angry at government. They should be angry with all the greed on Wall Street. They should take umbrage at those who took advantage of the deregulation and unbridled capitalism that Ronald Reagan introduced in the 1980s. They are the ones who subjected Anerucans to sub prime mortgages and hedge funds. They caused the Great Recession of 2008. They caused untold suffering and high unemployment around the world. They are responsible for people losing their homes and their jobs and for pensioners suffering the loss of their retirement savings.
President Barack Obama inherited a huge mess, the worst economic slump since The Great Depression. He could not have cleaned it up in the 21 months he has been in office. He is not a magician. It is impossible to recover from such an economic down slide overnight. The Tea Partiers portray Obama as some kind of radical socialist. He is not anything of the sort. His stimulus spending has worked. The American economy would be in worse shape if Obama had not taken tthe measures he did. Thanks to Obama, many who did not have health coverage before have it now.
Barack Obama advocated tax increases for those making over $200,000 a year. That’s not communism. That’s just a fairer and more equitable society. The Republican Party has swung too far to the radical right. The G.O.P. is no longer the party of Dwight Eisenhower and it hasn’t been for quite a long time.
I've said it before and I'll say it again. The best societies have both individual initiative and a sense of community to protect the weak and the vulnerable. One without the other is not conducive to a just and prosperous society for all. Capitalism needs safeguards. It needs regulation to protect it from the ravages of human avarice. Adam Smith's so-called "invisible hand" really is invisible. It doesn't exist.
SPORTS
Baseball
Well, it was not the most exciting World Series, but the San Francisco Giants won it and they are thrilled with the victory, thank you very much. They took 52 long years to win the “October” Classic and they won it on November 1, 2010. Nevertheless, they are World Series champions (not “world champions” as Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig referred to them). They defeated the Texas Rangers last night by a score of 3-1 to take the Series 4 games to 1. Congratulations to the San Francisco Giants and their fans.
- Joanne
QUOTE OF THE DAY
No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,I have to admit that I identify with the sentiments of Thomas Hood. Never have I been a fan of the month of November. My problem with the eleventh month of the year is that it becomes dark too early in the day. That is why I yearn for daylight saving time all year round. I must have Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).
No comfortable feel in any member –
No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,
No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds,
November!
- Thomas Hood
From the poem No
Some people consider November to be hauntingly beautiful. I have also heard it referred to as the “death month”. I suppose it is necessary to go through the sombreness of November to get to the brightness of Christmas.
I try to make the best of November, but I’m still glad it only lasts for 30 days instead of 31.
ON THIS DAY
Marie-Antoinette was born on November 2, 1755. She was Austrian, not French, and she never said, “Let them eat cake.” Her name at birth was Maria Antonia Josepha Johanna von Hapsburg-Lothringen and she was the Archduchess of Austria. She was born at the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, Austria, the fifteenth child of the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I and his wife Empress Maria Theresa. Marie-Antoinette was only 37 years old when she was executed by guillotine in Paris on October 16, 1793. The place of her execution is now known as the Place de la Concorde.
All the publicity, the attention, the interviews, the photographs, were too much for me.
- Johnny Vander Meer (describing how he felt about all the attention he received after throwing his second no-hitter)', AP Wire, 1939
Baseball’s Johnny Vander Meer was born on November 2, 1914 in Midland Park, New Jersey. His nickname was The Dutch Master. Vander Meer was a left-handed pitcher and for most of his career he played for the Cincinnati Reds (1937-1949, served in the Navy from 1944-45)). He is the only pitcher in major league history to pitch no-hitters in two consecutive starts. On June 11, 1938, the southpaw pitched a no-hitter for the Reds against the Boston Braves at Crosley Field in Cincinnati. Four nights later, on June 15, he pitched another no-hitter against the Brooklyn Dodgers in the very first night game at Ebbets Field. Vander Meer won 15 games in that 1938 season. He won the most games of his career in 1942 when he recorded 18 victories.
John Samuel Vander Meer played his final game on May 7, 1951 and died in Tampa, Florida on October 6, 1997 at the age of 82. The cause of death was an abdominal aneurysm. His record of two consecutive no-hitters is not likely to be broken any time soon.
MIDTERM ELECTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES
Our neighbours south of the border go to the polls today in crucial midterm elections. The Democrats are not expected to do well. I realize I am not an American citizen, but what happens in the United States affects Canada and the rest of the world. On that basis, I feel quite entitled to express my opinion.
I don’t agree with the politics of the Tea Party movement at all. It can’t be dismissed because it is a populist movement and many Americans support it. However, their ideas and their powerful hatred of government repulse me. We just don’t have the same view of the world.
Let’s begin with the name of this right-wing grass roots movement. The Boston Tea Party was certainly a protest against a tax, but it was a tax imposed by Britain – not the Thirteen Colonies. Tea Partiers complain about the high deficit and government spending. However, it was the “conservative” government of George W. Bush that put the United States in such deep debt with its spending on war and on tax cuts for the most wealthy.
Tea Partiers are angry at government. They should be angry with all the greed on Wall Street. They should take umbrage at those who took advantage of the deregulation and unbridled capitalism that Ronald Reagan introduced in the 1980s. They are the ones who subjected Anerucans to sub prime mortgages and hedge funds. They caused the Great Recession of 2008. They caused untold suffering and high unemployment around the world. They are responsible for people losing their homes and their jobs and for pensioners suffering the loss of their retirement savings.
President Barack Obama inherited a huge mess, the worst economic slump since The Great Depression. He could not have cleaned it up in the 21 months he has been in office. He is not a magician. It is impossible to recover from such an economic down slide overnight. The Tea Partiers portray Obama as some kind of radical socialist. He is not anything of the sort. His stimulus spending has worked. The American economy would be in worse shape if Obama had not taken tthe measures he did. Thanks to Obama, many who did not have health coverage before have it now.
Barack Obama advocated tax increases for those making over $200,000 a year. That’s not communism. That’s just a fairer and more equitable society. The Republican Party has swung too far to the radical right. The G.O.P. is no longer the party of Dwight Eisenhower and it hasn’t been for quite a long time.
I've said it before and I'll say it again. The best societies have both individual initiative and a sense of community to protect the weak and the vulnerable. One without the other is not conducive to a just and prosperous society for all. Capitalism needs safeguards. It needs regulation to protect it from the ravages of human avarice. Adam Smith's so-called "invisible hand" really is invisible. It doesn't exist.
SPORTS
Baseball
Well, it was not the most exciting World Series, but the San Francisco Giants won it and they are thrilled with the victory, thank you very much. They took 52 long years to win the “October” Classic and they won it on November 1, 2010. Nevertheless, they are World Series champions (not “world champions” as Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig referred to them). They defeated the Texas Rangers last night by a score of 3-1 to take the Series 4 games to 1. Congratulations to the San Francisco Giants and their fans.
- Joanne
Sunday, October 31, 2010
All About Halloween
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2010
HAPPY HALLOWEEN
On this last day of October, I wish you a Happy Halloween.
As a Halloween gift to you, I have written a short story. Just press the “Fiction” tab above on this webpage to read The Eerie Mrs. Healy.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
Here are some Halloween quotes for you. Hope you enjoy them.
One need not be a chamber to be haunted;
One need not be a house;
The brain has corridors surpassing
Material place.
- Emily Dickinson
- From One Need Not Be A Chamber To Be Haunted
‘Tis now the witching time of night.
When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out
Contagion to this world
William Shakespeare
From Hamlet
Just like a ghost, you’ve been a-hauntin’ my dreams,
So I’ll propose . . . on Halloween.
Love is kinda crazy with a spooky little girl like you.
From the Classics IV song, Spooky; Songwriters : J.R. Cobb, Mike Shapiro, Harry Middlebrooks and Buddy Buie
To watch a video with the song Spooky, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUf4F9VXo_s
A grandmother pretends she doesn’t know who you are on Halloween.
- Erma Bombeck
LANGUAGE CORNER
The word "Halloween" is a shortened form of "Hallow-Even", the evening before Hallows Day or All Saints Day ( November 1). "Hallow" is an old English word meaning to make holy or consecrated.
RIDDLE ME THIS
What did one jack-o'-lantern say to the other jack-o'-lantern?
ANSWER
Cut that out!
(Courtesy of Hockey Night in Canada's Ron MacLean, the king of silly puns.)
SPORTS
Baseball
Well, Texas is back in it! They won Game 3 of the World Series in home territory in the Lone Star State. The Texas Rangers defeated the San Francisco Giants 4-2. We’ll see what happens in Game 3 tonight.
- Joanne
HAPPY HALLOWEEN
On this last day of October, I wish you a Happy Halloween.
As a Halloween gift to you, I have written a short story. Just press the “Fiction” tab above on this webpage to read The Eerie Mrs. Healy.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
Here are some Halloween quotes for you. Hope you enjoy them.
One need not be a chamber to be haunted;
One need not be a house;
The brain has corridors surpassing
Material place.
- Emily Dickinson
- From One Need Not Be A Chamber To Be Haunted
‘Tis now the witching time of night.
When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out
Contagion to this world
William Shakespeare
From Hamlet
Just like a ghost, you’ve been a-hauntin’ my dreams,
So I’ll propose . . . on Halloween.
Love is kinda crazy with a spooky little girl like you.
From the Classics IV song, Spooky; Songwriters : J.R. Cobb, Mike Shapiro, Harry Middlebrooks and Buddy Buie
To watch a video with the song Spooky, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUf4F9VXo_s
A grandmother pretends she doesn’t know who you are on Halloween.
- Erma Bombeck
LANGUAGE CORNER
The word "Halloween" is a shortened form of "Hallow-Even", the evening before Hallows Day or All Saints Day ( November 1). "Hallow" is an old English word meaning to make holy or consecrated.
RIDDLE ME THIS
What did one jack-o'-lantern say to the other jack-o'-lantern?
ANSWER
Cut that out!
(Courtesy of Hockey Night in Canada's Ron MacLean, the king of silly puns.)
SPORTS
Baseball
Well, Texas is back in it! They won Game 3 of the World Series in home territory in the Lone Star State. The Texas Rangers defeated the San Francisco Giants 4-2. We’ll see what happens in Game 3 tonight.
- Joanne
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Halloween
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2010
A HALLOWEEN TREAT TO YOU FROM ME
Tomorrow is All Hallow's Eve, the day before All Saints Day. As a Halloween treat for you, I have written a short story. To read my story, please click the "Fiction" button above.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
From ghoulies and ghosties and long-
leggety beasties
And things that go bump in the night,
Good Lord, deliver us!
- Scottish prayer
Football (CFL)
Last night I attended the Toronto Argonaut game at the dome. It was an entertaining game, but the Argos lost a game they should have won. Once again, they snatched defeat fron the jaws of vicory. I was among the 22,477 fans at the former SkyDome who witnessed one of the craziest plays in CFL history in the dying seconds of the game. The Argos and the Montreal Alouettes were tied 30-30 and Montreal attempted a 36-yard field goal. However, Montreal's Damon Duval kicked the ball wide. Then, a comedy of errors ensued involving two Toronto players who were waiting in the end zone. Somehow, when the dust was cleared, Montreal had scored a touch down . They won the game 37-30.
Baseball
The San Francisco Giants are in firm command of this World Series. They lead 2 game to 0 as the stage moves to Arlington for Game Three. Texas could still pull a rabbit out of the hat, but I wouldn't bet against the Giants now,
- Joanne
A HALLOWEEN TREAT TO YOU FROM ME
Tomorrow is All Hallow's Eve, the day before All Saints Day. As a Halloween treat for you, I have written a short story. To read my story, please click the "Fiction" button above.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
From ghoulies and ghosties and long-
leggety beasties
And things that go bump in the night,
Good Lord, deliver us!
- Scottish prayer
Football (CFL)
Last night I attended the Toronto Argonaut game at the dome. It was an entertaining game, but the Argos lost a game they should have won. Once again, they snatched defeat fron the jaws of vicory. I was among the 22,477 fans at the former SkyDome who witnessed one of the craziest plays in CFL history in the dying seconds of the game. The Argos and the Montreal Alouettes were tied 30-30 and Montreal attempted a 36-yard field goal. However, Montreal's Damon Duval kicked the ball wide. Then, a comedy of errors ensued involving two Toronto players who were waiting in the end zone. Somehow, when the dust was cleared, Montreal had scored a touch down . They won the game 37-30.
Baseball
The San Francisco Giants are in firm command of this World Series. They lead 2 game to 0 as the stage moves to Arlington for Game Three. Texas could still pull a rabbit out of the hat, but I wouldn't bet against the Giants now,
- Joanne
Thursday, October 28, 2010
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2010
NOTICE TO READERS OF NUMBER 16
I have started a second website on the subject of television trivia. If you are a fan of old and current television shows, check out TV Banter at http://www.tvbanter.net/.
ON THIS DAY
On October 28, 1858, a dry goods store opened on the corner of 14th Street and 6th Avenue in New York City. It would become one of the largest department store retailers in the world. The name of that store was R.H. Macy & Co. and its founder was 36-year-old Rowland Hussey Macy, a Quaker businessman. Macy, born on Nantucket Island in Massachusetts, was a whaler turned shopkeeper. He used a red star as his symbol of good fortune, a throwback to his days as a sailor.
First-day sales at the new establishment were $11.06. At the end of its first complete year of operation, Macy’s sales grossed almost $90,000. By 1877, Macy’s had become a bona fide department store filling up the ground space of 11 adjacent buildings.
We do not have Macy’s here in Canada and I have never entered the famed Manhattan store. I visited New York City several times in the 1980s but never ventured into Macy’s. I did go to the Macy’s store in Erie, Pennsylvania this past summer.
SPORTS
Basketball
The Toronto Raptors lost their first game of the season yesterday to the New York Knicks by a score of 98- 93. Well, at least the Miami Heat and prima donnas Chris Bosh and King James lost their first game too.
Baseball
I'm pleased that the San Francisco Giants pounded the Texas Rangers by a score of 11-7 in Game 1 of the World Series last night. Did you catch 84-year-old Tony Bennett belting out God Bless America at the game? Wasn't he great? He certainly did leave his heart in the "City by the Bay." Bravo, Tony!
If you didn't see Tony Bennett singing at the World Series, just click the link below to view a video of his performance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiaTuiQ4Ffs&feature=player_embedded
- Joanne
NOTICE TO READERS OF NUMBER 16
I have started a second website on the subject of television trivia. If you are a fan of old and current television shows, check out TV Banter at http://www.tvbanter.net/.
ON THIS DAY
On October 28, 1858, a dry goods store opened on the corner of 14th Street and 6th Avenue in New York City. It would become one of the largest department store retailers in the world. The name of that store was R.H. Macy & Co. and its founder was 36-year-old Rowland Hussey Macy, a Quaker businessman. Macy, born on Nantucket Island in Massachusetts, was a whaler turned shopkeeper. He used a red star as his symbol of good fortune, a throwback to his days as a sailor.
First-day sales at the new establishment were $11.06. At the end of its first complete year of operation, Macy’s sales grossed almost $90,000. By 1877, Macy’s had become a bona fide department store filling up the ground space of 11 adjacent buildings.
We do not have Macy’s here in Canada and I have never entered the famed Manhattan store. I visited New York City several times in the 1980s but never ventured into Macy’s. I did go to the Macy’s store in Erie, Pennsylvania this past summer.
SPORTS
Basketball
The Toronto Raptors lost their first game of the season yesterday to the New York Knicks by a score of 98- 93. Well, at least the Miami Heat and prima donnas Chris Bosh and King James lost their first game too.
Baseball
I'm pleased that the San Francisco Giants pounded the Texas Rangers by a score of 11-7 in Game 1 of the World Series last night. Did you catch 84-year-old Tony Bennett belting out God Bless America at the game? Wasn't he great? He certainly did leave his heart in the "City by the Bay." Bravo, Tony!
If you didn't see Tony Bennett singing at the World Series, just click the link below to view a video of his performance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiaTuiQ4Ffs&feature=player_embedded
- Joanne
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Dylan Thomas
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2010
Dylan Marlais Thomas was born in Swansea, Wales on October 27, 1914. If he were alive today, the great poet and writer would be 96 years old. Sadly, he died in New York City at the age of 39. He arrived in the Big Apple on October 20, 1953 to take part in a performance of his radio play Under the Milk Wood at New York’s Poetry Centre. He became ill in New York and died there on November 9, 1953.
To watch a video with Dylan Thomas reading Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night, click on the link.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyWiE1vNSxU&NR=1
TALKING ABOUT TORONTO
Here are some thoughts in the aftermath of Toronto’s mayoral election. Yes, I am disappointed that Rob Ford has been elected mayor of our fair city. However, the people have spoken. That’s what democracy is all about. I don’t think it’s helpful to just dismiss him as buffoon or ridicule him. It is far better to determine why his simplistic message resonated with so many Torontonians.
Our city councillors have not set a good example of fiscal responsibility. Even if it’s a drop in the bucket, perception is everything. That is why many taxpayers feel they are not being respected. However, Rob Ford wants to throw out the baby with the bathwater.
Ridiculing Ford only serves to make him and his supporters more resolute. However, by the same token, it is also not helpful for Ford’s adherents to label those who disagree with their man as “downtown elites." Ford would do well to remember that he will be mayor of all the people, not just suburbanites and Toronto Sun readers.
I strongly disagree with Ford’s ideas. He doesn’t have a vision. He is a one-trick pony who repeats his “stop the gravy train” mantra ad infinitum. He wants to cut and chop like a mad lumberjack. He wants to bring out the wrecking ball. I wonder how he is going to do that without sacrificing the vital services we enjoy in this city. How is he going to cut taxes and pay for the subways he says he wants to build? Is he a magician? Sure, some new subways should be built, but we should not abandon our streetcars as Ford advocates.
Yes, there has been some wasteful spending. There should be better management of our tax dollars, but Instead of putting the city on a healthy diet, Rob Ford wants to starve this great metropolis. Or at the very least, his cuts may cause Toronto to become weak and anorexic. Finally, Rob Ford’s attitude toward immigrants is very disturbing to me. He says we don’t need any newcomers. However, he should remember that Toronto’s motto is “Diversity our strength.”
SPORTS
Hockey
The Toronto Maple Leafs are back in the win column. After three successive losses, the Leafs defeated the Florida Panthers by a score of 3-1 at the Air Canada Centre last night.
Baseball
The 2010 World Series begins today in San Francisco. The Giants have home field advantage due to the victory of the National League in this year’s All-Star Game. This “October Classic” will finish in November. That is much too late. I agree with those who say that the regular season should begin a week earlier. Some of those ballparks in the northern U.S. can get quite frigid at the beginning of November. Of course, the next time the Blue Jays play in the World Series (I hope in my lifetime), we will be in the warmth of the dome with a retractable roof over our heads.
I am opposed to increasing the number of playoff games. I do not want Major League Baseball to become like the National Hockey League in which the playoff season seems almost as long as the regular season and the Stanley Cup Final is contested in June. I realize that several teams have not participated in postseason play for years and their fans are frustrated. We Blue Jay fans certainly understand that feeling. A solution must be found to deal with that, but the answer is not to expand the postseason as the NHL has done.
- Joanne
I should say I wanted to write poetry in the beginning because I had fallen in love with words. The first poems I knew were nursery rhymes and before I could read them for myself I had come to love the words of them. The words alone. What the words stood for was of a very secondary importance.
- Dylan ThomasHere are a few verses from one of the finest poems of Dylan Thomas.
"On the Words in Poetry” from Early Prose Writings in Dictionary of poetic terms (2003)
Do not go gentle into that good night,Dylan Thomas is one of my favourite bards. Although he died at a young age, the Welshman left us a rich legacy of verse. He also bestowed upon us the beautiful Yuletide classic, A Child’s Christmas in Wales. My favourite Dylan Thomas poems are Fern Hill, And death shall have no dominion and of course, his celebrated poem for his dying father, Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night.
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.
- Dylan Thomas
From Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night {1952}
Dylan Marlais Thomas was born in Swansea, Wales on October 27, 1914. If he were alive today, the great poet and writer would be 96 years old. Sadly, he died in New York City at the age of 39. He arrived in the Big Apple on October 20, 1953 to take part in a performance of his radio play Under the Milk Wood at New York’s Poetry Centre. He became ill in New York and died there on November 9, 1953.
To watch a video with Dylan Thomas reading Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night, click on the link.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyWiE1vNSxU&NR=1
TALKING ABOUT TORONTO
Here are some thoughts in the aftermath of Toronto’s mayoral election. Yes, I am disappointed that Rob Ford has been elected mayor of our fair city. However, the people have spoken. That’s what democracy is all about. I don’t think it’s helpful to just dismiss him as buffoon or ridicule him. It is far better to determine why his simplistic message resonated with so many Torontonians.
Our city councillors have not set a good example of fiscal responsibility. Even if it’s a drop in the bucket, perception is everything. That is why many taxpayers feel they are not being respected. However, Rob Ford wants to throw out the baby with the bathwater.
Ridiculing Ford only serves to make him and his supporters more resolute. However, by the same token, it is also not helpful for Ford’s adherents to label those who disagree with their man as “downtown elites." Ford would do well to remember that he will be mayor of all the people, not just suburbanites and Toronto Sun readers.
I strongly disagree with Ford’s ideas. He doesn’t have a vision. He is a one-trick pony who repeats his “stop the gravy train” mantra ad infinitum. He wants to cut and chop like a mad lumberjack. He wants to bring out the wrecking ball. I wonder how he is going to do that without sacrificing the vital services we enjoy in this city. How is he going to cut taxes and pay for the subways he says he wants to build? Is he a magician? Sure, some new subways should be built, but we should not abandon our streetcars as Ford advocates.
Yes, there has been some wasteful spending. There should be better management of our tax dollars, but Instead of putting the city on a healthy diet, Rob Ford wants to starve this great metropolis. Or at the very least, his cuts may cause Toronto to become weak and anorexic. Finally, Rob Ford’s attitude toward immigrants is very disturbing to me. He says we don’t need any newcomers. However, he should remember that Toronto’s motto is “Diversity our strength.”
SPORTS
Hockey
The Toronto Maple Leafs are back in the win column. After three successive losses, the Leafs defeated the Florida Panthers by a score of 3-1 at the Air Canada Centre last night.
Baseball
The 2010 World Series begins today in San Francisco. The Giants have home field advantage due to the victory of the National League in this year’s All-Star Game. This “October Classic” will finish in November. That is much too late. I agree with those who say that the regular season should begin a week earlier. Some of those ballparks in the northern U.S. can get quite frigid at the beginning of November. Of course, the next time the Blue Jays play in the World Series (I hope in my lifetime), we will be in the warmth of the dome with a retractable roof over our heads.
I am opposed to increasing the number of playoff games. I do not want Major League Baseball to become like the National Hockey League in which the playoff season seems almost as long as the regular season and the Stanley Cup Final is contested in June. I realize that several teams have not participated in postseason play for years and their fans are frustrated. We Blue Jay fans certainly understand that feeling. A solution must be found to deal with that, but the answer is not to expand the postseason as the NHL has done.
- Joanne
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Doc Holliday and the O.K. Corral
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2010
There was something very peculiar about Doc. He was gentlemanly, a good dentist, a friendly man and yet, outside of us boys, I don't think he had a friend in the Territory. Tales were told that he had murdered men in different parts of the country; that he had robbed and committed all manner of crimes, and yet, when persons were asked how they knew it, they could only admit it was hearsay, and that nothing of the kind could really be traced to Doc's account. He was a slender, sickly fellow, but whenever a stage was robbed or a row started, and help was needed, Doc was one of the first to saddle his horse and report for duty.
- Virgil Earp
Interview in the Arizona Daily Star, May 30, 1882
ON THIS DAY
The “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral” took place at Tombstone, Arizona on October 26. 1881. Wyatt Earp and his brothers Vigil and Morgan were joined by Doc Holliday in a deadly showdown with the Clanton and McLaury brothers and Billy Claiborne. Three of the nine participants - Billy Clanton and Frank and Tom McLaury - were killed in the shootout.
John Henry “Doc” Holliday was a gambler and gunfighter of the Old West. Dr. Holliday was also a dentist. He graduated from the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery in 1872 at the age of 20. Holliday was born with a troublesome birth defect, a cleft palate. Plagued by ill health, he suffered from tuberculosis and died in Colorado on November 8, 1887. He was 36 years old.
Baseball
It’s official. The Toronto Blue Jays have a new manager. He’s John Farrell, 48, who served as pitching coach of the Boston Red Sox for the last four seasons. It’s interesting that Farrell is a former hurler because pitchers do not often become managers.
Blue Jays General Manager Alex Athopoulos must have considered Farrell’s experience as Director of Player Development in Latin America for the Cleveland Indians as an asset. Anthopoulos tends to make surprise moves and this is another one. Not many could have predicted this choice. I hope that Farrell, a native of New Jersey, finds much success in T.O.
- Joanne
There was something very peculiar about Doc. He was gentlemanly, a good dentist, a friendly man and yet, outside of us boys, I don't think he had a friend in the Territory. Tales were told that he had murdered men in different parts of the country; that he had robbed and committed all manner of crimes, and yet, when persons were asked how they knew it, they could only admit it was hearsay, and that nothing of the kind could really be traced to Doc's account. He was a slender, sickly fellow, but whenever a stage was robbed or a row started, and help was needed, Doc was one of the first to saddle his horse and report for duty.
- Virgil Earp
Interview in the Arizona Daily Star, May 30, 1882
ON THIS DAY
The “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral” took place at Tombstone, Arizona on October 26. 1881. Wyatt Earp and his brothers Vigil and Morgan were joined by Doc Holliday in a deadly showdown with the Clanton and McLaury brothers and Billy Claiborne. Three of the nine participants - Billy Clanton and Frank and Tom McLaury - were killed in the shootout.
John Henry “Doc” Holliday was a gambler and gunfighter of the Old West. Dr. Holliday was also a dentist. He graduated from the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery in 1872 at the age of 20. Holliday was born with a troublesome birth defect, a cleft palate. Plagued by ill health, he suffered from tuberculosis and died in Colorado on November 8, 1887. He was 36 years old.
Baseball
It’s official. The Toronto Blue Jays have a new manager. He’s John Farrell, 48, who served as pitching coach of the Boston Red Sox for the last four seasons. It’s interesting that Farrell is a former hurler because pitchers do not often become managers.
Blue Jays General Manager Alex Athopoulos must have considered Farrell’s experience as Director of Player Development in Latin America for the Cleveland Indians as an asset. Anthopoulos tends to make surprise moves and this is another one. Not many could have predicted this choice. I hope that Farrell, a native of New Jersey, finds much success in T.O.
- Joanne
Monday, October 25, 2010
On taxes and government spending
MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2010
Less government spending means less economic activity and, as a consequence, less tax revenue and so a larger deficit. In Britain, for instance, it is calculated that cutting the public payrolls by half a million will cause the loss of half a million jobs in the private sector.
The consequence could be what can be called the Japan Syndrome. Once it was widely assumed that Japan was about to become the world’s No. 1 economy. Instead, among developed countries, Japan’s economy is now one of the weakest. It hasn’t grown since 1991. House prices there, once the highest in the world, are back to where they were in 1983. And the debt of the Japanese government — about double the nation’s total output — is the highest in the world.
What went wrong in Japan, economists now generally agree, is that it responded to hard times by cutting back and got itself locked into a straitjacket of slow growth, high unemployment, low tax revenues and, as a consequence of all that, a high debt.
- Richard Gwyn
From the Toronto Star, October 22, 2010
I am going to get a little political today. These words by Richard Gwyn are worth pondering. They really resonate with me. I am not an economist and I do not advocate irresponsible waste of tax payers’ dollars. I do know, however, that unemployed people do not spend money to stimulate the economy. Unemployed people do not have enough income to put much money into government coffers.
Nobody likes taxes. However, if government spends wisely, we all reap the benefits. If less tax money is spent on education, parents are forced to fork out more money to help out cash-starved schools. Students are asked more often to sell chocolates and magazine subscriptions to raise money for school initiatives. It has to come from somewhere. If tax money is spent on preventive health, then that money will be saved in the long run because illnesses will be diagnosed and treated before they become worse. Dollars spent on literacy programs will reduce crime.
Neoconservatives talk about saving taxpayers’ money. Yet, they spend it like drunken sailors on prisons and war machines when it should be spent on education, literacy and health. The answer is not to cut and chop. Nor is it to spend recklessly. The answer is to spend taxpayers’ money wisely and carefully for the benefit of all. Spending wisely can obviate the necessity for raising taxes precipitously.
PLEASE VOTE TODAY
This is a reminder that today municipal elections are being held in the Greater Toronto Area and in other municipalities Ontario. Please let your voice be heard.
FOCUS ON HISTORY
Today is the anniversary of the Battle of Agincourt. On October 14, 1415, the English won a major victory over the larger French forces in the Hundred Years War between England and France. The English were led by King Henry V and the story is immortalized in Shakespeare’s Henry V. The battle took place in northern France.
To watch a video on the Battle of Agincourt, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ix0bfz3c0I
SPORTS
Baseball
The World Series is set. It’ll be San Francisco and Texas. The San Francisco Giants have been in Fall Classic three times and have lost thrice. They were defeated by the New York Yankees in 1962 and they lost the 1989 Bay Area Earthquake Series to the Oakland A’s. In 2002, they were overtaken by the Anaheim Angels. The Texas Rangers have never gone to the Series. I think and I hope that San Francisco’s time has come.
Football (CFL)
Toronto finally has a professional team in the playoffs. The Toronto Argonauts defeated the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 27-8 on Saturday to win a berth in the Eastern Division playoffs for the first time since 2007. They will face the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and it should be a crowd pleaser.
- Joanne
Less government spending means less economic activity and, as a consequence, less tax revenue and so a larger deficit. In Britain, for instance, it is calculated that cutting the public payrolls by half a million will cause the loss of half a million jobs in the private sector.
The consequence could be what can be called the Japan Syndrome. Once it was widely assumed that Japan was about to become the world’s No. 1 economy. Instead, among developed countries, Japan’s economy is now one of the weakest. It hasn’t grown since 1991. House prices there, once the highest in the world, are back to where they were in 1983. And the debt of the Japanese government — about double the nation’s total output — is the highest in the world.
What went wrong in Japan, economists now generally agree, is that it responded to hard times by cutting back and got itself locked into a straitjacket of slow growth, high unemployment, low tax revenues and, as a consequence of all that, a high debt.
- Richard Gwyn
From the Toronto Star, October 22, 2010
I am going to get a little political today. These words by Richard Gwyn are worth pondering. They really resonate with me. I am not an economist and I do not advocate irresponsible waste of tax payers’ dollars. I do know, however, that unemployed people do not spend money to stimulate the economy. Unemployed people do not have enough income to put much money into government coffers.
Nobody likes taxes. However, if government spends wisely, we all reap the benefits. If less tax money is spent on education, parents are forced to fork out more money to help out cash-starved schools. Students are asked more often to sell chocolates and magazine subscriptions to raise money for school initiatives. It has to come from somewhere. If tax money is spent on preventive health, then that money will be saved in the long run because illnesses will be diagnosed and treated before they become worse. Dollars spent on literacy programs will reduce crime.
Neoconservatives talk about saving taxpayers’ money. Yet, they spend it like drunken sailors on prisons and war machines when it should be spent on education, literacy and health. The answer is not to cut and chop. Nor is it to spend recklessly. The answer is to spend taxpayers’ money wisely and carefully for the benefit of all. Spending wisely can obviate the necessity for raising taxes precipitously.
PLEASE VOTE TODAY
This is a reminder that today municipal elections are being held in the Greater Toronto Area and in other municipalities Ontario. Please let your voice be heard.
FOCUS ON HISTORY
Today is the anniversary of the Battle of Agincourt. On October 14, 1415, the English won a major victory over the larger French forces in the Hundred Years War between England and France. The English were led by King Henry V and the story is immortalized in Shakespeare’s Henry V. The battle took place in northern France.
To watch a video on the Battle of Agincourt, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ix0bfz3c0I
SPORTS
Baseball
The World Series is set. It’ll be San Francisco and Texas. The San Francisco Giants have been in Fall Classic three times and have lost thrice. They were defeated by the New York Yankees in 1962 and they lost the 1989 Bay Area Earthquake Series to the Oakland A’s. In 2002, they were overtaken by the Anaheim Angels. The Texas Rangers have never gone to the Series. I think and I hope that San Francisco’s time has come.
Football (CFL)
Toronto finally has a professional team in the playoffs. The Toronto Argonauts defeated the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 27-8 on Saturday to win a berth in the Eastern Division playoffs for the first time since 2007. They will face the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and it should be a crowd pleaser.
- Joanne
Saturday, October 23, 2010
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2010
I have written a poem entitled Autumn Eve that reflects the mood of this time of year. I hope you enjoy it.
As I’ve mentioned before, I am a moon watcher (See my blog entry for September 23, 2010). Last night, the second best full moon of the year was visible in the Northern Hemisphere. It's called the Hunter's Moon and it is the first full moon after the Harvest Moon. Tonight, lunar lovers will be able to view the full moon again. So, enjoy, fellow moon gazers!
ON THIS DAY
The great Canadian painter Lawren Stewart Harris was born on October 23, 1885 in Brantford, Ontario (Hey, he shares the same birthplace with Wayne Gretzky. That’s two feathers in Brantford’s cap!) Today is the 125th anniversary of the birth of this member of the Group of Seven, a band of artists renowned for their abstract portraits of Canadian landscapes.
The Group of Seven was founded in 1920 as an organization of modern artists. According to the Canadian Encyclopedia, all of its members made their living as commercial artists, except Lawren Harris who was independently wealthy. Harris was the son of Thomas Morgan Harris, the secretary of A. Harris, Son and Co. Ltd., a manufacturer of farm machinery. In 1891, the company amalgamated with Massey to become Massey-Harris Co. Ltd. It now exists as Massey Ferguson, a brand name for one of the world’s major sellers of agricultural equipment.
Lawren Harris moved to British Columbia in 1940 and died in Vancouver on January 29, 1970. He was 84. On November 26, 2009, a Lawren Harris painting entitled The Old Stump Lake Superior sold for $3,510,000.00 at Heffel’s Auction of Fine Canadian Art. Those of us who are not multi-millionaires can view the paintings of Lawren Harris and the other members of the Group of Seven at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinberg, Ontario. If you are in the area and have the opportunity, it’s well worth a visit. I’ve been there and I highly recommend it.
To see a video of the Lawren Harris painting selling at the Heffel auction, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOC7MhzeRW0
TIM HORTONS OF NUNAVUT
I guess it had to happen. Tim Hortons has announced plans to open 3 kiosks in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut and one of the last places in Canada where you can’t find a franchise of the popular coffee-and-doughnut shop chain. The kiosks are set to make their debut in December and will be the chain’s northernmost franchises.
Baseball
The New York Yankees are out and the Texas Rangers are headed to the World Series. The Bronx Bombers were simply outplayed by the Rangers who defeated them 6-1 before a delighted home crowd in Arlington. Although I am not a Texas fan, I'm quite pleased that the Yankees are not going to win the October Classic yet again this year. I am going to cheer for Philadelphia or San Francisco, as soon as the winner of the National League Championship Series is decided.
I'd be thrilled if the Toronto Blue Jays made it as far as the American League Championship Series in the near future. I have to admit, however, that if they got that far, a part of me would be disappointed that they did not go all the way. Many Yankees fans are not thrilled unless their team plays in the World Series. Some are not thrilled unless their heroes win the World Series every year. Not even the Yankees can accomplish that, especially with 30 teams in Major League Baseball.
- Joanne
I have written a poem entitled Autumn Eve that reflects the mood of this time of year. I hope you enjoy it.
Autumn Eve
Under the gaze of a hunter’s moon
On an autumn eve so long ago
We pranced about in a lively swoon
While crimson bales of leaves did blow
As the oaks and elms and maples blew
We tossed them high and we tossed them low
They floated and fluttered and they flew
And their colours sprinkled to and fro
Then came a wind so fiercely biting
It caused us to shake and to quiver
Home never seemed quite so inviting
As we walked by the banks of the river
In silence we sat by the fireside
To take our leave of autumn’s chill
We stoked the flames, we smiled and sighed
The moon was gone and the night was still
- Joanne Madden
As I’ve mentioned before, I am a moon watcher (See my blog entry for September 23, 2010). Last night, the second best full moon of the year was visible in the Northern Hemisphere. It's called the Hunter's Moon and it is the first full moon after the Harvest Moon. Tonight, lunar lovers will be able to view the full moon again. So, enjoy, fellow moon gazers!
ON THIS DAY
The great Canadian painter Lawren Stewart Harris was born on October 23, 1885 in Brantford, Ontario (Hey, he shares the same birthplace with Wayne Gretzky. That’s two feathers in Brantford’s cap!) Today is the 125th anniversary of the birth of this member of the Group of Seven, a band of artists renowned for their abstract portraits of Canadian landscapes.
The Group of Seven was founded in 1920 as an organization of modern artists. According to the Canadian Encyclopedia, all of its members made their living as commercial artists, except Lawren Harris who was independently wealthy. Harris was the son of Thomas Morgan Harris, the secretary of A. Harris, Son and Co. Ltd., a manufacturer of farm machinery. In 1891, the company amalgamated with Massey to become Massey-Harris Co. Ltd. It now exists as Massey Ferguson, a brand name for one of the world’s major sellers of agricultural equipment.
Lawren Harris moved to British Columbia in 1940 and died in Vancouver on January 29, 1970. He was 84. On November 26, 2009, a Lawren Harris painting entitled The Old Stump Lake Superior sold for $3,510,000.00 at Heffel’s Auction of Fine Canadian Art. Those of us who are not multi-millionaires can view the paintings of Lawren Harris and the other members of the Group of Seven at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection in Kleinberg, Ontario. If you are in the area and have the opportunity, it’s well worth a visit. I’ve been there and I highly recommend it.
To see a video of the Lawren Harris painting selling at the Heffel auction, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOC7MhzeRW0
TIM HORTONS OF NUNAVUT
I guess it had to happen. Tim Hortons has announced plans to open 3 kiosks in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut and one of the last places in Canada where you can’t find a franchise of the popular coffee-and-doughnut shop chain. The kiosks are set to make their debut in December and will be the chain’s northernmost franchises.
The New York Yankees are out and the Texas Rangers are headed to the World Series. The Bronx Bombers were simply outplayed by the Rangers who defeated them 6-1 before a delighted home crowd in Arlington. Although I am not a Texas fan, I'm quite pleased that the Yankees are not going to win the October Classic yet again this year. I am going to cheer for Philadelphia or San Francisco, as soon as the winner of the National League Championship Series is decided.
I'd be thrilled if the Toronto Blue Jays made it as far as the American League Championship Series in the near future. I have to admit, however, that if they got that far, a part of me would be disappointed that they did not go all the way. Many Yankees fans are not thrilled unless their team plays in the World Series. Some are not thrilled unless their heroes win the World Series every year. Not even the Yankees can accomplish that, especially with 30 teams in Major League Baseball.
- Joanne
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Alfred Nobel
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2010
I intend to leave after my death a large fund for the promotion of the peace idea, but I am skeptical as to its results. The savants will write excellent volumes. There will be laureates. But wars will continue just the same until the force of circumstances renders them impossible.
- Alfred Nobel
Alfred Bernhard Nobel, Swedish inventor and founder of the Nobel Prize was born in Stockholm on October 21, 1833. Nobel was a chemist and an engineer. It was he who invented dynamite, intending it to be used for construction. Ironically, however, the founder of the Nobel Peace Prize was also the owner of Bofors, a major Swedish armaments manufacturer.
Alfred Nobel died on December 10, 1896 of a brain hemorrhage at his villa in San Remo, Italy. He was 63 years old. Nobel amassed a great fortune during his lifetime. In his last will, he used his substantial wealth to institute the humanitarian, literary and scientific prizes which bear his name.
LANGUAGE CORNER
Alfred Nobel himself coined the word “dynamite” from the Greek “dunamis” meaning “power.” The term was coined in Swedish in the form of “dynamit,” The Swedish suffix “it” corresponds to the English suffix “ite” used in scientific fields.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, WHITEY FORD
I don't care what the situation was, how high the stakes were - the bases could be loaded.and the pennant riding on every pitch. It never bothered Whitey Ford. He pitched his game. Cool. Craft. Nerves of steel.
- Mickey Mantle
(as quoted by Baseball Almanac and on the National Baseball Hall of Fame website)
Edward Charles “Whitey” Ford was born in New York City on October 21, 1928. He is 82 years old today. The left-handed pitcher made his debut with the New York Yankees in 1950 and played his entire career with them. He was nicknamed “Whitey” because of his blond, almost white hair. In 1961, Ford won 25 games and was honoured with the Cy Young Award. His record that year was a magnificent 25-4.
Whitey Ford retired in 1967 with 236 career wins. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown in 1974. To watch a brief video on the career of Whitey Ford, click on the link below.
http://baseballhall.org/media/video/1974-hall-fame-inductee-bio-whitey-ford
SPORTS
Baseball
The New York Yankees managed to stay alive yesterday. They staved off elimination by defeating the Texas Rangers in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series in the Bronx yesterday. CC Sabathia was on the mound for the Yankees. He went six innings and allowed two runs. The Rangers still lead the series 3-2 as the two teams head to Texas for Game 6. The Rangers have two chances to finish off the Yanks. If they fail to win one of those game in their own ballpark, they don't deserve to be in the October Classic.
- Joanne
I intend to leave after my death a large fund for the promotion of the peace idea, but I am skeptical as to its results. The savants will write excellent volumes. There will be laureates. But wars will continue just the same until the force of circumstances renders them impossible.
- Alfred Nobel
Alfred Bernhard Nobel, Swedish inventor and founder of the Nobel Prize was born in Stockholm on October 21, 1833. Nobel was a chemist and an engineer. It was he who invented dynamite, intending it to be used for construction. Ironically, however, the founder of the Nobel Peace Prize was also the owner of Bofors, a major Swedish armaments manufacturer.
Alfred Nobel died on December 10, 1896 of a brain hemorrhage at his villa in San Remo, Italy. He was 63 years old. Nobel amassed a great fortune during his lifetime. In his last will, he used his substantial wealth to institute the humanitarian, literary and scientific prizes which bear his name.
LANGUAGE CORNER
Alfred Nobel himself coined the word “dynamite” from the Greek “dunamis” meaning “power.” The term was coined in Swedish in the form of “dynamit,” The Swedish suffix “it” corresponds to the English suffix “ite” used in scientific fields.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, WHITEY FORD
I don't care what the situation was, how high the stakes were - the bases could be loaded.and the pennant riding on every pitch. It never bothered Whitey Ford. He pitched his game. Cool. Craft. Nerves of steel.
- Mickey Mantle
(as quoted by Baseball Almanac and on the National Baseball Hall of Fame website)
Edward Charles “Whitey” Ford was born in New York City on October 21, 1928. He is 82 years old today. The left-handed pitcher made his debut with the New York Yankees in 1950 and played his entire career with them. He was nicknamed “Whitey” because of his blond, almost white hair. In 1961, Ford won 25 games and was honoured with the Cy Young Award. His record that year was a magnificent 25-4.
Whitey Ford retired in 1967 with 236 career wins. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown in 1974. To watch a brief video on the career of Whitey Ford, click on the link below.
http://baseballhall.org/media/video/1974-hall-fame-inductee-bio-whitey-ford
SPORTS
Baseball
The New York Yankees managed to stay alive yesterday. They staved off elimination by defeating the Texas Rangers in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series in the Bronx yesterday. CC Sabathia was on the mound for the Yankees. He went six innings and allowed two runs. The Rangers still lead the series 3-2 as the two teams head to Texas for Game 6. The Rangers have two chances to finish off the Yanks. If they fail to win one of those game in their own ballpark, they don't deserve to be in the October Classic.
- Joanne
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Reflections on Idealism
TUDESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2010
On this October day, I present to you, for your edification, some thoughts and reflections on the subject of idealism.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
This is the anniversary of “Black Monday.” October 19, 1987 was a nightmarish day for stock markets around the world as they plunged to record losses. It can be described as one of the most infamous days in recent financial history. The Dow Jones dropped a record 508 points, a 22.6% decline. That 22.6% far surpassed the 12.8% drop of October 28, 1929 which ushered in the Great Depression. In fact, the 1987 “Black Monday” decline was the largest one-day percentage decline in stock market history.
ON THIS DAY IN SPORTS
On October 19, 1981, Rick Monday of the Los Angeles Dodgers broke the hearts of Montreal Expos fans and Canadian baseball fans everywhere. Monday hit a ninth-inning home run to give the Dodgers to a 2-1 victory over the Expos and the National League pennant. I remember watching that home run and sharing in the disappointment with my co-workers at the Toronto Star.
The now-defunct Expos never came closer to an appearance in the World Series although they had a really good team in 1994 and could have won it all that year. Pedro Martinez, Larry Walker, Moises Alou and Marquis Grissom were on that 1994 team. Not a bad collection of talent, eh? Fate intervened, however, in the form of a Major League Baseball strike. There was no World Series that year and we’ll never know what would have happened. Regrettably, the Expos never seemed to recover and departed from Montreal after the 2004 season.
SPORTS
Baseball
The New York Yankees didn’t play like champions last night. Much to the dismay of the patrons of the Bronx Zoo, the Yanks were walloped by the upstart Texas Rangers in Game 3 of the American League Championship Series. The score was 8-0 for Texas who had their ace, Cliff Lee, on the mound. As I’ve mentioned before, I don’t want the Yanks to win the World Series again, so I’m quite happy with that result.
Texas has a 2-1 lead in the series. However, I won’t count the Pinstripes out just yet. It's too early for that, even though I think they had a better team last year. Tonight they will send former Blue Jay A.J. Burnett to the mound.
Hockey
After four straight wins, The Toronto Maple Leafs tasted defeat for the first time this season. They were defeated by the gritty New York Islanders at the Air Canada Centre last night. It was an overtime loss, so they still picked up a point. In the third period, Phil Kessel of the Leafs tied the game 1-1. It went into overtime. The Leafs were penalized for goaltender interference and John Tavares scored a power play goal for the Islanders. The Leafs lost 2-1 in overtime.
- Joanne
On this October day, I present to you, for your edification, some thoughts and reflections on the subject of idealism.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
Ideals are like the stars; you will not succeed in touching them with your hands. But like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your guides, and following them you will reach your destiny.
- Carl Schurz
Address, Faneuil Hall, Boston (April 18, 1859)
When they come downstairs from their Ivory Towers, idealists are apt to walk straight into the gutter.
- Logan Pearsall Smith
From Afterthoughts {1931}
An idealist is one who, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes that it is also more nourishing.
- H. L. Mencken
From A Little Book in C Major, page 19 (1916)
It's really a wonder that I haven't dropped all my ideals because they seem so absurd and impossible to carry out. Yet, I keep them, because in spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart. I simply can't build up my hopes on a foundation consisting of confusion, misery, and death. I see the world gradually being turned into a wilderness, I hear the ever-approaching thunder, which will destroy us too, I can feel the sufferings of millions and yet, if I look up into the heavens, I think that it will all come right, that this cruelty too will end, and that peace and tranquility will return again.ON THIS DAY
- Anne Frank
From her diary
An idealist believes the short run doesn't count. A cynic believes the long run doesn't matter. A realist believes that what is done or left undone in the short run determines the long run.
- Sidney J. Harris, in his column Thoughts at Large for the Chicago Sun-Times
This is the anniversary of “Black Monday.” October 19, 1987 was a nightmarish day for stock markets around the world as they plunged to record losses. It can be described as one of the most infamous days in recent financial history. The Dow Jones dropped a record 508 points, a 22.6% decline. That 22.6% far surpassed the 12.8% drop of October 28, 1929 which ushered in the Great Depression. In fact, the 1987 “Black Monday” decline was the largest one-day percentage decline in stock market history.
That stock market crash of 23 years ago put an end to the great years of prosperity in the 1980s. It marked the end of a five-year bull market and was a prelude to the terrible recession of the early 1990s. Click on the link below to watch a video of a CBC news report on “Black Monday.”
http://archives.cbc.ca/on_this_day/10/19/ON THIS DAY IN SPORTS
On October 19, 1981, Rick Monday of the Los Angeles Dodgers broke the hearts of Montreal Expos fans and Canadian baseball fans everywhere. Monday hit a ninth-inning home run to give the Dodgers to a 2-1 victory over the Expos and the National League pennant. I remember watching that home run and sharing in the disappointment with my co-workers at the Toronto Star.
The now-defunct Expos never came closer to an appearance in the World Series although they had a really good team in 1994 and could have won it all that year. Pedro Martinez, Larry Walker, Moises Alou and Marquis Grissom were on that 1994 team. Not a bad collection of talent, eh? Fate intervened, however, in the form of a Major League Baseball strike. There was no World Series that year and we’ll never know what would have happened. Regrettably, the Expos never seemed to recover and departed from Montreal after the 2004 season.
SPORTS
Baseball
The New York Yankees didn’t play like champions last night. Much to the dismay of the patrons of the Bronx Zoo, the Yanks were walloped by the upstart Texas Rangers in Game 3 of the American League Championship Series. The score was 8-0 for Texas who had their ace, Cliff Lee, on the mound. As I’ve mentioned before, I don’t want the Yanks to win the World Series again, so I’m quite happy with that result.
Texas has a 2-1 lead in the series. However, I won’t count the Pinstripes out just yet. It's too early for that, even though I think they had a better team last year. Tonight they will send former Blue Jay A.J. Burnett to the mound.
Hockey
After four straight wins, The Toronto Maple Leafs tasted defeat for the first time this season. They were defeated by the gritty New York Islanders at the Air Canada Centre last night. It was an overtime loss, so they still picked up a point. In the third period, Phil Kessel of the Leafs tied the game 1-1. It went into overtime. The Leafs were penalized for goaltender interference and John Tavares scored a power play goal for the Islanders. The Leafs lost 2-1 in overtime.
- Joanne
Monday, October 18, 2010
Pierre Elliott Trudeau: His style and his just society
MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2010
From the heady days of Trudeaumania to his famous 1984 walk in the snow (in which he decided to resign as prime minister), the man captivated this nation. He was our own philosopher king and had more world-wide recognition than any other Canadian prime minister. Yes, he could be infuriating and arrogant. He also had style, wit and a vision for this country.
Pierre Trudeau was also very quotable. Many of his remarks will long be remembered. How many of Stephen Harper’s or Michael Ignatieff’s words will be quoted for years to come?
To view a video of Pierre Trudeau’s “just society” speech, click on the link below.
http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/prime_ministers/topics/2192/
Here’s another short video about Trudeaumania.
http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/parties_leaders/topics/73/
Although he eventually married, Pierre Trudeau was a bachelor when he became prime minister in 1968. So here’s some trivia about bachelor prime ministers and presidents. Two other Canadian prime ministers were bachelors – R.B. Bennett and William Lyon Mackenzie King never married.
James Buchanan, 15th President of the United States was a life-long bachelor and is the only American president who never wed. His niece Harriet Lane acted as First Lady.
REAL NAMES OF FAMOUS PEOPLE
George Orwell was the pen name of Eric Arthur Blair. Blair was a British journalist, political author and novelist. He was the author of Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) and Animal Farm (1945),
Comedian Jack Benny was born Benjamin Kubelsky in Chicago, Illinois on February 14, 1894. When he was a young vaudeville performer, a lawyer for famous Czech violinist Jan KubelÃk pressured him to change his name, claiming that the similar name would damage his client’s reputation. So Benjamin Kubelsky became Ben K. Benny. When a band leader and fiddler named Ben Bernie threatened to sue him, he adopted the name “Jack,” a nickname associated with sailors. And that is how Benjamin Kubelsky became Jack Benny.
Singer Tom Jones was born Thomas John Woodward in Wales, U.K. on June 7, 1940. He is now 70 years old. Jones performed as Tommy Scott early in his career. In 1963, he became the frontman for a band called Tommy Scott and the Senators. a Welsh beat group. Tommy Scott and the Senators eventually became Tom Jones and the Squires. Remember that Tom Jones is also the name of the roguish protagonist of the classic Henry Fielding novel published in 1749. Given his stage persona, it is not surprising that the Welsh singer took the name of the amorous main character of Fielding’s novel.
Oprah Winfrey, born in Mississippi on January 29, 1954, was originally named Orpah after a biblical character in the Book of Ruth. The “r” and the “p” were reversed due to problems in spelling and pronouncing Orpah.
FOCUS ON HISTORY
On October 18, 1685, Louis XIV, France’s “Sun King,” revoked the Edict of Nantes which granted rights to France’s minority Protestants (known as Huguenots). Louis renounced the Edict and declared Protestantism illegal. As a result, there was an exodus of Protestants from France. Some immigrated to Great Britain and Prussia. Others settled in the more tolerant Dutch Republic and in Switzerland. Still others found their way to the new French colonies in North America.
SPORTS
Baseball
The Philadelphia Phillies won Game 2 of their National League Championship Series against the San Francisco Giants. Led by the superb pitching of that other Roy – Roy Oswalt – the Phillies enjoyed a 6-1 triumph over the Giants. I still think the Phillies have the best team and I think they will win the World Series.
- Joanne
Canada must be unified. Canada must be one, Canada must be progressive and Canada must be a just society.Pierre Elliott Trudeau was born on October 18, 1919 in Montreal. If he were alive today, he would be celebrating his 91st birthday. There has never been a Canadian prime minister quite like him. To this day, his name evokes a variety of emotions and a strong, passionate response. During his lifetime, Canada’s 15th Prime Minister was strongly admired and intensely disliked. Many Western Canadians cannot forgive him for the National Energy Policy. He has been criticized for invoking the War Measures Act forty years ago. Others say it was his finest moment.
- Pierre Elliott Trudeau
(Speech after winning the Liberal Party leadership in April of 1968.)
From the heady days of Trudeaumania to his famous 1984 walk in the snow (in which he decided to resign as prime minister), the man captivated this nation. He was our own philosopher king and had more world-wide recognition than any other Canadian prime minister. Yes, he could be infuriating and arrogant. He also had style, wit and a vision for this country.
Pierre Trudeau was also very quotable. Many of his remarks will long be remembered. How many of Stephen Harper’s or Michael Ignatieff’s words will be quoted for years to come?
To view a video of Pierre Trudeau’s “just society” speech, click on the link below.
http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/prime_ministers/topics/2192/
Here’s another short video about Trudeaumania.
http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/parties_leaders/topics/73/
Although he eventually married, Pierre Trudeau was a bachelor when he became prime minister in 1968. So here’s some trivia about bachelor prime ministers and presidents. Two other Canadian prime ministers were bachelors – R.B. Bennett and William Lyon Mackenzie King never married.
James Buchanan, 15th President of the United States was a life-long bachelor and is the only American president who never wed. His niece Harriet Lane acted as First Lady.
REAL NAMES OF FAMOUS PEOPLE
George Orwell was the pen name of Eric Arthur Blair. Blair was a British journalist, political author and novelist. He was the author of Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) and Animal Farm (1945),
Comedian Jack Benny was born Benjamin Kubelsky in Chicago, Illinois on February 14, 1894. When he was a young vaudeville performer, a lawyer for famous Czech violinist Jan KubelÃk pressured him to change his name, claiming that the similar name would damage his client’s reputation. So Benjamin Kubelsky became Ben K. Benny. When a band leader and fiddler named Ben Bernie threatened to sue him, he adopted the name “Jack,” a nickname associated with sailors. And that is how Benjamin Kubelsky became Jack Benny.
Singer Tom Jones was born Thomas John Woodward in Wales, U.K. on June 7, 1940. He is now 70 years old. Jones performed as Tommy Scott early in his career. In 1963, he became the frontman for a band called Tommy Scott and the Senators. a Welsh beat group. Tommy Scott and the Senators eventually became Tom Jones and the Squires. Remember that Tom Jones is also the name of the roguish protagonist of the classic Henry Fielding novel published in 1749. Given his stage persona, it is not surprising that the Welsh singer took the name of the amorous main character of Fielding’s novel.
Oprah Winfrey, born in Mississippi on January 29, 1954, was originally named Orpah after a biblical character in the Book of Ruth. The “r” and the “p” were reversed due to problems in spelling and pronouncing Orpah.
FOCUS ON HISTORY
On October 18, 1685, Louis XIV, France’s “Sun King,” revoked the Edict of Nantes which granted rights to France’s minority Protestants (known as Huguenots). Louis renounced the Edict and declared Protestantism illegal. As a result, there was an exodus of Protestants from France. Some immigrated to Great Britain and Prussia. Others settled in the more tolerant Dutch Republic and in Switzerland. Still others found their way to the new French colonies in North America.
SPORTS
Baseball
The Philadelphia Phillies won Game 2 of their National League Championship Series against the San Francisco Giants. Led by the superb pitching of that other Roy – Roy Oswalt – the Phillies enjoyed a 6-1 triumph over the Giants. I still think the Phillies have the best team and I think they will win the World Series.
- Joanne
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Arthur Miller
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2010
From Death of a Salesman, Requiem
Playwright Arthur Miller was born in New York City on October 17, 1915. His notable works include All My Sons (1947), Death of a Salesman (1949), The Crucible (1953), A View from the Bridge (1955) and After the Fall (1964). His most celebrated play and his masterpiece is Death of a Salesman which deals with a character named Willy Loman and the failure of his American Dream. I studied Death of a Salesman in high school. The references in the play to Ebbets Field were the first time I learned about the long ago home of the defunct Brooklyn Dodgers. Several years ago I saw Death of a Salsman on stage with Dustin Hoffman playing the role of Willy Loman.
After the Fall is considered to be a thinly disguised reflection of Miller’s marriage to Marilyn Monroe from 1956 to 1961. He was her third and final husband. Arthur Miller died on February 10, 2005 at the age of 89.
RIDDLE ME THIS
What do get when you cross a detective with a skeleton?
Answer: Sherlock Bones
Note to readers: I invite you to send me some riddles and I will publish them on my blog.
BURTON CUMMINGS
My favourite Canadian band of all time is the Guess Who. On Friday night, I attended a Burton Cummings concert at Massey Hall. I’ve got to say that Burton really had the place rocking. The Winnipeg native really connected with the audience and made a point of expressing appreciation for his fan support. Backed by the Toronto-based Carpet Frogs, he played many of the old Guess Who standards. Cummings also performed a great version of Louie Louie, the 1960s hit by the Kinks. He ended the concert with Share the Land, which he described as “a song of optimism.”
REST IN PEACE, JUNE CLEAVER
Barbara Billingsley, the actress who played the ideal mother of the 1950s and early 60s on Leave it to Beaver, died yesterday at her home in Santa Monica, California. She was 94 years old. From 1957 until 1963, Barbara played June Cleaver, the mother of two sons, Wally and Beaver. Hugh Beaumont, who portrayed Barbara’s television husband Ward Cleaver, passed away on May 14, 1982. He died of a heart attack at the age of 73 while visiting his son in Munich, Germany.
To watch a video of the 50th anniversary reunion of Leave it to Beaver, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBWO1vWZXGY&NR=1
SPORTS
Hockey
How about those Leafs? They did it again. That’s four in a row, folks. On Saturday night, the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the New York Rangers in overtime by a score of 4-3. Phil Kessel led the Leaf attack with two goals.
Baseball
It seems that Roy Halladay is human after all. He and his Philadelphia Phillies lost Game One of the National League Championship Series to the San Francisco Giants yesterday by a score of 4-3.
Football (CFL)
Well, the Toronto Argonauts were crushed 30-3 by the ferocious Hamilton Tiger-Cats at the dome on Friday night. Hamilton clinched a playoff berth.
- Joanne
Willy was a salesman. And for a salesman, there is no rock bottom to the life. He don’t put a bolt to a nut, he don’t tell you the law or give you medicine. He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back – that’s an earthquake. And then you get yourself a couple of spots on your hat, and you’re finished. Nobody dast blame this man. A salesman is got to dream, boy. It comes with the territory.- Arthur Miller
From Death of a Salesman, Requiem
Playwright Arthur Miller was born in New York City on October 17, 1915. His notable works include All My Sons (1947), Death of a Salesman (1949), The Crucible (1953), A View from the Bridge (1955) and After the Fall (1964). His most celebrated play and his masterpiece is Death of a Salesman which deals with a character named Willy Loman and the failure of his American Dream. I studied Death of a Salesman in high school. The references in the play to Ebbets Field were the first time I learned about the long ago home of the defunct Brooklyn Dodgers. Several years ago I saw Death of a Salsman on stage with Dustin Hoffman playing the role of Willy Loman.
After the Fall is considered to be a thinly disguised reflection of Miller’s marriage to Marilyn Monroe from 1956 to 1961. He was her third and final husband. Arthur Miller died on February 10, 2005 at the age of 89.
RIDDLE ME THIS
What do get when you cross a detective with a skeleton?
Answer: Sherlock Bones
Note to readers: I invite you to send me some riddles and I will publish them on my blog.
BURTON CUMMINGS
My favourite Canadian band of all time is the Guess Who. On Friday night, I attended a Burton Cummings concert at Massey Hall. I’ve got to say that Burton really had the place rocking. The Winnipeg native really connected with the audience and made a point of expressing appreciation for his fan support. Backed by the Toronto-based Carpet Frogs, he played many of the old Guess Who standards. Cummings also performed a great version of Louie Louie, the 1960s hit by the Kinks. He ended the concert with Share the Land, which he described as “a song of optimism.”
REST IN PEACE, JUNE CLEAVER
Barbara Billingsley, the actress who played the ideal mother of the 1950s and early 60s on Leave it to Beaver, died yesterday at her home in Santa Monica, California. She was 94 years old. From 1957 until 1963, Barbara played June Cleaver, the mother of two sons, Wally and Beaver. Hugh Beaumont, who portrayed Barbara’s television husband Ward Cleaver, passed away on May 14, 1982. He died of a heart attack at the age of 73 while visiting his son in Munich, Germany.
To watch a video of the 50th anniversary reunion of Leave it to Beaver, click on the link below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBWO1vWZXGY&NR=1
SPORTS
Hockey
How about those Leafs? They did it again. That’s four in a row, folks. On Saturday night, the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the New York Rangers in overtime by a score of 4-3. Phil Kessel led the Leaf attack with two goals.
Baseball
It seems that Roy Halladay is human after all. He and his Philadelphia Phillies lost Game One of the National League Championship Series to the San Francisco Giants yesterday by a score of 4-3.
Football (CFL)
Well, the Toronto Argonauts were crushed 30-3 by the ferocious Hamilton Tiger-Cats at the dome on Friday night. Hamilton clinched a playoff berth.
- Joanne
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