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By Sheila Lennon
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Dec 6, 2002 - (Last week's weblog)

Geek chic for Sen. Chafee? From Mark at Intricate Plot:

There's a unique parody of the Apple - Switch ad over at WorkingForChange. WorkingForChange is the online voice of Working Assets, a company that funds nonprofit organizations by getting you to switch to their credit cards, long distance, and online services. Their switch ad is aimed at Senator Olympia Snowe, Senator Lincoln Chafee, and Senator Arlen Specter, three moderate Republicans who are being urged to "pull a Jeffords" and leave the Republican party.

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Caedmon: Recreating the Moment of Inspiration NPR reports,

In 1952, Barbara Holdridge and her best friend, Marianne Roney, had just graduated from college when they made a move that would forever change the literary world. Looking for a way to get into the record business, the two young women heard that Welsh poet Dylan Thomas was due to give a public reading at New York's 92nd Street Y.

They decided they would go and record him.

This year is the the 50th anniversary of Caedmon, the company Holdridge and Roney formed to record the spoken word performances of Thomas, T.S. Eliot, William Faulkner, Eudora Welty and other famous writers.

The page contains several audio links, including Dylan Thomas reading "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night" and "A Child’s Christmas in Wales" from A Child’s Christmas in Wales and Five Poems (Harper Audio).

Related: Lost papers reveal Dylan Thomas's last days
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Homeland Security a hard sell: "Only 13 percent of Americans polled by the Gallup Organization say they have confidence that the new department will make them "a lot" safer. Nearly 4 in 10 Americans expect that the new department will not make the country any safer," writes Ann McFeatters of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Related: Feds Label Wi-Fi a Terrorist Tool

Meanwhile: JD points to Internet.com's account of Boingo Wireless and Earthlink founder Sky Dayton's talk at the 802.11 Planet Fall 2002 Conference & Expo in Santa Clara, Calif.: Boingo Recruiting For Wi-Fi Hotspots. And...

Cometa is Intel and IBM teaming with AT&T to push a big-business version of Wi-Fi.
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Walmart backs down over Black Friday sales leaks: From Donna Wentworth at Copyfight:

In response to FatWallet's letter demanding that Wal-Mart withdraw its subpoena for identifying information about a poster or face sanctions, the retailer backed down. Wal-Mart had sought the identity of the individual who posted Wal-Mart Day After Thanksgiving sales information on the FatWallet site.

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Could you read a blog on this? Hammacher Schlemmer's 180 Computer Monitor is a hemispherical projection screen that's 5'3" high by by 5'5" wide by 3'5" deep.

It weighs 150 lbs. and costs $20,594.95; the lower-res (800 x 600) SVGA version is only $15,594.95.

Plus $650 for shipping.
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Long gray line: Tomorrow is the 103rd Army - Navy game. My big brother Frank -- a member of the West Point class of '63 -- sends along a pointer to this ESPN column by Adrian Wojnarowski: A game bigger than life and death

Through the telephone line, the words sound like they're tumbling down off a distant mountain, a cadence and conviction that leaves your spine tingling. Pete Dawkins was the captain of Army's 1958 unbeaten season, the first Captain of the Corps of Cadets, the Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, the youngest general in military history, a uniform decorated with voluminous acts of valor in Vietnam. He has lived a most remarkable American life, Heisman Trophy winner to war hero, Wall Street CEO to U.S. Senatorial candidate out of New Jersey. But the man's mission has stayed strangely simple: Beat Navy.

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Internet spammer can't take what he dishes out by Mike Wendland of the Detroit Free Press:

West Bloomfield bulk e-mailer Alan Ralsky, who just may be the world's biggest sender of Internet spam, is getting a taste of his own medicine.

Ever since I wrote a story on him a couple of weeks ago (www.freep.com/money/tech/mwend22_20021122.htm), he says he's been inundated with ads, catalogs and brochures delivered by the U.S. Postal Service to his brand-new $740,000 home.

It's all the result of a well-organized campaign by the anti-spam community, and Ralsky doesn't find it funny.

"They've signed me up for every advertising campaign and mailing list there is," he told me. "These people are out of their minds. They're harassing me."

That they are. Gleefully. Almost 300 anti-Ralsky posts were made on the Slashdot.org Web site, where the plan was hatched after spam haters posted his address, even an aerial view of his neighborhood.

Here's the reaction of the gleeful on Slashdot.
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Ms. Magazine has a blog: It's written by Christine Cupaiuolo of Chicago, who also edits the online magazine PopPolitics.com. Cupaiuolo is assembling a list of female bloggers. Email your recommendations.
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Rapture Letters:

After the rapture, there will be a lot of speculation as to why millions of people have
just disappeared. Unfortunately, after the rapture, only non believers will be left to come up with answers. You probably have family and friends that you have witnessed to and they just won't listen. After the rapture they probably will, but who will tell them?

We have written a computer program to do just that. It will send an Electronic Message (e-mail) to whomever you want after the rapture has taken place, and you and I have been taken to heaven. via Metafilter

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What the World Thinks in 2002 by The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.

"Breast scarves" are all the rage in Japan

Dec 5, 2002


Journal / Mary Murphy
HEADING OUT: Former Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr. leaves the Providence Biltmore hotel, as reporters follow, for his new home in a N.J. prison.
April 22, 1974: Then-Republican Vincent A. Cianci Jr. (he later became an Independent) in 1974 becomes the first Italian­American elected mayor of Providence. Here he announces his candidacy for mayor.
America's longest-serving mayor
heads for federal prison

Cianci leaves city with 'a heavy heart'

By JACK PERRY
projo.com staff writer

PROVIDENCE / 1:25 p.m. -- Former Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr. waved goodbye as he left amid the falling snow today for a federal prison in New Jersey, where he will start serving his sentence for racketeering conspiracy tomorrow.

"I leave with a heavy heart, but with a sense of accomplishment," Cianci, 61, told reporters outside the Providence Biltmore hotel, his home for the past two years.

Cianci, credited for leading Providence through a renaissance, is required to report to the prison in Fort Dix, N.J., by noon tomorrow to begin serving his sentence of 5 years and 4 months.

Cianci had said yesterday that he might leave early because of the snowstorm hitting the East Coast. Today, Cianci said he would spend the night at an undisclosed location near the prison.

Cianci said he had spent the morning accepting phone calls from well- wishers and supporters. He said his mood was "very sad,'' and summarized his incarceration as a journey, a new opportunity and a "learning experience.''

He said he hoped people would ``reflect on the positive'' when remembering his years as mayor: "No one's perfect. I certainly am not.''

Cianci told reporters gathered outside the hotel that it felt "surreal" to be leaving, especially in snow and with the city bedecked for Christmas, a season he has always enjoyed. He wished everyone happy holidays.

"See you around the campus,'' he said, an apparent reference to the federal prison at Fort Dix, before climbing into a maroon minivan, driven by a retired Providence police officer, for the trip around 12:20 p.m.

Unless the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturns Cianci's conviction in the next year or two, he must serve at least 4 years, 6 months and 12 days of his sentence.

The prison at Fort Dix will be a far cry from Cianci’'s home at the Biltmore.

Classified as low-level security, it has some 4,500 inmates. Most are assigned to 12-man rooms. Two lines of fencing and razor wire surround the prison’s two compounds.

Like all inmates, Cianci will be expected to work inside prison. He also won’'t be able to wear his hairpiece.

As of this morning, however, the hatless Cianci left with hair intact while casually dressed in gray jacket and open-necked blue shirt. Earlier, a navy blue jacket, several ties and food were brought into the van for the trip.

Cianci was originally sentenced to serve his time in a federal prison in Lisbon, Ohio, but his transfer to a prison closer to home in New Jersey was approved last week after U.S. Reps. James R. Langevin and Patrick Kennedy lobbied the Federal Bureau of Prisons on Cianci’'s behalf.

Cianci had written letters to Langevin and Kennedy last month asking to be moved closer to home. He cited his daughter, Nicole'’s, problems with substance abuse as the reason. Cianci said he needed to be closer to Nicole and her two children, ages 5 and 8. Nicole is in drug treatment in Exeter.

The prison in Ohio is about 575 miles from Providence, while Fort Dix is about 210 miles away. Fort Dix is about 35 miles east of Philadelphia.

Cianci has had a busy couple of weeks preparing for his incarceration. He said he has established a trust to benefit his daughter and grandchildren if he should die in prison.

In an emotional send off, Cianci signed off his radio show on WPRO-AM last Friday. Supporters called to wish him well. Many of them pledged to write and send cards. The radio station hired Cianci a few days after he was sentenced in September.

In public, Cianci has faced his departure with his chin up and a sense of humor. He appeared on the Today show Wednesday, trading quips with Matt Lauer, co-host and a former Rhode Island television personality.

”Cianci said, "“It's almost like dying without dying."

On Sunday afternoon, a party was held for Cianci at Mediterraneo, the Federal Hill restaurant that has been one of his favorite haunts.

On Sunday night, the CBS news program 60 Minutes is scheduled to air a segment on the former mayor. During the summer, reporter Morley Safer was seen driving around Providence with Cianci.

Cianci told Lauer that he didn't know what the future holds. He said that he would write, try to quit smoking, and maybe learn something from the inmates.

Once he gets out, sometime in 2007, Cianci said he would enjoy life and possibly embark on a career in teaching.

-- With reports from Journal staff writer Tom Mooney and Journal photographer Mary Murphy

* * *


Snow is falling at a 45-degree angle outside our windows, and the flakes are getting fatter as the snow and ice storm intensifies. Everybody not making the newspaper has been sent home.

I'm outta here.

We'll catch up tomorrow.

Link to this item | Comment

Dec 4, 2002

The DiIulio Letter to Esquire: University of Pennsylvania professor John DiIulio, the former director of the White House faith-based initiative office, "apologized yesterday after being quoted as saying a band of 'Mayberry Machiavellis' is running a White House in which politics trumps policy," The Washington Post reports.

.A few hours after White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer called DiIulio's comments to Ron Suskind of Esquire magazine "baseless and groundless," DiIulio called them "baseless and groundless." And then he went on sick leave.

The core of the matter: "What you've got is everything, and I mean everything, being run by the political arm. It's the reign of the Mayberry Machiavellis."

After an interview today with Suskind, CNN's Judy Woodruff said, "... the White House said in reaction to this, good politics is good government."

Excerpts from Suskind's story are on the Esquire website. The story will be published in the January issue.We can't wait for the full story.
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"The Perpetual War Portfolio is an evenly weighted basket of five stocks poised to succeed in the age of perpetual war. The stocks were selected on the basis of popular product lines, strong political connections and lobbying efforts, and paid-for access to key Congressional decision makers."
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New Scientist
The criss-cross and straight patterns (left and centre) are strongest, but the bow-tie pattern (right) is the most efficient
Science has determined you already tie your shoes the best way: New Scientist reports,

The knotty problem of choosing the optimum way of lacing up shoes has been solved by a new mathematical proof.

There are many millions of different possibilities but, reassuringly, the proof shows that centuries of human trial and error has already selected out the strongest lacing patterns. However, the pattern using the least amount of lace possible, the decorative "bowtie" lacing, is usually only seen in shoe shop displays.

...criss-cross came out on top for a short, wide set of eyeholes - that is, when the vertical distance between eyeholes is low, and horizontal distance is high. Straight lacing came out tops for a long, skinny set of eyeholes....

There are 400 million different ways of lacing a shoe with only seven pairs of eyelets.

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The Rendlesham UFO files: Read them yourself (pdfs). Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5

I didn't go too deep, but there's an interesting back-and-forth about the level of radiation found -- .1 milliroentgens -- and a request for an expert opinion on what normal radiation levels would be. That answer that came back: .015.
More info is here.
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Ch-ch-ch-choices: How come "Choose Life" is okay on Louisiana's license plates but "Choice on Earth" is not okay on your Christmas cards?
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Dec 3, 2002

A Woman Blogger and Proud of It: South Carolina blogger Pamela Mack turns me on to a page that subdivides feminists into a boggling variety of stripes, and writes her own thoughts on a thread that began with a NYT story about women bloggers by freelancer and Salon.com blogger Lisa Guernsey. (The story has drawn criticism as having been under-researched, particularly given lines such as, "Women want to talk about their personal lives. Men want to talk about anything but.")

Simultaneously, one of the most amazing outward spirals I've seen online: Halley Suitt at Halley's Comment is blogging about "the end of Feminism and the beginning of Girlism" followed by "Girlism Revisited." Shelley Powers responded here and here. And Doc, then Doc reconsiders, and reconsiders again. Meanwhile, women bloggers are finding each other because of this thread, linking and emailing and introducing themselves.

Look for upheaval and expansion of my blogroll soon as a result.
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Greenbacks to come in many colors: MSNBC reports,

Color is coming, and government money makers are hoping for a warmer reception for the changes. The new $20, with its public unveiling set for the spring, is supposed to be in circulation as early as next fall.
Jackson is first in line for a makeover. After the new $20 makes its debut, the new $50 (Ulysses S. Grant) and the $100s (Benjamin Franklin) will follow in within 18 months.

In the works is a five-year effort, costing up to $53 million, to educate people about the changes. An important goal is to help distinguish between genuine greenbacks and bogus bills.

... Green and black ink is now used on neutral-colored paper. With the makeover, color tints will be added in the neutral areas of the note. Ferguson (Thomas Ferguson, director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing) would not say which colors will be used, but said they will vary by denomination.

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NYC events-calendar blog: JD writes, "John Hiler has done something amazing: On Sunday he launched a brilliant new site, CityBlogs.com, which he explains at length here." (JD, once an editor at the gone San Francisco city guide site Microsoft called Sidewalk, applauds the concept's return.)

John is covering three categories of New York City events right now: Cinema, readings and talks. The expert annotation he brings to the listings -- as well as coverage of those he chooses to attend -- results in a handcrafted calendar, a fan's notes.

"Bloggers can provide the sort of distributed coverage of local events that newspapers can't even dream of" John writes.

I saw another microlocal NYC website the other day: The Soho/Nolita Pratique is a guide to every store in these Manhattan neighborhoods (SOuth of HOuston St, NOrth of Houston St., Little ITAly). Check it out if you're going Christmas shopping in the City. via Nick Denton.
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Eclipse on the web: There's a total eclipse of the sun tonight -- visible only in the Southern Hemisphere. The eclipse path begins in the South Atlantic, crosses southern Africa, the southern Indian Ocean and ends at sunset in southern Australia.

The event will be webcast live from the best viewing site -- Ceduna, Australia -- at 4:10 a.m. EST, with totality at 4:40. (Totality lasts 86 seconds.)

If the pipe is clogged, or if you'd rather stay up late than get up early, there's a pay alternative.

Melissa Milios, OnlineJournalism.com Managing Editor, reports that AfriCam will be live from 12:50 a.m. (EST) catching the path as it crosses Africa. "A one-time payment of $9.90 covers access to the Live Eclipse Cam as well as a subscription through January 31, 2003, to other AfriCam and Magical Skies videos, stills and educational content related to the eclipse," she writes.

NASA has a page with a computer simulations of the path, charts and links.

Eclipses have always been mysterious events. Modern astrologers say it will take place at 12 degrees of Sagittarius, and offer various takes on its meaning for world events now.
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Author who claims 9/11 attack was faked coming to NYC: AP reports,

A French author who suggests that the Sept. 11 attacks were concocted by a faction of the U.S. military is planning to promote his book on a tour that will begin in New York City.

The English title of Thierry Meyssan’s book is 9-11, The Big Lie, which also suggests that the Pentagon was hit by an American missile, and not American Airlines Flight 77. USA Books, a subsidiary of the book’s French publisher, says he could launch the tour as early as this month.

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Artist Hopes Dairy Herd Makes Poetry: AP reports,

PURCHASE, N.Y. - Any artist can paint cows. Nathan Banks paints ON cows.

Banks, a 22-year-old student at Purchase College, painted single words (from "a" to "existential") on the flanks of about 60 cows near his upstate New York home, then let them wander around to see if they could compose poetry.

So Holsteins and Jerseys named Elsie and Maggie came up with phrases like "eccentric art," "performance as cow environment" and Banks' own favorite, "organic conceptual art as poetry."

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Volkswagen 1-liter Concept: (Photo is there, too)

The world's most economical car is being shown to shareholders attending the 42nd annual general meeting of Volkswagen AG in Hamburg. It is a '1-liter' car, that is to say covers 100 kilometers (approximately 239 mpg) on only this amount (that's 1.06 quarts, about a quarter-gallon) of fuel.

It's cute, with its little bubble dome, but I don't think it'd survive a run-in with an SUV.
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Standalones:

Mozilla 1.2.1 is released: Seamlessly upgraded here.

An Exit Interview With WSJ.com's Neil Budde: Carl Sullivan at Editor & Publisher talks with the departing publisher of Wall Street Journal Online

Free Wi-Fi in British pubs

Putting course materials online, the university faces high expectations: The Chronicle of Higher Education in depth on MIT's OpenCourseWare.

Dec 2, 2002

Antiwar Effort Gains Momentum: Growing Peace Movement's Ranks Include Some Unlikely Allies

The Washington Post reports,

...Having lived through the Vietnam antiwar movement, which took years to build, the Mothers Against War are buoyed to find themselves part of a fast-growing movement of people from every walk of life, from every political stripe.

The extraordinary array of groups questioning the Bush administration's rationale for an invasion of Iraq includes longtime radical groups such as the Workers World Party, but also groups not known for taking stands against the government. There is a labor movement against war, led by organizers of the largest unions in the country; a religious movement against the war, which includes leaders of virtually every mainstream denomination; a veterans movement against the war, led by those who fought Iraq in the Persian Gulf a decade ago; business leaders against the war, led by corporate leaders; an antiwar movement led by relatives of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks; and immigrant groups against the war.

There are also black and Latino organizations, hundreds of campus antiwar groups and scores of groups of ordinary citizens meeting in community centers and church basements from Baltimore to Seattle.

It has reached a point where United for Peace, a Web site started by the San Francisco-based human rights organization Global Exchange for groups to list events commemorating the Sept. 11 anniversary, has morphed into a national network coordinating events for more than 70 peace groups nationwide.

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Related: "Mothers of draft age sons - should we organize?" is the first post in a discussion thread at democraticunderground.com:

Oct. 11 2002:
I don't know how many posts I've seen lately saying, "No matter what I have to do, I won't let them take my child." I suspect there are a lot of us here. (Unless, of course, it's all been the same person and I just haven't noticed.)

I have a 20-year-old son myself, and the more I look into conscientious objector status, the less of a viable option it seems. I'm not sure Canada is going to work this go-round, either. So what do we do?

Let's get together and talk.

One of the many responses:

"how do you propose we kick off the DUBYA GOES FIRST campaign? This has to become a nation-wide mantra."

My prediction: The more Bush and Cheney re-create the Nixon administration with appointments such as Henry ("The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer." -- The New York Times Magazine, Oct. 28, 1973) "Kissinger to chair the 911 inquiry, the bigger the peace movement is likely to become. "Mayberry Machiavelli" Karl Rove, who will be 52 on Christmas Day, should be old enough to understand this.
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The Trained Eye Gallery: "All of these images are from the sides of boxcars, coal cars, miscellaneous freight cars and a caboose. These cars have been scratched, gouged, painted, scraped, rusted, and repainted over the course of their lifetimes. From a distance they appear uniformly colored, neat, and tidy. But, up close, with their context removed, they have become the gallery you see here."

Terrific photos by Tim Davis.

via Picto Blog
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Infinity mirrored: As kids, we all tried the two-mirror trick, trying to see increasingly tiny reflections as they bounced between two mirrors we stood between. Your head gets in the way. So it's with admiration a little crowd of editors gathered around my screen to watch this awesome Flash demonstration of what we could never see before.

Watch the frame.
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No More Fanaticism as Usual by Salmon Rushdie:

A couple of months ago I said that I detested the sloganization of my name by Islamists around the world. I'm beginning to rethink that position. Maybe it's not so bad to be a Rushdie among other "Rushdies." For the most part I'm comfortable with, and often even proud of, the company I'm in.

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Brian Walker, Rocket Guy: He appeared on Conan O'Brien's show Thanksgiving night. ABC News covered him. He' s serious: he plans to blast off from the black rock desert in Nevada, without benefit of NASA.
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Standalones:

Dave Barry's Holiday Gift Guide

The 3rd Annual 20 Worst People, Places, And Things On The Internet For 2002

Scientists condemn new gene technique ("Researchers have developed a technique to speed evolution by inserting human cancer-causing genes into animals and plants.")

How the Three Card Monte is done

Tell the FCC to Serve the Public, Not Hollywood! (by New Yorkers for Fair Use)

And if this isn't enough, there are a few weekend items and new pix (snow!) at my personal site at lennon2.com.

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Subterranean Homepage News
by Sheila Lennon
features & interactive producer of projo.com

 

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