Month: September 2003

  • Project for the
    New Century


    "A bully can be stopped, and so can a mob. It takes one person with the courage and a resolute voice."


    -- Tim Robbins, speech to National Press Club, April 15, 2003


    Resoluteness is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for such a voice.  Also needed is eloquence.  Here is such a voice:


    William Rivers Pitt.


    Postscript:


    I wrote the above at 3:38 PM today, thinking I had finally found someone to admire whom my left-leaning friends might also admire.


    Perhaps resoluteness and eloquence suffice to stop a mob; they are not, however, sufficient to impress professional journalists, who, to be much impressed, require a third quality-- truthfulness.


    Since today's major Washington and New York papers indicate that a presidential scandal of Water- or Monica-gate proportions may be in the offing, some minimal fact-checking seems in order.  Hence, at 3:40 PM today, I did a Google search on names Pitt discusses:


    "karl rove"  
    "robert mosbacher"  
     novak
    .
     


    That search indicates that unfortunately, mob-stopper Pitt seems, like many leftists, to be a liar.


    Here is an excerpt from Pitt on Karl Rove dated Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2003:


    The Most Insidious of Traitors



    "Karl Rove, senior political advisor to George W. Bush, is a very powerful man. That is not to say he has never been in trouble. Rove was fired from the 1992 Bush Sr. campaign for trashing Robert Mosbacher, Jr., who was the chief fundraiser for the campaign and an avowed Bush loyalist. Rove accomplished this trashing of Mosbacher by planting a negative story with columnist Bob Novak. The campaign figured out that Karl had done the dirty deed, and he was given his walking papers.


    Demonstrably, Rove is back in the saddle again. The January 2003 edition of Esquire magazine carried an article by Ron Suskind.... "


    Here is an excerpt from columnist Robert Novak dated December 5, 2002:


    Low Political Intrigue



    "The article in Esquire's January edition by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ron Suskind is actually about Karl Rove, Bush's powerful political adviser.... 


    Unfortunately, I did not escape Suskind's article, which includes these sentences: 'Sources close to the former president say Rove was fired from the 1992 Bush presidential campaign after he planted a negative story with columnist Robert Novak about dissatisfaction with campaign fund-raising chief and Bush loyalist Robert Mosbacher Jr. It was smoked out, and he was summarily ousted.'  I was called by no fact-checker, who would have learned of multiple errors.

    Suskind has confused former Secretary of Commerce Robert Mosbacher Sr., Bush's 1992 chief fund-raiser, with his son Rob, who headed the Bush campaign in Texas (Victory '92). Criticism of the younger Mosbacher, a frequent unsuccessful candidate in Texas, was not 'planted' with me by Rove but was passed to me by a Bush aide whom I interviewed. Rove was indeed fired by Mosbacher from Victory '92 but continued as a national Bush-for-president operative.

    Three mistakes in two sentences lend credence to claims by White House aides that they were misrepresented in Suskind's July article..."


    I say Pitt seems to be lying because in today's editorial he never even mentions Novak's column of December 5, 2002, which is, as noted above, readily available. 


    It is, of course, possible that Pitt and Suskind are right and Novak is wrong.  It is also possible that Orwell was wrong, that Stalin was a great man, and that Communism is the wave of the future.

  • On the Beach


    On this date in 1954, the first nuclear submarine, the USS Nautilus, was commissioned.


    Related reading in today's New York Times:



    1. Obituary of Marshall N. Rosenbluth, physicist who helped develop the H-bomb.  He died Sunday in San Diego, California.
    2. Quotation from a Fermilab physicist:
      "There are a bunch of things that nothing can turn them around. Death is one."

    Related reading from yesterday's entries:



    Related reading from the Song of Songs:


    "Love is strong as death."


    Related viewing:




    From Here to Eternity


     Today's birthday: Deborah Kerr.

  • Magic Hawaii


    Today, the birthday of singer Jerry Lee Lewis, is also the feast of St. Michael and All Angels.


    In honor of Lewis:


    Killer Radio, an entry of July 31, 2003, that contains the following...



    "When the light came she was sitting on the bed beside an open suitcase, toying with her diamond rings.  She saw the light first in the depths of the largest stone."


    -- Paul Preuss, Broken Symmetries,
        scene at Diamond Head, Oahu,
        Hawaii


    In honor of the angels:


    Mathematics as an Adequate Language,
    by Israel Gelfand, Sept. 2, 2003, which contains the following...



    "Many people consider mathematics to be a boring and formal science.  However, any really good work in mathematics always has in it: beauty, simplicity, exactness, and crazy ideas.  This is a strange combination.  I understood earlier that this combination is essential on the example of classical music and poetry.  But it is also typical in mathematics.  It is not by chance that many mathematicians enjoy serious music.


    This combination of beauty, simplicity, exactness, and crazy ideas is, I think, common to both mathematics and music."


    These qualities seem also to be sought by practitioners of religion and physics... for example, by the spiritually-minded physicist in Preuss's Broken Symmetries.  Skeptics might prefer, to the word "religion," the word (pronounced with a sneer) "magic."


    What do we find if, following in the footsteps of Gelfand and Preuss, we do a Google search on the following words...



    "beauty simplicity exactness
     crazy magic Hawaii
    "?


    The search yields two results:




    1. The Pupil: Poems by W. S. Merwin.
      The above link is to a poem, "Prophecy," that seems suitable for these, the High Holy Days at the end of one year and the beginning of another.



      For a follow-up to the poem, see
      The Shining of Lucero.


    2. "Striking Through the Mask, or
       The Allegorical Meanings
       in Moby Dick
      ."

    These two selections, both on the theme of light and darkness, offer a language that is perhaps more adequate than mathematics for dealing with the nature of the High Holy Days.  For a more lighthearted approach to these concerns, also with a Hawaiian theme, see


    The Aloha Mass.

  • Declaring Victory
    and Going Home
     










    Elia Kazan
    1909-2003


  • Spirit of East St. Louis


    On Miles Davis and Philly Joe Jones:



    Miles said to Jones, "I think this is it." Jones agreed having said of the group, "The first time we played together…we just looked around at each other and said, ‘hum here it is right here. We’ve got musical telepathy here. We have five people who always know what’s going to happen next.’" And those five people became legendary as the classic Miles Davis Quintet was baptized for its first time.


    From The American Art Form:



    While singing work songs, a leader would call out a phrase, and the rest of the people would answer. This is known as call and response. In Cindy Blackman's "Telepathy" , the lead saxophone who is playing the melody calls out a phrase, and another horn responds. In some jazz music, there is what is known as "trading 4's". This is when one instrument plays 4 measures, and then another plays 4 measures off what the first person played, and so on. This is a modern rendition of call and response.


     

    Trading Fours


    See also


    Miles Davis, E. S. P.,


    Bill Stewart, Telepathy,


    Desmond and Mulligan, Two of a Mind,


    Google search, "musical telepathy,"


    and a novel dealing with East St. Louis (where Miles Davis grew up) and telepathy,


    The Hollow Man, by Dan Simmons.


    From the jacket of The Hollow Man:



    Jeremy Bremen has a secret. All his life he has been cursed with the unwanted ability to read minds. He can hear the secret thoughts behind the placid expressions of strangers, colleagues, and friends. Their dreams, their fears, their most secret desires are as intimate to him as his own. For years his wife, Gail, has served as a shield between Jeremy and the intrusive thoughts of those around him. Her presence has protected him from the outside world and allowed him to continue his work as one of the world's leading mathematicians. But now Gail is dying, her mind slipping slowly away, and Jeremy comes face-to-face with the horror of his own omniscience. Vulnerable and alone, he is suddenly exposed to a chaotic flood of others' thoughts, threatening to fill him with the world's pain and longing, to sweep away his very sanity. His mathematical studies have taken him to the threshold of knowledge and enabled him to map uncharted regions of the mind, to recognize the mind itself as a mirror of the universe...and to see in that mirror the fleeting reflection of the creator himself. But his studies taught him nothing at all about the death of the mind, about the loss of love and trust, and about the terrible loneliness of mortality. Now Jeremy is on the run - from his mind, from his past, from himself - hoping to find peace in isolation. Instead he witnesses an act of brutality that sends him on a treacherous odyssey across America, from a fantasy theme park to the mean streets of an uncaring city, from the lair of a killer to the gaudy casinos of Las Vegas, and at last to a sterile hospital room in St. Louis in search of the voice that is calling him to the secret of existence itself.

  • Time is a Weapon


    "Time is a weapon, it’s cold and it’s cruel."


    — Max D. Barnes song lyric,
    sung by Ray Price
    (See Aug. 1, 2003, entry.)


    3:57


    was the time of yesterday afternoon's entry,


    Aloha.









    The Friday,
    Sept. 26, 2003,
    Mid-Day Lottery
    Number for
    Pennsylvania
    (State of Grace)
    was
     357.


    "Only through time time is conquered."
    — T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets

  • A Mass for
    Rosh Hashanah


    In memory of playwright Herb Gardner, who died on Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2003, in honor of the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, which begins at sunset today, and in celebration of T. S. Eliot's birthday, which is today, here is an illustrated Mass from the Catholic News Service dated Sept. 24 (Saint Herb's Day):






    Proposed Vatican document on liturgy returned to drafting committee

    By Cindy Wooden
    Catholic News Service

    ROME (CNS) -- A proposed Vatican document on liturgical norms was sent back to its drafting committee after cardinals and bishops raised some objections and encouraged some changes.

    Among other things, the draft presented to consulting prelates in June reportedly discouraged the distribution of Communion under the forms of both bread and wine and said altar girls were permissible only for a good reason.



    From DONE BY DOM •
     cards of unparalleled fabulosity


    See also the two previous entries,
    and "Max's Hawaiian Ecstasies" in
    Gardner's play "The Goodbye People."


    For a musical accompaniment to this
    requiem for Gardner,
     the "Aloha Mass,"
    click here.


    Among
    those
    at the
    Mass:



    The Mass, at Max's Hawaiian Ecstasies
    in Paradise, will conclude with
    "Simply Irresistible," sung by
    Saint Robert Palmer and performed by...



    Irresistible Grace.


    The role of the congregation will, as usual,
    be performed by George Plimpton.
    Payment for our sins will be made by
    Johnny Cash.

  • In Memory of Playwright
     Herb Gardner


    eBay item 3243620848:


    "Up for auction is a Hawaiian hula girl music box. It plays 'Tiny Bubbles' and spins around. It is approx. 12" tall and the top part of the body is made of hard plastic. It is in great condition."



    Aloha.

  • Bel Canto


    The conclusion of tonight's season-
    opening episode of "The West Wing"
    was a picture of President Bartlet  
     receiving the Host at Mass.


    Related material:



    The Source:


    Tips On Popular Singing
    by Frank Sinatra
    in collaboration with
    his vocal teacher John Quinlan


    What prompted me to find this
    booklet on the Web
    (at about 8:45 PM tonight) was


    40,000 Years of Music
    by Jacques Chailley
    (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1964),
    page 162,
    on the bel canto style of singing.


    I picked up this book this afternoon
    at a sale for $1.


    See also Sinatra's remarks on bel canto
    (various places on the Web).


    For the religious significance of
    the page number 162, see my
    entry of 9/11 2003,


    Particularity.




    Added at 3:20 AM Sept. 25...


    In Related News:



    Source: Google News, about 3:15 AM 9/25/03

  • Intelligence Test








    At left:
    Reuters
    Offers
    IQ Test


    Today's British Intelligence Award
    goes to Reuters news agency:






    Key Phrase Was Dropped
    from UK Iraq Dossier

    Tue September 23, 2003 12:33 PM ET
    By Katherine Baldwin and Janet McBride


    LONDON (Reuters) - The British intelligence chief responsible for a pre-war dossier on Iraq's weapons dropped a key sentence from it days before publication after prompting from Downing Street, an inquiry heard Tuesday.

    He did it at the suggestion of Jonathan Powell, chief of staff to Prime Minister Tony Blair, the inquiry heard.

    The offending sentence stated that former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was prepared to use chemical and biological weapons "if he believes his regime is under threat."

    Powell argued that phrase suggested Iraq was only a threat if attacked.

    The revelation that Powell ordered the sentence to be omitted raises fresh doubts over the intervention of Blair's office in the compilation of the September dossier.


    Today's British Stupidity Award goes,
    of course, to Jonathan Powell.