914 lines
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914 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
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** ITE IN ORCUM DIRECTE **
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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"All the news About Hal that Hal deems fit to print"
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Special Introductory Electronic Issue
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The Harold Herald you've downloaded here is the on-line
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incarnation of a newsletter published every month or so from
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Portland, Maine.
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But before you skip down the screen looking for nice, cheery
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welcomes and nice, reader-friendly guides to the publication, let's get
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one thing straight: This is my newsletter and "nice" is not the
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operative phrase around here. I formulate the editorial tone in these
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parts and I happen to like it "acidic." So, if you're one of these
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super-appreciative dolts who sees the good in everything but lacks any
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high regard for sarcasm and aggressive denigration, then log off right
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now and continue scanning the Internet for a heapin' helping of the
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electronic pablum you crave.
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When we launched in June 1993, stories strictly adhered to the
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Herald's mission statement: "All the news about Hal that Hal deems
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fit to print." While my life could be described as the ideal editorial
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vehicle - thrilling, sultry, multi-faceted, mysterious - the Herald
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soon tackled a broader spectrum of subject matter, viewed through
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the eyes and keyboards of various guest columnists.
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The evolution has continued. In response to the oversensitive
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whiners I might have taken to task in previous issues, the Herald has
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instituted a "letters to the editor" section. I invite you to
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contribute, respond or generally spew (see the masthead for
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correspondence information). Another department open to contribution is
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our regular travel feature, Pejorative Corner, examples of which appear
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further down the menu.
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Consider these files a special introductory offer: We've gathered
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here stories from recent issues to give you a feel for the publication's
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editorial tone and mission. If you don't like it, heed the advice listed
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each month on the front-page banner: Ite in orcum directe!
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Harold G. Phillips III
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Publisher
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Editor-in-Chief
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Resident Stud
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THE HAROLD HERALD
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Publisher Food Editor
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Harold Gardner Phillips III Max Baer
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Editor-in-Chief Living Editor
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Hal Phillips Dr. Baruch Goldstein
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Virtual Editor Production Manager
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Dr. David M. Rose Quinn-Martin
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Managing Editor Circulation Manager
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Formletter McKinley Benjamin Pennypacker Binswanger
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Associate Editor Spiritual Consultant
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Throatwarbler Mangrove Cardinal Mannix
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Weapons Consultant Drug Tsar
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Mohommed Farah Aidid William F. Buckley Jr.
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Giant Sucking Sound
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Provided By:
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Ross Perot's daughter
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on her honeymoon
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Editorial Offices: Satellite Office:
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The Harold Herald c/o Golf Course News
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30 Deering St. 38 Lafayette St.
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Portland, Maine 04101 P.O. Box 997
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207-774-7095 Yarmouth, Maine 04096
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207-846-0600
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Fax: 207-846-0657
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Virtual Office:
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c/o drose@husc.harvard.edu
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===================================================================
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BASEBALL'S ARMAGEDDON?
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By HAL PHILLIPS
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So many people are down on baseball these days, I felt it important to
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weigh in on a few choice topics before the seemingly inevitable
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implosion of this venerable institution.
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If we are to believe these disillusioned pundits, it's as if baseball's
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survival depends totally on its ability to replicate the innocence and
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purity of the 1950s, when Baby Boomers sat close to radios on back
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porches cooing to the exploits of Mickey, Willie and the Duke, instead
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of masturbating or experimenting with drugs.
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Listen: It's over. And I've got blasphemous news for you: It wasn't that
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great.
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There were stars, but fans west of St. Louis couldn't attest to their
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greatness. Indeed, the Yankees dominated both leagues - in terms of wins
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and publicity - which further exacerbated the game's Gothamcentrism. And
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can we please stop with all this complaining about a lack of afternoon
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games, especially when the playoffs (more blasphemy) and Worlds Series
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roll around? In the 50s, there was virtually no television, so nobody
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saw shit! How, exactly, do night games on nationwide television exclude
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little tykes any more than day games discriminated against working men
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and women, or little tykes attending school at 1 p.m. on Tuesday
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afternoon?
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No doubt, there was great hitting for power in this hallowed decade, but
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teams were also loaded with plodding Walt Dropo types. These same
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purists derided him, but Dave Kingman would have been a cult hero in an
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era where burly potted plants like Ralph Kiner were so glorified.
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Further, stolen bases were a lost art in this station-to-station
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atmosphere. Willie Mays was the decade's leader in thefts with 179. Read
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that again... Can you imagine? From 1950-57, no major league team stole
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100 bases in a season! These guys would make the present-day Red Sox
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look like waterbugs.
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And one more thing: Lets us not confuse loyalty with serfdom. Of course
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players stayed with teams for longer periods of time - they had no
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choice! Owners in the 50s were an appallingly greedy bunch, doling out
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meager salaries while selling virtually every inch of stadium facade and
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every minute of air time to the Ballantines and White Owls of the world.
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In short, if I hear another Baby Boomer bemoaning baseball's boorish
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bourgeoise behavior, I'm gonna boot!
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***
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An open query to the fans and media of Baltimore: Why is everybody on
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Cal Ripken's case? Is this some sort of biennial ritual in the land of
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pleasant living, where the immortal Mark Belanger patrolled Memorial
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Stadium for 20 years, often going months without hitting a ball out of
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the infield? Bring back Kiko Garcia! People of Baltimore, listen
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closely: Ripken is not only the best shortstop you have, he remains the
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best defensive shortstop in the American League, of which he was MVP
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only two seasons ago. He's pursuing one of baseball's most revered
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records with uncommon dignity despite continual carping from all sides.
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He has even displayed some of that 50s-era loyalty by keeping quiet
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after Orioles management unceremoniously fired his father (twice) and
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shipped his brother to Texas. Cal Ripken could quit right now and waltz
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in to the Hall of Fame on the first ballot because he's a first-rate
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defensive player and his power numbers dwarf those of other shortstops.
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Unfortunately, if you try to explain this to some sap who grew up
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listening to Vin Scully heap praise on Pee Wee Reese, you're liable to
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elicit the baseball equivalent of a Pavlovian froth. Then they'll blame
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it on the talent dilution brought on by expansion.
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=====================================================================
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MISERY HAS COMPANY
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By DR. DAVID ROSE
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BOSTON, Mass. - From a meteorological perspective, this winter has been
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a particularly difficult one in New England. The ground here has been
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snow-covered for at least a month, and each time the snow begins to
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retreat a new storm sets in, dumping a foot or two of the white stuff on
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the city's long-suffering populace.
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In times like these, even the most stalwart, Eastern masochist can cast
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an admiring eye to the South or West, imagining more comfortable - if
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less character-building - Februarys. In weaker moments we are all
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capable of believing we would be less miserable if only the weather were
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better.
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What few people realize, however, is that misery - like matter, energy
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or gravity - is a measurable entity subject to strict physical laws.
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Paramount among these is the law of conservation of misery, which states
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that misery can be neither be created nor destroyed.
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What the law of conservation of misery means is that each human being is
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subject to a fixed quantity of misery during his or her lifetime. This
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"misery quotient" is absolutely immutable, a constant that holds across
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socioeconomic groups and geographic boundaries.
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The law can be demonstrated in the field by measuring and tabulating
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misery in test subjects by using sensitive, electronic monitoring
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equipment. In the following study, diary entries for three individuals
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are followed by the amount of misery experienced by each, expressed in
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misery units (MU).
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Subject 1, Los Angeles, Calif.
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Day 1: Beautiful day. Saw Erik Estrada at Arby's (.002 MU)
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Day 2: Beautiful day. Discussed Rolfing with a Scientologist.
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(22.001 MU)
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Day 3: Beautiful day. Around noon my house ripped loose from its
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foundation, slid down a hill, burst into flames and was swallowed up by
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a huge fissure that opened in the Earth. I was trapped for four weeks
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and was forced to drink by own urine to survive. One of the paramedics
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looked just like Kevin Bacon in Footloose. (1223.12 MU)
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Subject 2, Tallahassee, Fla.
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Day 1: Beautiful day. Stayed in the trailer and ran the air conditioner.
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(.003 MU)
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Day 2: Beautiful day. Noticed that some, but by no means all, of my
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neighbors bear a striking resemblance to Gomer Pyle. (12.4 MU)
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Day 3: The morning was beautiful, but in the afternoon I was mistaken
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for a German tourist and shot in the head, doused with gasoline, and set
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afire during a hurricane that destroyed the entire trailer park.
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(1232.72 MU)
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Subject 3, Boston, Mass.
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Day 1: Mixture of snow and sleet. Frostbite in right foot. (415.041 MU)
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Day 2: Mixture of snow and freezing rain. My right foot has become
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gangrenous, and the stench is unbearable (415.041 MU)
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Day 3: More snow. However, I reflected today that my house remains
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intact and this gave me a sense of stability and well-being. Right foot
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amputated. (415.041 MU)
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Note the three subjects had very different experiences during the test
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period. However, the total amount of misery endured by each subject is
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identical (1245.123 MU).
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While life in Boston is characterized by an endless series of petty
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humiliations and annoyances, life to the South or West consists of long
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stretches of inane, vapid, colorless contentment punctuated by absolute
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cataclysm. You can take your pick, but you can't avoid misery
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altogether.
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And before you move to warmer climes, consider the fact that spring will
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bring nicer weather to Boston, whereas Gomer Pyle lives in Tallahassee
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year 'round.
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------------
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Herald Science Editor David Rose, PhD, is the world's foremost authority
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on suffering. While he still gets a charge from the warranted misfortune
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of others, he specializes in chance trauma and self-imposed misery. He
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once dieted for two weeks on nothing but chicken boullion and carrots.
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His latest book, "I'm Wretched, You're Wretched" (Knopf, $14.95), was
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published in February. He lives in Boston with wife Penelope.
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=================================================================
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TERROR BY NIGHT
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By MARK SULLIVAN
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PORTLAND, Maine - There was a time when Hal Phillips dismissed ghost
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sightings as so much folderol, as the incredible claims of carny
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spiritualists and practitioners of hoodoo, or the fevered rantings of
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the gullibly credulous, like insensitively depicted minstrel butlers in
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Three Stooges episodes or the pant-suited blue-hairs who hog the 7-11
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counter scratching lottery tickets when all Phillips wants to do is buy
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a pack of Players.
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No longer. Phillips, by all accounts a sane and frequently sober
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magazine editor, has become convinced that his Portland apartment is
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haunted by the spirit of a long-dead Maine congressman who pounds a
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ghostly gavel, loudly practices speeches at all hours of the night, and
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frequently mocks with withering bursts of sarcasm.
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Congressman Thomas Reed, who served as Speaker of the U.S. House of
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Representatives at the turn of the century and who died in 1902, lived
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in the Deering Street brownstone in which Phillips' apartment is now
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located.
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The hulking specter of Reed - who combined a massive girth with a
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cultivated wit, and whose masterful handling of the House chamber earned
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him the nickname "Czar" - continues to roam the building, Phillips
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claims.
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"It's getting to where I can't sleep at night, what with all the
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stomping about and the lofty oratory and the cigar smoke," Phillips
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explains. "And all the witty asides - I can't pull on my new Black Watch
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underwear without him going on about the Boxer Rebellion."
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Reed was described by historian Barbara Tuchman as "a physical giant,
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six feet three inches tall, weighing almost three hundred pounds and
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dressed completely in black, out of whose collar rose an enormous clean-
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shaven baby face like a Casaba melon flowering from a fat black stalk...
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"Speaking in a slow drawl, he delighted to drop cool pearls of sarcasm
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into the most heated rhetoric and to watch the resulting fizzle with the
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bland gravity of a New England Buddha," Tuchman wrote of Reed in the
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Proud Tower. "As he walked down the streets of Portland, he resembled a
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human frigate among shallops. Silent, impassive, with an inward-turned
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eye, noticing no one, he moved along with the ponderous, gently swaying
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gait of an elephant."
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<20><><EFBFBD>
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Reed's ghost first made his presence known to Phillips a few weeks ago.
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Phillips said he was awakened one night by a persistent pounding noise,
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which he first thought to be the pipes, or the rutting of feral felines
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drawn to his roof by the allure of his pet cats, Scott and Zelda. As he
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listed longer, however, the sound became unmistakable: It was the
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hammering of a gavel.
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The continuous pounding grew so deafening that Phillips, in the hope of
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getting some sleep, curled up in his '40s-era phone booth - a souvenir
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from the old Hampshire House in Boston - that sits in the middle of his
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living room. Phillips was just drifting off when he was startled by a
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spectral face gazing at him through the door.
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It was the ghost of Reed.
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"Quorum call, quorum call!" the spirit exclaimed. "Will the gentleman
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from Massachusetts kindly yield the kiosk?"
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Phillips was flabbergasted. "You can imagine how I felt when I saw that
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Casaba-melon face looking in at me," he recalls. "I thought I'd got hold
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of a bad Carling, or that I'd been having too many hookahs for
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breakfast."
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Since that time, Phillips says, the ghost has appeared nightly in his
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apartment, holding forth on Admiral Mahan's naval theory, the policies
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of the McKinley Administration and the damnable obstructionism of House
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Democrats. Reed persists in taking roll calls, repeatedly, counting as
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present Phillips' cats, whom Reed refers to as "Cabot" and "Lodge."
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Phillips also finds himself a target of Reed's quick wit. When a lengthy
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declamation on tariff drew only stammers from a befuddled Phillips, Reed
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smiled haughtily: "Having embedded that fly in the liquid amber of my
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remarks, I will proceed," the ghost said.
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Phillips has laid in stores of claret and port to placate the ghost who,
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after discovering Phillips' new martini mixer, was found rummaging
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through the refrigerator in a futile search for olives, which Phillips
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eschews.
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"I call that damned fussy, given martinis hadn't even been invented when
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he was alive," Phillips says.
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The speaker's sarcasm took a biting turn after Phillips returned,
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tanned, from a trip to the Philippines. The editor had traveled there to
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cover an innovative social advance: a new golf championship golf course
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built atop a Manila landfill where beggars - to the dismay of local
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businessmen and tourists - had previously taken to congregate in search
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of scraps of food.
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A smirking Reed began henceforth to refer to Phillips as "Aguinaldo,"
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after the turn-of-the-century Filipino insurrectionary. The Wellesley-
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bred, lapsed-Unitarian Phillips chafes at the comparison, which he says
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is not apt regardless of his having attended Wesleyan with campus bomber
|
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Nicholas Haddad and his frequent defenses of soccer, a sport notorious
|
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for it hooliganism.
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"I've had it," says Phillips. "There's only room for one speaker in this
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house, and that's me."
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|
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---------------
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Mark Sullivan is a freelance journalist living in Winchester, Mass. His
|
|||
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rants and implausible historical juxtapositions appear frequently in the
|
|||
|
Herald, as no self-respecting journal would accept them.
|
|||
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===================================================================
|
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ARE YOU A DUPE FOR THE LEFT?
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BY HAL PHILLIPS
|
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|
|||
|
Pursuing a liberal political and social agenda is a noble, virtuous
|
|||
|
goal. But many ardent Democrats run the risk of blindly walking the
|
|||
|
party line - even though it's been outlawed in Moscow. Ha! Just kidding!
|
|||
|
Dyed-in-the-wool liberals aren't necessarily socialists, but sometimes
|
|||
|
the two groups can be hard to distinguish.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Are you a dupe for the left? The following self-administered quiz was
|
|||
|
designed to assist you in answering this important question. Let's
|
|||
|
begin:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1.Would you describe Pat Buchanan as...
|
|||
|
a. A fat, balding fascist
|
|||
|
b. An over-exposed opportunist
|
|||
|
c. A moderate republican
|
|||
|
(If you answered "c", add three points to your score.)
|
|||
|
2. You oppose term limits because...
|
|||
|
a. We already have term limitation; it's called voting
|
|||
|
b. They limit my choice as a voter
|
|||
|
c. It's a minority issue and "we" still have a majority in
|
|||
|
Congress.
|
|||
|
(If you answered "c", add two points to your score. If you
|
|||
|
answered "a" or "b", subtract one.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. I listen to "All Things Considered" because...
|
|||
|
a. It's the best news program in America
|
|||
|
b. There's no bi-partisan alternative
|
|||
|
c. I fall into a Dionysian trance every time Daniel Schorr says
|
|||
|
"former President Bush."
|
|||
|
(If you answered "c", stop taking this quiz and go directly to the
|
|||
|
George McGovern Deprogramming Clinic nearest you.)
|
|||
|
4. I oppose nuclear power plants because...
|
|||
|
a. The waste-disposal issue has never been fully addressed.
|
|||
|
b. Solar energy has never been given a chance.
|
|||
|
c. I receive $5 off my annual Sierra Club membership dues for
|
|||
|
every anti-nuke letter I get published.
|
|||
|
(If you answered "a" or "b", subtract one point; if you answered
|
|||
|
"c", get a life.)
|
|||
|
5. I would describe the average U.S. conservative as...
|
|||
|
a. Just like me, only misinformed
|
|||
|
b. Self-centered and close-minded
|
|||
|
c. A Nazi
|
|||
|
(Subtract one point for any answer.)
|
|||
|
6. "Family values" is not a relevant political issue because...
|
|||
|
a. America is a melting pot where one cultural steriotype of
|
|||
|
"family" cannot be imposed upon or expected of anyone else.
|
|||
|
b. My parents were hippies who raised me on a diet of
|
|||
|
wheat germ and Thai stick in the back of VW MicroBus - quite
|
|||
|
frankly, the issue makes me uncomfortable.
|
|||
|
c. Republicans got to it first.
|
|||
|
(If you answered "a", add a point to your score; if "b", add two
|
|||
|
points; if "c" add three points.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you scored 10 points or more on this very scientific examination,
|
|||
|
it's time to seriously reconsider the level of your politcal commitment.
|
|||
|
Voting Libertarian can be quite therapeutic, in that it asserts your
|
|||
|
independence as a voter while not assisting the stormtrooping right. In
|
|||
|
the interest of fairness, we had planned to run a similar quiz next
|
|||
|
month for our conservative readers. However, because the average
|
|||
|
conservative tends not to bother with introspection of any kind, we
|
|||
|
won't bother.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=====================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PEJORATIVE CORNER
|
|||
|
BY HAL PHILLIPS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I'm a little behind in my methodical trashing of the world's most
|
|||
|
beloved destinations. So, seeing as this is the initial 1994
|
|||
|
installment of Pejorative Corner and I haven't moved about much of
|
|||
|
late, allow me to review my travels during November of 1993:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
San Francisco - Though I've been to San Francisco several times and,
|
|||
|
indeed, lived just north of the city during some of my numerous
|
|||
|
formative years, I am continually amazed at the ultra-liberal, supremely
|
|||
|
activist nature of its talk radio landscape. It is virtually impossible
|
|||
|
to scan the AM dial and find anything but heated exchanges over the
|
|||
|
treatment of homeless people, homosexuals, AIDS, the ozone layer, gun
|
|||
|
control or feminism (Okay, I listed it sixth - so what!). These people
|
|||
|
need a good seatbelt controversy to break the monotony of left-leaning
|
|||
|
righteousness. Enough about the inherent indignity of panhandling and
|
|||
|
job discrimination - what about Will Clark?!? I was in San Francisco
|
|||
|
right after he signed with the Rangers and I didn't hear a peep. Too
|
|||
|
busy dreaming up the next Alar scare, I guess...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hong Kong - Bring back the opium dens! These people need to relax! A
|
|||
|
little lying around, sleeping off the effects of heavy drug use would do
|
|||
|
HK residents a world of good. There's more street activity at 6 a.m.
|
|||
|
than you'll see all year in downtown Portland, Maine. Shop vendors open
|
|||
|
at first light - presumably to serve the millions of old men and women
|
|||
|
already doing tai chi as the sun rises over Victoria Harbour - and never
|
|||
|
close. Hong Kongers: Lighten up! See a movie, read a book, sleep in,
|
|||
|
develop poor eating habits. The Red Chinese are coming in three years...
|
|||
|
Enjoy the world's highest standard of living while you can!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Charleston, S.C. - After arriving at my hotel dehydrated, I promptly
|
|||
|
gulped down a tall glass of water - I nearly wretched! Worst tap water
|
|||
|
I've ever encountered. Softer than a baby's butt, only less appetizing.
|
|||
|
I drank bottled water all week - an overtly pretentious thing I never
|
|||
|
do. But I had no choice! As for the people, are you familiar with the
|
|||
|
phrase, "Dumb as a post"? Well, Charlestonians are dumber than posts.
|
|||
|
Somewhere along the line, a post was a tree - a living, productive
|
|||
|
organism. South Carolinians are more closely akin to rocks and clumps of
|
|||
|
dirt. Neither can they speak. Asking directions anywhere in the state is
|
|||
|
virtually pointless. The best diction I heard during my stay was the
|
|||
|
brand new speaking cash register at a Piggly Wiggly I patronized. "Four
|
|||
|
dollars and thirty-seven cents," it said impeccably, as the bar coded
|
|||
|
Evian bottle passed over the sensor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Sure does talk funny," drawled the amused checkout girl. "Y'all want
|
|||
|
any green stamps?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Vermont/Texas - You wouldn't think Vermont and Dallas/Ft. Worth have
|
|||
|
much in common, but that's where you're wrong: They both turn my
|
|||
|
stomach! The beauty of America is the diversity of its people and the
|
|||
|
nauseating places they call home. In many ways, Texas and the Route 7
|
|||
|
corridor in Western Vermont couldn't be more different - but they both
|
|||
|
drove me and my GI tract to distraction during my respective visits.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If Ethan Allen could see what's happened to the once-sleepy town of
|
|||
|
Manchester, he'd have led the Green Mountain Boys in British scarlet and
|
|||
|
black. Outlet outposts are bourgeoise enough, but Manchester city
|
|||
|
fathers have perverted the already-disturbing genre by ignoring the
|
|||
|
town's proximity to New York City. Only three hours to the south, the
|
|||
|
Big Apple secretes an endless stream of bargain-hunting status-seekers
|
|||
|
who flock to Donna Karan with a near-rabid intensity. The crowd of
|
|||
|
listless, middle-aged husbands milling about the parking lot is almost
|
|||
|
sad. What Manchester really needs is a Robert Bly Factory Store selling
|
|||
|
leather drum seconds produced by the native Americans driven from their
|
|||
|
homes by these hordes of ill-mannered New Yorkers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Never let it be said that I don't approach my destinations with an open
|
|||
|
mind. When I stepped off the plane in Dallas around noon, I had already
|
|||
|
been awake for some nine hours (having risen at 3 a.m. to catch a 6 a.m.
|
|||
|
flight out of Manchester, N.H., another garden spot). I was hoping my
|
|||
|
all-around grogginess would shield me from the harrowing subtleties of
|
|||
|
Texan culture, but I ended up going straight to the galleria where my
|
|||
|
worst fears were exceeded by the harsh realities of Big D. These people
|
|||
|
really dress up when they go to the mall! The "D" clearly stands for "on
|
|||
|
Display" because, in Dallas, one always is. Either that or psychological
|
|||
|
"damage" because most natives greet you with a vacant grin commonly
|
|||
|
associated with overmedication.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dear Mr. Phillips,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We regret to inform you that we have, after careful review, rejected
|
|||
|
your application to model and represent our product. While your general
|
|||
|
physical appearance is not in itself displeasing, our Board of Directors
|
|||
|
feels that your wearing our product in an advertisement does not portray
|
|||
|
a positive, romantic and, indeed, manly image. Frankly, we feel that a
|
|||
|
loose, baggy and wrinkled condom is not conducive to projecting the
|
|||
|
"Trojan Man" image.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We did admire your valiant efforts to firm it up through the "two
|
|||
|
popsicle sticks and one elastic band" method, but even then it slipped
|
|||
|
off before the photographs could be taken. Attempts on our behalf to
|
|||
|
increase shutter speed also failed. We would, however, like to note that
|
|||
|
yours is the first we have seen that looks like a bicycle grip.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hal, we appreciate your interest and thank you for your time. Your
|
|||
|
application will be retained for future consideration, perhaps for our
|
|||
|
summer '94 Asian adolescent-wear line.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We are sorry to say that this does unfortunately mean that we will not
|
|||
|
be able to offer the round-trip ticket and accommodation in Hong Kong
|
|||
|
which we had previously discussed and, which we know, you were so
|
|||
|
looking forward to. Should you still wish to come on your own, however,
|
|||
|
we would be willing to arrange an interview with a specialist here, who
|
|||
|
could at the very least offer professional condolences.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We send greetings and our deepest sympathies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yours very truly,
|
|||
|
Mr. I.M. Hung
|
|||
|
Trojan Condom Company (Far East) Ltd.
|
|||
|
6969 Slippery Root Dr.
|
|||
|
Hong Kong
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ED: Bicycle grip!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
===============================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A LIBERAL IN CRISIS
|
|||
|
By DR. DAVID ROSE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BOSTON, Mass. - Two weeks ago, a single event changed the course and
|
|||
|
character of my life forever.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For the past 29 years I have led a life of near-pristine liberalism, a
|
|||
|
life out of the pages of the Utne Reader. I'm a vegetarian and an
|
|||
|
atheist. I vote for Democrats and curse them for being closet
|
|||
|
Republicans. During the Gulf War, when our armed forces' unparalleled
|
|||
|
ability to kill those swarthier than ourselves was celebrated as
|
|||
|
civilization's highest achievement, I sulked. I nursed a vitriolic
|
|||
|
hatred of George Bush long before it was fashionable to do so. I cursed
|
|||
|
the facile fascism of Readers' Digest, The Boston Herald, Bill Bennett
|
|||
|
and William F. Buckley Jr. In short, I was the Ur-liberal. I made Gore
|
|||
|
Vidal look like Herman Goering.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But one fortnight ago, all that changed forever. My credentials are no
|
|||
|
longer in order. There is a chink in my armor of internal consistency...
|
|||
|
In a box in my hall closet sits a Harrington and Richardson Forty-Niner
|
|||
|
Model 949, a .22-caliber, nine-shot, side-loading, double-action
|
|||
|
revolver with blue finish and a western-style grip.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I am a gun owner.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The gun belonged to my grandfather, and when he died, my father
|
|||
|
reluctantly took possession. My father is not a gun person. He is a
|
|||
|
nervous man, nervous about every-day things like the weather or whether
|
|||
|
his automatic ice maker is working properly. He frets about these things
|
|||
|
continually. He brought the gun home and put it away, but it haunted
|
|||
|
him. He was afraid it would go off by itself. He was afraid he would
|
|||
|
shoot John (his Longtime Friend) in a fit of rage. He was afraid someone
|
|||
|
would break in, find the gun and shoot them both.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Finally, he bailed out. With great relief, he gave the gun and
|
|||
|
accompanying bullets to his Just Regular Old Friend Alex, who is from
|
|||
|
the South. To Southerners like Alex, having a pistol and some bullets
|
|||
|
around is like having a cheese board and some batteries around would be
|
|||
|
to my father. Everybody was happy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Except me. I felt the gun should be in the family, so I asked my father
|
|||
|
to ask Alex to give it back. Alex didn't care, and in about two days, my
|
|||
|
father called to say that it was in a shoe box in the back of his car.
|
|||
|
He was leaving it there because he was afraid of it, and he wasn't sure
|
|||
|
that it wasn't loaded. He was so afraid and unsure that, when I picked
|
|||
|
up the box, I saw he had drawn an arrow on the box to show which way the
|
|||
|
gun was pointing - so when it went off, he wouldn't be killed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I determined pretty quickly the gun wasn't loading by pulling this pin
|
|||
|
in front of the cylinder and having the cylinder fall out and roll
|
|||
|
across the floor. Once this was accomplished, I resolved to make the gun
|
|||
|
safe by getting rid of the bullets. This plan seemed elegant in its
|
|||
|
simplicity, but it turned out go be trickier than I had imagined.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What exactly does one do with bullets? Well, I can now tell you... You
|
|||
|
don't give them to the police. In fact, the police laughed at me when I
|
|||
|
tried this and ruefully told me "people think The Department does
|
|||
|
everything." You can't throw them in the trash, some innocent garbage
|
|||
|
man would be killed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
No, the correct way to dispose of unwanted munitions is to wrap them in
|
|||
|
colored paper and give them to your sister's boyfriend for a Christmas
|
|||
|
present. This I did. Unfortunately, a couple of days later my wife
|
|||
|
remembered she still had one .22-caliber bullet, which we had found in
|
|||
|
the woods a year or so ago. For this rogue bullet, I adopted another
|
|||
|
strategy: Throwing it in the Muddy River and walking away quickly while
|
|||
|
no one was looking. Some ducks tried to eat it but I think it sank
|
|||
|
before they could get to it... Whew.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My apartment is now bullet free - and so, in a matter of speaking, the
|
|||
|
gun is no longer a gun and can harm no one. It could become a gun again,
|
|||
|
of course, if someone brought bullets over, or if I took it to where
|
|||
|
there are some bullets.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But more likely it will be relegated to the status of curio or keepsake.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nevertheless, it has affected me profoundly. Just this morning, I heard
|
|||
|
on NPR the federal government is planning to raise the annual fee for a
|
|||
|
gun dealer's license from $90 to $600.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Gee," I thought, before I could catch myself, "that doesn't seem quite
|
|||
|
fair."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Somewhere, Charleton Heston was laughing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-------------
|
|||
|
David M. Rose, Ph.D. and Ur-wordsmith, lives on Boylston Street with his
|
|||
|
wife Penelope and cares not a tinker's cuss about the welfare of
|
|||
|
Boston's water fowl... Incidentally, said "rogue" bullet did sink to the
|
|||
|
bottom before it traveled downstream to the Charles River, where it was
|
|||
|
picked up by anti-Castro Cubans and clandestinely placed on a stretcher
|
|||
|
at Parkland Hospital.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
====================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SHADOW GOVERNANCE...
|
|||
|
BY HAL PHILLIPS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MOSCOW - While it's somewhat akin to tilting at political windmills, the
|
|||
|
creation of shadow governments - such as the one attempted here late in
|
|||
|
September 1993 - offers considerable insight into the art of
|
|||
|
obstructionism. Sober examination of these power grabs reveal them to be
|
|||
|
utterly perplexing to would-be legitimate regimes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Shadow and parallel governments lack subtlety. But they also magnify the
|
|||
|
fragility of democratic sovereignty because, inherently, they occur
|
|||
|
during turbulent political periods and the few effective ways to combat
|
|||
|
them must include retention and display of military power - to ferret
|
|||
|
out "subversive" elements and, most important, to protect the television
|
|||
|
apparatus. [It's interesting to note that Boris Yeltsin moved quickly to
|
|||
|
secure Russian television capabilities - not assurances from his
|
|||
|
military leaders - following his ouster by the Parliament he
|
|||
|
subsequently dissolved.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is the rub: Creation of a shadow governments forces a military
|
|||
|
response from the "legitimate regime" which then seen as the regime of
|
|||
|
force and suppression.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Short of rolling tanks and riot troops through the streets, how does one
|
|||
|
deal with a shadow regime? This was the question facing the Southern
|
|||
|
Christian Leadership Conference during the 1964 civil rights
|
|||
|
demonstrations in Birmingham, Ala. One of the most bizarre, oft-
|
|||
|
overlooked aspects of the Birmingham confrontation was the pair of City
|
|||
|
Councils, both making policy decisions during an extended period of the
|
|||
|
unrest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some background: The hard-line tactics of eight-term Police Commissioner
|
|||
|
"Bull" Connor had been so barbaric and rigid, they elicited even the
|
|||
|
wrath of white Birmingham citizens and officials. When he was sacked,
|
|||
|
Connor ran for mayor - only to be defeated along with the entire City
|
|||
|
Council that had supported him. When it came time for the new Council to
|
|||
|
take up city matters, however, the old Council members never stopped
|
|||
|
legislating. To hear then-state attorney general David Vann tell it, one
|
|||
|
Council would preside from 7 to 9 p.m., then the shadow Council would
|
|||
|
hold forth from 9 to 11.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because it had been elected at the expense of Connor and the
|
|||
|
segregationist Council, the new Council had a pretty strong mandate to
|
|||
|
deal directly with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the SCLC. But with
|
|||
|
whom should civil rights leaders deal? King and his forces were stymied
|
|||
|
for a time while all of Birmingham waited to see which Council had
|
|||
|
control over a police force widely seen to be loyal to Connor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Indeed, the "shadowy" President of Russia, former vice president
|
|||
|
Alexander Rutskoi, is a former brigadier general who fought the air war
|
|||
|
over Afghanistan. Part of his appeal to formulators of the shadow
|
|||
|
government was the sway he may have held over the military, arguably the
|
|||
|
most aggrieved victim of Yeltin's reform mentality.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There's an odd legitimacy at work in these instances; one that generally
|
|||
|
does not give comfort to the forces of perceived sweetness and light.
|
|||
|
The Russian Republic has a constitution, as the City of Birmingham had a
|
|||
|
codified set of laws. It is Yeltsin who is playing fast and loose with
|
|||
|
the only documentation of Russian legislative power. It was the old
|
|||
|
Council in Birmingham that attempted to follow the letter of its
|
|||
|
segregationist law.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Stubborn and audacious, shadow governments nonetheless present a
|
|||
|
dizzying array of problems for opponents. As last-ditch efforts go, they
|
|||
|
should be the choice of better subversive elements everywhere.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
===================================================================
|
|||
|
STARS HAVE SEX...AND THEY'RE GOOD!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By VISCOUNT REGINALD
|
|||
|
BARRINGTON-SMYTHE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HOLLYWOOD - Studies released today by the Flimsey Institute on Sexual
|
|||
|
Mores indicate that myths surrounding the sexual prowess of film stars
|
|||
|
are completely inaccurate. Cinema heroes and heroines, it turns out, are
|
|||
|
even better in bed that we had realized!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The 569-page treatise, entitled "Big Knobs and Groom Sticks: Sexual
|
|||
|
Overachievement in the Film Community", cites more 50 case studies that
|
|||
|
strongly suggest randy cinema darlings like Kevin Costner, Gary
|
|||
|
Burghoff, Geena Davis, Bea Arthur, Dick Van Patten and even Bob Saget
|
|||
|
are stupendous lovers!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"My wife had a stroke one time," Costner says in the report. "She's okay
|
|||
|
now, but we were having one of our 10-day marathon sessions and her 67th
|
|||
|
orgasm was so devastating, she lost all feeling on the left side of her
|
|||
|
body!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"That's how good at sex I am."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
First-hand accounts like this one are not uncommon in the Flimsey
|
|||
|
Report, which confirms what experts have long believed - namely, that
|
|||
|
cinema stars gain fame for reasons more tangible than mere looks and
|
|||
|
charisma. They can really hump!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Unfortunately, the Flimsey report says nothing of Costner's reported
|
|||
|
affair with leggy diva Whitney Houston on the set of their blockbuster
|
|||
|
hit, "The Bodyguard." One can only imagine the electricity generated by
|
|||
|
two bonafide superstars bonking in a trailer! Talk about the greatest
|
|||
|
love of all!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michelle Pfeiffer, the curvy, pouting star of recently released "Age
|
|||
|
of Innocence," says her formidable sexuality is a tremendous burden - so
|
|||
|
much so the unmarried Pfeiffer has adopted an infant son rather than
|
|||
|
subject a man to her lethal doses of carnal knowledge!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I consider it something of a curse," says Pfeiffer. "Of course, men see
|
|||
|
me on the street and want to have sex with me. But once they've actually
|
|||
|
had sex with me, I can't get rid of them - if they live. I don't want to
|
|||
|
kill them. I'm just really good at sex, that all."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Good thing Pfeiffer didn't pillow "Age.." co-star Daniel Day Lewis on
|
|||
|
the set. His death might have slowed production considerably!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Stars like Joan Plowright, because they're so old, have been engaging in
|
|||
|
stupendous feats of sexual congress for decades! She and late hubby Sir
|
|||
|
Laurence Olivier are such talented Shakespearean actors, they could have
|
|||
|
faked it - but they didn't have to!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My Kingdom for a horse? No need! says Joan.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Larry was very well endowed and very, very good at sex - right up until
|
|||
|
the end," recalls Britain's First Lady of the Screen. "I remember when
|
|||
|
we were first married: He had borrowed much of his technique from Sir
|
|||
|
John [Gielgud]. But once I turned him around, as it were, we were off
|
|||
|
and running!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I've had plenty of sex with people who have no connection to the screen
|
|||
|
and stage - I'm afraid there just not very good at sex. Poor dears."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
===================================================================
|
|||
|
EXTRA! TIMES BUYS HERALD!
|
|||
|
By WILLIAM SAFYRE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NEW YORK - The New York Times Company, having displayed its intent to
|
|||
|
gobble up the Northeast's most reputable news outlets, has instead
|
|||
|
agreed to purchase Portland, Me.-based Harold Herald, Inc. from Editor,
|
|||
|
Publisher and Resident Stud Hal Phillips.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The agreed pricetag for has yet to be disclosed but Phillips did say,
|
|||
|
"They bought it," as he walked briskly from the Times' midtown offices
|
|||
|
here.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Times Co. has expanded its considerable influence in the past few
|
|||
|
months. In June it shelled out $1.1 billion for Affiliated Publications,
|
|||
|
parent company of the Boston Globe. The Times portfolio also includes
|
|||
|
several TV stations, two New York radio stations, several magazines
|
|||
|
(including McCalls and Golf Digest), not to mention a joint ownership -
|
|||
|
with the Washington Post - of the International Herald-Tribune.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All told, the Times Co. readership totals nearly 40 million per month -
|
|||
|
now 40,000,042 with its acquisition of the Harold Herald, a monthly
|
|||
|
newsletter with remarkably broad appeal considering its subject matter
|
|||
|
is limited almost exclusively to Phillips, who will stay on as editor
|
|||
|
"until the suits in New York come to their senses," he explained.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"We felt the Times would benefit from a foothold in northern New
|
|||
|
England," said Times President Arthur "Suds" Sulzberger. "Further, Mr.
|
|||
|
Phillips assured us the publication's lack of advertising could not be
|
|||
|
attributed to meager circulation or narrow editorial vision. Apparently,
|
|||
|
much of it can be traced to Jupiter's full eclipse of Venus last March."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Phillips insisted the Herald's tenor would not be altered to suit the
|
|||
|
Times' corporate strategy or "any other candy-assed corporate types," he
|
|||
|
said.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Very little will change, except, of course, I'll be making a lot more
|
|||
|
money," Phillips continued, donning a smoking jacket and sipping a
|
|||
|
martini while talking with reporters. "The beauty of the Herald is its
|
|||
|
unique focus - in short, me. I can't think of a more fascinating subject
|
|||
|
matter. And if one ever presented itself, I would probably ignore it.
|
|||
|
It's like Sudsy said: 'If it ain't broke, don't spoil a good broth...
|
|||
|
He's not too bright."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LETTER FROM BRITAIN
|
|||
|
By Trevor Ledger
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CRAWLEY, Sussex, England - New research is set to create reverberating
|
|||
|
shock waves across the entire scientific world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Work at the Little Grundies Technical College has proven beyond doubt
|
|||
|
that chewing gum is a major factor in a number of very nasty diseases.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mr. Richard Knob-Sprocket, a master of linoleum studies (ret.), has
|
|||
|
been studying the effects of gum for the last few days and is firmly
|
|||
|
convinced the pointless comestible is responsible for most, if not all
|
|||
|
of the world's ills.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Genghis Khan probably chewed gum, and he wasn't very nice," notes Knob
|
|||
|
Sprocket, who himself has had one or two close shaves with the Wrigley
|
|||
|
abomination. "I was struggling with a nasty bout of leprosy one day when
|
|||
|
I found myself draw towards a sweet shop. Before I knew what was
|
|||
|
happening, I had swapped my left elbow for a six pack of Juicyfruit.
|
|||
|
Luckily I am right handed and managed to sign the check at Betty Ford's
|
|||
|
where she managed to wean me off the gum with a Doublemint substitute
|
|||
|
called Skag."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It was the renowned dependency clinic that Dick began to smell a rat. He
|
|||
|
found that of all the sickos booked in, 93 percent had chewed gum. "It
|
|||
|
was a bit of a shock, I can tell you," explains the veteran scientist.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"One minute I was a normal worthless scientist bumbling around producing
|
|||
|
bugger all of any value and the next I found myself on the brink of an
|
|||
|
earth-shattering scoop.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"You can keep your theory of relativity, I thought. I'm onto something
|
|||
|
big here! "
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Knobby's revelations started to take on monstrous proportions. He
|
|||
|
noticed that AIDS sufferers chewed gum - not only were they skinny and
|
|||
|
haunted-looking, but they were also inveterate lip smackers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I tried to interview some of these sad queens but they didn't entertain
|
|||
|
me at all," recalls Knob-Sprocket from his secure ward.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It appears the stars are also at risk from the gum plague, according to
|
|||
|
the Sprocket papers: Rock Hudson chewed gum and then died; Bob Hope was
|
|||
|
funny pre-gum; and the greatest chewer of them all was one R. Reagan
|
|||
|
esq. (although not whilst walking or embarking upon any other
|
|||
|
complicated maneuver such as shitting).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So what does Knob-Sprocket intend to do with this hard-earned first?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Oh, bugger all I should think," he says. "What else do scientists do
|
|||
|
with their findings."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ominously, those named in the report were far from keen to talk with
|
|||
|
your humble correspondent. Bent-faced funnyman Bob Hope suggested that I
|
|||
|
"Fuck right off."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Wrigley Chewing Gum Inc. were a little more verbose: "Mr. Knob-Sprocket
|
|||
|
is a fucking liar and is patently off his chump. Good day."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Trevor Ledger is a spotty git and fervent backer of Israel because,
|
|||
|
"They're the hardest bastards in the world," he explains. Though he
|
|||
|
hasn't a trace of Jewish blood in his pasty, Anglican carcass, he
|
|||
|
eagerly awaits the day "when the Dead Sea pedestrians come to their
|
|||
|
senses and scream down Armageddon Hill brandishing the Sword of Justice
|
|||
|
with every intention of using it." Ledger lives in Crawley, Susses,
|
|||
|
England, with his wife Nichola and son Ieuan..
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|