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All the News About Hal that Hal Deems Fit to Print
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=====================================================================
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NOV/DEC 1994 ~ Ite in Orcum Directe ~ Volume 3, Issue 7
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_____________________________________________________________________
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The Best Non-cooking, Non-Gardening, Self-Published Newsletter
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in New England - Some Guy at the Boston Globe
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Publisher: Harold Gardner Phillips, III
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Editor-in-Chief: Hal Phillips
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General Managing Editor: Lou Gorman
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Deputy Managing Editor: Don Knotts
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Virtual Editor: Dr. David M. Rose, Ph.D.
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Paranoia Editor: Howard Giske
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Production Manager: Quinn Martin
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Weapons Consultant: Kirby Dar-Dar
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Spiritual Consultant: William Bennett
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Editorial Offices: The Harold Herald
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30 Deering St.
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Portland, ME 04101
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Satellite Office: c/o Golf Course News
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38 Lafayette St.
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P.O. Box 997
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Yarmouth, ME 04096
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ARCHIVE SITES:
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fir.cic.net (pub/Zines/Harold.Herald)
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etext.archive.umich.edu (pub/Zines/Harold.Herald)
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Subscription requests to drose@fas.harvard.edu
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Submissions welcome
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THIS ISSUE: Bob Dole Becomes a Moderate!
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The Herald Seeks 1000 Points of Light!
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Housing Subsidy Subsides in Cambridge!
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READER SURVEY: You're a Statistic!
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Morocco/Orland Junket!
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And, of course, your letters...
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/-/ \-\
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NEWT WORLD ORDER
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By MARK SULLIVAN
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A flood of post-election commentary has been devoted to the "precision
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surgery" voters administered on Nov. 8 to the American body politic.
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Democrats great and small were put to rout, like first-born sons
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targeted by a noxious Old Testament plague that stopped at every home
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with an "R" swabbed in lamb's blood on the door. Republican incumbents
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were spared, and the GOP captured both houses of Congress.
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Yet voters were discerning enough, pundits observe, to reject certain
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big-spending, high-profile Republican newcomers - Iran-Contra felon
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Oliver North and vacuous, cult-connected California millionaire
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Michael Huffington - who were patently unsuited to positions of public
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trust.
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This talk is all well and good.
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Perhaps Maine voters, who for the second time in a generation elected
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an Independent to the governor's office, were demonstrating their
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surgically precise-mindedness when they rejected the bid of an obscure
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third-party candidate named Plato Truman for the U.S. Senate.
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Perhaps civic religion was thereby served. But think how much fun it
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would have been to have a member of the Senate named Plato Truman.
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Voters in Massachusetts' 3rd Congressional District may have acted
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short-sightedly, from a cosmic perspective, when they took a scalpel
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to the candidacy of Dale E. Friedgen, owner of a Maynard auto-parts
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store and candidate of the Natural Law Party, founded on the
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principles of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
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The bespectacled 45-year-old Friedgen, who looks rather more like a
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stamp collector or Baptist Sunday School instructor than a dealer in
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brake pads and CV joints, cited studies showing that violent crime
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decreases significantly in cities where large numbers of people
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practice transcendental meditation. He called for government funding
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into further studies of this phenomenon.
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The mantra-and-levitation approach was lost on blue-collar voters in
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the 3rd District, an oddly-cobbled swath of bleak Central
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Massachusetts mill towns jokingly called the "Ivy League District"
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because it stretches from Princeton to Dartmouth. Friedgen received
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2,382 votes, to the 116,286 garnered by the victorious incumbent,
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Peter Blute, a hail-fellow Republican whose Joey Heatherton-esque
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wife, Robbi, does a mean Marjorie Claprood imitation and gives Hal's
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favorite drunken misanthropic Marlboro newspaper columnist, Ed
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Bridges, the hots.
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Discriminating Bay Staters, in returning the Republican team of Gov.
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William Weld and Lt. Gov. Paul Cellucci to office with a hefty 71
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percent of the vote, rejected an arguably more colorful alternative,
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the wild-eyed, beam-weapon-loving ticket of Jeffrey Rebello and Howard
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Giske of the LaRouche Was Right Party.
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The oddball, intensely paranoid cult followers of millionaire crackpot
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visionary Lyndon LaRouche are big on conspiracies, seeing the world
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abound with evil international intrigues involving Swiss bankers,
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Freemasons, the genocidal World Wildlife Fund, Prince Philip and his
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drug-smuggling wife, Queen Elizabeth.
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My favorite campaign-year LaRouchisms: The ominous 1984 headline in a
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LaRouche cult newspaper, "John Glenn visits Pittsburgh, noted hotbed
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of Freemasonry," and the 1980 charge by LaRouche, a perennial
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presidential candidate, that he was being targeted for assassination
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by a sinister cabal consisting of the Ayatollah Khomeini, The Boston
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Globe and then New Hampshire Gov. Hugh Gallen.
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Weld, who as U.S. attorney prosecuted LaRouche for financial
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chicanery, is particularly despised by cult members, who have accused
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the Massachusetts governor of inheriting a family fortune made in the
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19th century opium trade, and maintaining current drug-smuggling ties
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with the queen of England.
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While the 37-year-old Giske lists a chemical engineering degree from
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Penn, the would-be lieutenant governor claims to have worked full-time
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the past 15 years as a LaRouche activist, which presumably entails
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spending one's days handing out pamphlets to unwitting travelers in
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airport terminals and baiting Trotskyites at the adjacent table in the
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BU student union.
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Giske and Rebello, for the foreseeable future, will continue in this
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line, having logged just 3,930 votes in the recent election, to the
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1.5 million for Weld and Cellucci.
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Surgical precision? Conspiracy is more like it.
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Mark Sullivan's family fortune was made smuggling wide-wale
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corduroys out of Winchester, Mass., where he still resides. A
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freelance writer and devoted Whig, Sullivan has contracted with
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Putnam to publish the unauthorized biography Massachusetts
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Congressman Peter Torkildsen, due out when ex-con/congressman
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Nicky "Pockets" Mavroulas decides to run again.
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/-/ \-\
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HAROLD NOTEBOOK
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BY HAROLD GARDNER PHILLIPS III
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Hey, kids! How 'bout a little political humor to lighten the mood
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following a most rancorous political season? All in good fun, of
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course. We're all friends here in America - that is, if your white and
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believe in the one, true God:
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* National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" (known to my father
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as "All Liberal Things Considered") has been shortened from 90 to 60
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minutes. Seems there just aren't enough liberal things to consider
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anymore... Budda-boom.
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* What's the difference between Denver International Airport and the
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White House? Well, you can land a plane at the White House... Hoo-Hoo!
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I got a million of 'em.
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* Come 1995, Sen. Jesse Helms will chair of the Foreign Relations
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Committee and Al D'Amato will head the Senate Banking Committee...
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AAHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!
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But seriously folks, as a member of the media, I have to call a spade
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a spade: For months, we heard Peter Jennings, Tom Brokaw and all of
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mainstream punditry drone on about the strong "anti-incumbent" feeling
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among the electorate. Well, not a single incumbent Republican was
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voted out of office.
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Hard to refute those Republicans who've complained for years about the
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left-leaning, liberal-sympathizing media.
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***
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I've just returned from Phoenix and Scottsdale, where many of golf's
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luminaries gathered at the tony Scottsdale Conference Resort for Golf
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Summit '94, a biennial strategic planning seminar. Pretty boring
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stuff, but I did play a fantastic golf course - The Boulders in
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Carefree, where managed to shoot an 83 while three-putting five times
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(!?!).
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Anyway, the course is carved from a bizarre landscape where condos
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reminiscent of suburban Bedrock blend surprisingly well with tractor-
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trailer-sized boulders that sit precariously atop one another. All
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manner of fauna skitter back and forth across the immaculate fairways.
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We saw a family of four coyotes on the 12th hole, while the rabbits
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and lizards were too numerous to count.
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On that same 12th hole, I happened upon another rare species: The
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Octogenarian Wesleyan Grad.
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I had just hit my second shot on the par 5 when an elderly couple
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interrupted their walk to say hello. This old dude noticed my Wesleyan
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golf bag on the cart and smiled ear to ear.
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"John Andrus '33," he said.
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"Hal Phillips '86," I answered, quickly adding: "Andrus of Andrus
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Field?"
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"The same."
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We chatted for a while, as he seemed genuinely pleased to find a
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fellow Cardinal so far from beautiful Middletown, Conn. He also left
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me with some advice.
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"Don't ever go to your 60th reunion," he warned. "I just went to mine.
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There were about seven of us, and all we did was talk about who died."
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***
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I was upgraded all the way to Phoenix. So, in the plush confines of
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first class I enjoyed a knock-down-drag-out political argument with a
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middle-aged conservative female from San Francisco's East Bay.
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Basically, we didn't agree on a damn thing. But the banter was
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reasonably good natured, as I bludgeoned her with the full weight of
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my multi-faceted libertine/liberal philosophy and she retaliated with
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her "that's not government's role" mantra.
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"I don't meet too many people with your political views in first
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class," she observed after two hours of defending Clinton.
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"Well," I responded, "Feinstein bought me the ticket to prove you
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wasted your vote on Huffington."
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/-/ \-\
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PAY UP
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By HAL PHILLIPS
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PORTLAND, Maine - In keeping with the rising tide of conservatism, the
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management team here at the Harold Herald has come to a troubling but
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nevertheless monumental decision. In stark contrast to the millions of
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deadbeat orphans and welfare mothers who selfishly drain the country's
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coffers of your tax money, the Harold has chosen to refuse all
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government assistance and appeal directly to the charitable conscience
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of its readership.
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We're serious. Give us some money.
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The Herald has been published for the better part of three years with
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the shaky financial backing of Editor/Publisher/All-Being Hal Phillips
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(that's me) and a handful of readers who've sent me stamps. Don't get
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me wrong. Nothing in life, save a cheese steak and fries from
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Genovese's, has given me more pleasure than sharing the riveting
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details of my life with you, my loyal, fawning readership. But the
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Herald's growing circulation costs are breaking me.
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This is one of those classic "good news, bad news" situations: While
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it's gratifying to see the circulation list expand, the larger it
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becomes, the more it costs me.
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Internet subscribers aside, the Herald readership has tripled this
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year. More than 110 folks now receive it via the U.S. Postal Service,
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which I refuse mock. [In terms of public opinion, the Post Office gets
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a raw deal. If you discount its slow, discourteous service and the
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rather aggressive behavior of certain employees in fast food joints,
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the Post Office does a creditable job. I mean, you can't buy a
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freakin' Hershey bar for 29 cents in this day and age.]
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Anyway, do the math. It costs me a bundle to send this finely crafted
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newsletter to every damn one of you. But don't think of me. Think of
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the lovely Sharon Vandermay, who is showered with gifts and finery on
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a scale inversely proportionate to the Herald circulation list.
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The central question is, "What's the Herald worth to you?"
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Consider your narrow, hopeless life; then consider it without the
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Harold Herald, your monthly ray of clever, free-thinking sunshine. Can
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you afford to let your pathetic existence become any more dreary, any
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more... common?
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While there will be no mandatory subscription price, any contribution
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of $3 or more will earn you a lifetime subscription to the Harold
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Herald.
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As God is my witness and the Democrats keep control of the House, I
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assure you the Herald will never force readers to pay for each
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scintillating issue. However, any contribution to the Herald's newly
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formed Circulation Endowment - be it money or stamps - will be
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graciously accepted... well, the Herald staff isn't big on grace. In
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any case, you can rest assured we'll take the money and run.
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/-/ \-\
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SURVEY SAYS!
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By DAVID ROSE, PhD
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BOSTON - As our loyal readers will recall, the Harold Herald began
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world-wide distribution via the Internet in spring of this year. Since
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then, 40-odd souls on four continents have requested electronic
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subscriptions; hundreds less committed folks have casually browsed
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through the Herald at various archive sites; and many millions of
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people have ignored us entirely.
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The birth of the electronic Harold Gardner Phillips III, or e-Hal as I
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like to call him, marked a turning point in the publication's
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evolution. Our audience, once comprised entirely of friends, family
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and unwitting Boston Globe columnists, expanded to include... well, we
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knew not what.
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Who were these people? What were their interests? What did they look
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for in an electronic, quasi-monthly monument to self-absorption?
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Hell-bent on finding out, we planned a reader survey, a list of
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questions so painstakingly crafted that it would both entertain our
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readers and lay bare their deepest and most embarrassing thoughts,
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fears and aspirations. Unfortunately, our work on the survey consisted
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almost entirely of drinking beer, smoking cigarettes and repeatedly
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chanting the mantra, "Boy, we should really work on that survey."
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Well, we may yet write a survey that will shake our readership to its
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very foundations, a survey that will force them to question their most
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strongly held precepts. But to fill the gap in the meantime, I sent
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out a mini-survey to our electronic subscribers to get some hint of
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with whom we are dealing. The answers were most revealing:
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Some numbers: Interestingly, 66 percent of Herald readers don't
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respond to even the most witty reader surveys - meaning that only 12
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people wrote back. The math is quite complex, so I'll just ask you to
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accept my assertion that this gives our survey a .000023 percent
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margin of error. In other words, it's pretty fucking accurate.
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Geography: The whole point of going electronic was to go global, so
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it wasn't surprising that responses flew in from far-flung locales
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with exotic names like Swansea, Jacksonville and Minnetonka. What was
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unexpected was the preponderance of responses from that green and
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pleasant land, Great Britain; a full 41 percent of respondents are
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citizens of that once-great nation. There are several explanations for
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this result. First, we've stacked the deck by employing three British
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contributors, one of whom is named Trevor - you don't get much more
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British than that! Second, relieved of such tiresome burdens as
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learning to cook or playing a meaningful role in world affairs, Brits
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may simply have more time on their hands than citizens of other
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nations. Finally, having been schooled in the finer points of
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etiquette such as throwing their cloaks over mud puddles, they may
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simply be too polite to ignore correspondence of any kind.
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Occupation: It's difficult to discern any pattern in the occupations
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of respondents. Such wide-ranging trades as computer technician,
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computer officer, computer programmer, software designer, software
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engineer, quantitative systems analyst, and programmer were
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represented. Other disparate job titles included student, law student,
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high school student, student and high school teacher. With such varied
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demographics, it won't be long before we're selling our mailing lists
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to advertising agencies for big bucks.
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Music: Hal's single contribution to the survey was probably the most
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interesting question of all*: "What was the first album you purchased
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with your own money?" What could be more revealing? Unfortunately, no
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clear picture of our readership emerges from the responses, which
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ranged from the cool ("Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars,"
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Dylan's "Highway 61 Revisited") to the embarrassing (Poison, Tom
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Jones) to the cryptic: Kylie Minogue's "Kiley," and "I'm alone with
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clubhouse" (?!?). Interestingly, exactly 50 percent of our respondents
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expressed remorse over their selections; 25 percent made wise choices,
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while the remaining quarter expressed no remorse but should be very,
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very ashamed.
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The Herald Itself: I couldn't resist asking (somewhat snivelingly)
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for our readers' assessment of the Herald itself. A full 33 percent
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had not received the Herald yet; had received it but not read it; or
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could not remember. Another 25 percent responded positively, if
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vaguely. The remaining readers break down as follows (8.3 percent
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each): Offered us dinner if we are ever in London; noted that the
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publication is free; remarked that the Herald is "bombastic and
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infrequent"; found it "different"; and "Corn Flakes," which I
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interpret as a somewhat obscure Young Ones reference.
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Hazel: Perhaps the most shocking result of the survey was that 83
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percent of respondents had never heard of the television show, Hazel.
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One is tempted to attribute this anomaly to the high percentage of
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Europeans surveyed, but when you break it down the incidence of Hazel-
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literacy is just 17 percent in the U.S. and abroad. Shocking.
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We look forward to querying a better-informed readership in the mega-
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survey to follow.
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* Not surprising really- ed.
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/-/ \-\
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Hal, Ink.
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(A regular feature chronicling the media frenzy surrounding our
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Editor. - V.Ed.)
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Slow period on the publicity front, but my ever-growing cult of
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personality did receive a pair of influential shots in the arm:
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* Readers of The New York Times on Saturday, Oct. 22, may have noticed
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an anti-golf piece on page 3, "FORE! Golf in Asia Hits Environmental
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Rough." After trashing the Asia-Pacific golf industry for 15
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paragraphs, reporter Philip Shenon saw fit to "balance" the story with
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a quote from yours truly:
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"Because golf is seen as a rich man's sport, it's an easy target for
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environmentalists," said Hal Phillips, editor of Golf Course News
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Asia-Pacific, an industry journal. "At least with golf, it's open
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space that's being developed. Would you rather have a golf course or a
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strip mall? A golf club or a 400-room hotel? If you want to compare
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the environmental impact, it's really no contest."
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My interview with Shenon, the Times' Bangkok bureau chief, lasted some
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45 minutes and he complimented GCN Asia-Pacific on its lack of
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industry sycophancy. Nevertheless, I could tell he was preparing to
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write what we in the trade call "a hatchet job," which he delivered.
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"You won't like the story," he called to tell me, before the story was
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published. "But you come out sounding pretty good."
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Hey, I wouldn't have it any other way.
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The reaction here was somewhat mixed. My mom, a Times devotee, was
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well pleased. Poor Tim Dibble woke up Saturday morning in San
|
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Francisco and nearly wretched. "I can live with your inherent
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arrogance," Dibble explained to my answering machine. "But getting up
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on a Saturday morning and reading you quoted in the Times - that's
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more than I can take."
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Full-time anti-golf zealot and sometimes Boston Globe columnist Alex
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Beam read the piece and called asking for names of stupid,
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inarticulate golf industry pundits he could quote for his forthcoming
|
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anti-golf piece in Forbes FYI. This guy's got a lot of nerve. First,
|
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he steals the story idea from the Times and Wall Street Journal. Then
|
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he pitches it to an unsuspecting editor at Forbes, where they've
|
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probably no idea how many times they've already been beaten on the
|
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story. Then Beam wants me to do the legwork for him.
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That's it! He's off the masthead!
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***
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From the highest highs...
|
||
|
||
A story and accompanying column I published in Golf Course News (Aug.
|
||
'94) was reprinted by the Biwabik Times, a weekly newspaper serving
|
||
the Iron Range Region of Northern Minnesota, near Duluth.
|
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|
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The story details the bureaucratic hoops a golf course architect named
|
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Jeffrey Brauer has jumped through to gain approval for an 18-hole
|
||
project called Giants Ridge. Basically, Brauer's project is caught in
|
||
a cat fight between two agencies - one state, one county - both of
|
||
which feel they have environmental jurisdiction.
|
||
|
||
The column was a fairly inspired bit of government bashing: "It's easy
|
||
to get discouraged when a conscientious, quality project like Giants
|
||
Ridge can by stymied by a bunch of hypersensitive DNR engineers who -
|
||
had their turf not been infringed upon by county counterparts - might
|
||
instead be fumbling around their St. Paul offices, admiring each
|
||
other's pocket protectors and obsessing over the office shortage of
|
||
four-color pens."
|
||
|
||
The good folks of Biwabik reprinted everything word for word, even the
|
||
headline, one of my personal favorites: "Red tape in Minnesota...
|
||
Weenies on parade."
|
||
|
||
***
|
||
|
||
When I toiled for the Town Crier, Hudson Sun and Marlboro Enterprise,
|
||
we entered piddling little newspaper contests sponsored by the New
|
||
England Press Association (NEPA), the trade group for piddling little
|
||
newspapers like ours. The big boys (i.e. the Globe, Herald and
|
||
Courant) belonged to the New England Newspaper Association, or NENA.
|
||
|
||
So it gave me great pleasure to draw a mention in NENA's September
|
||
Bulletin under the headline, "All about himself." Much of story -
|
||
actually, it was more of a blurb - was reprinted from the Portland
|
||
Press Herald feature that ran in August. However, the NENA folks did
|
||
write the Herald is "funny, irreverent, cutting and opinionated."
|
||
|
||
I would never have known about the NENA mention had seven association
|
||
members not subsequently asked for Herald subscriptions.
|
||
|
||
What price fame? Well, it's $2.03 per month in stamps.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
/-/ \-\
|
||
|
||
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
|
||
|
||
Dear Harold,
|
||
|
||
Alex Beam selected Owens as the premier self-published newsletter in
|
||
New England, giving the Harold Herald second place, for valid reasons:
|
||
|
||
* Self-absorption. I am a Baby Boomer and you are not. Do you think
|
||
that you or any member of your generation in your wildest dreams could
|
||
be as self-absorbed as I am, or anyone else born in the golden years
|
||
after World War II? You lack a complete focus on your own navel. You
|
||
betray yourself by writing about other people as if they mattered.
|
||
|
||
I and fellow Boomer Alex Beam, well, it's an extremely uninteresting
|
||
day when we even notice that you exist. To think that you have
|
||
something to say is preposterous, unless you were writing about us.
|
||
But, of course, I can't explain this - you weren't there.
|
||
|
||
* Compare the two titles, Owens and the Harold Herald. Repetition is
|
||
for losers. A simple "yes" will do if you know the truth.
|
||
Consequently, it's Owens because I don't need to say it twice. Owens
|
||
is Zen. Harold Herald is mumbling.
|
||
|
||
Suppose you asked Bridget to sleep with you. If she answered, "Yes,"
|
||
would you ask her a second time, or would you start removing your
|
||
shirt and head for the bedroom?
|
||
|
||
"Yes" always means yes, and "no" can mean anything... but now I'm
|
||
talking about women.
|
||
|
||
Good luck and don't quit.
|
||
|
||
Fred Owens
|
||
|
||
Newton, Mass.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ed. Self-parody is always the most cutting, so I defer to Fred on this
|
||
count and thank him for doing my bidding. As for Bridget, I find it
|
||
heartening that a man of Fred's advanced age still exhibits such a
|
||
healthy sexual interest, at least in print. The implication that he
|
||
prefers a partner (at least metaphorically) tells me that self-
|
||
absorption has its limits, even for Baby Boomers.o
|
||
|
||
/-/ \-\
|
||
|
||
The following appeared on the Reader Bulletin Board in The Highly
|
||
Esteemed Howl (vol. 4, no. 5), a Portland, Maine-based newsletter
|
||
published by a remarkably articulate but nevertheless thoroughly
|
||
adolescent group of, well, adolescents:
|
||
|
||
The Howl is proud to announce... Immortalization in someone else's
|
||
publication!
|
||
|
||
The Harold Herald calls it, "Interesting;" and it has "Literary pluck
|
||
and plain ol' enterprising spirit;" and "The Howl is well ahead of us"
|
||
(taking things out of context is fun).
|
||
|
||
Thanks Hal, except for the part where you called us "little fucks."
|
||
It's a good thing I don't have PMS right now. I might have to crank up
|
||
my raging "Boomer Envy," listen to "Helter Skelter" a couple times,
|
||
head over to the building where my parents lived when they were first
|
||
married, and kill you (tee-hee).
|
||
|
||
Elise Adams
|
||
|
||
Portland, Maine
|
||
|
||
Ed. I took liberty with the attribution here. The above entry was
|
||
unsigned. However, because of the PMS reference, it's almost certainly
|
||
the work of Elise, the Howl's distaff co-founder. Two questions: Did
|
||
your parents really live in Thomas Brackett Reed House? If so, were
|
||
you conceived there?
|
||
|
||
/-/ \-\
|
||
|
||
THROW THE BUMS OUT
|
||
By JOHN LAMONTAGNE
|
||
|
||
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - As too many commentators and reporters have pointed
|
||
out on too many occasions, Election Day 1994 signaled an end to the
|
||
policies of the 1960s.
|
||
|
||
Mario Cuomo, the eloquent spokesman for old-fashioned liberalism and
|
||
progressive government, tossed out of office by an unknown. Anne
|
||
Richards, Texas' popular governor, sent packing by a man whose sole
|
||
qualification for office is the fact that he is son of a former
|
||
president and owns a notoriously bad baseball team. Hundreds of
|
||
Democrats thrown our of Washington and (gasp!) Newt Gingrich to be
|
||
installed as Speaker of the House.
|
||
|
||
But more telling, still, is the death of rent control in
|
||
Massachusetts.
|
||
|
||
For most, Election Day '94 was either a terrible end to Democratic
|
||
control of Congress or a glorious conservative victory.
|
||
|
||
For me, it means I look for a new home.
|
||
|
||
The last vestige of left-wing, 1960s housing policy in Massachusetts -
|
||
rent control - died a narrow death here on Nov. 8. Now I'm homeless,
|
||
as of Jan. 1, 1995.
|
||
|
||
Yes, I'm a rent control tenant and not ashamed to say it. I've got a
|
||
nice little one-bedroom apartment just outside Harvard Square, here in
|
||
the home of counter-culture elitism. I pay a relatively paltry $545 a
|
||
month rent, heat included.
|
||
|
||
Sure, it has a few drawbacks. It's admittedly not huge; the traffic on
|
||
Massachusetts Avenue is a little loud; and parking is pretty
|
||
impossible to find. But heck, for $545 a month, I can deal with it.
|
||
|
||
As of January, however, it's history. Now my landlord can charge
|
||
whatever he wants, and that will run somewhere in the range of $800 a
|
||
month.
|
||
|
||
Gulp.
|
||
|
||
By casting their votes for the evil landlords who control our lives
|
||
and checking accounts, the voters of Massachusetts effectively tossed
|
||
thousands of elder Americans from their homes and evicted scads of
|
||
young, immigrant families.
|
||
|
||
Worse yet, I may have to live with my parents for a few months.
|
||
|
||
You bastards!
|
||
|
||
So, now I scan the Want Ads and hope the whole process is held up in
|
||
the courts. The mayor of Cambridge (who, by the way, has a $400-a-
|
||
month, two-bedroom rent-control apartment) swears he'll fight to pass
|
||
a Home Rule Petition, which would effectively keep the 1960s system
|
||
alive and well in the People's Republic.
|
||
|
||
But chances are slim the petition would give young people with jobs
|
||
and a decent income (i.e., me) much of a break. Instead, the elderly
|
||
and low-income families will get them - truly an outrage, if you asked
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
Sadly, Cambridge will be flooded with even more yuppies and the multi-
|
||
cultural flavor of this unique city will be squelched. But in today's
|
||
age of liberal-bashing, an old and somewhat unsuccessful policy like
|
||
rent control was doomed.
|
||
|
||
Anyone need a roommate?
|
||
|
||
John Lamontagne, a.k.a Paul Lefreniere, is yet another Marlboro
|
||
Enterprise refugee who's discovered life outside daily journalism. He
|
||
now works for Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger, one of
|
||
the few liberal Democrats to survive the purge of Nov. 8. So while
|
||
Lamontagne is a lame duck renter, his job is safe.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
/-/ \-\
|
||
|
||
PEJORATIVE CORNER
|
||
BY HAL PHILLIPS
|
||
|
||
THIS ISSUES TARGETS: MOROCCO AND ORLANDO
|
||
|
||
|
||
Morocco is a bad place to be a sheep.
|
||
|
||
First and foremost, you're liable to be eaten at any time. During my
|
||
week-long visit to North Africa's sole remaining monarchy in early
|
||
November, I was served lamb on at least 12 occasions. I love lamb, but
|
||
these people need to diversify their eating habits. Because sandals
|
||
are popular in this desert climate, it's apparent that nearly two-
|
||
thirds of male Moroccans have developed cloven hoofs.
|
||
|
||
Further, I wouldn't want to be a sheep in Morocco because you'd never
|
||
be sure when some horny Bedouin would lure you away from the herd for
|
||
a cross-genus quickie. Having picked up on several sly references from
|
||
natives, I gathered this peculiar form of inter-office romance is all
|
||
too common in Morocco, a Muslim nation where women don't sleep around
|
||
and men are forced to find alternative, oftentimes woolly outlets.
|
||
Come to think of it, this may explain the cloven hoofs.
|
||
|
||
Other observations:
|
||
|
||
* Third-world or otherwise backward industrial status tends to spill
|
||
over into popular culture, and Morocco is no exception. Night after
|
||
night, various lounge singers at the Hyatt Rabat paid homage to a
|
||
series of 1970s relics, Eric "I can't live" Carmen foremost among
|
||
them. When feeling particularly hip, they might throw in some
|
||
Christopher Cross. The situation was no better at an otherwise hoppin'
|
||
party thrown for and by the young, idle rich of Morocco. A quick
|
||
survey of the CD collection showed an unhealthy preponderance of
|
||
French disco, not to mention (gasp!) Barry Manilow and more Eric
|
||
Carmen.
|
||
|
||
* Virtually nothing in Morocco has a set price. One must haggle for
|
||
everything, including cab fare. Further, nothing is complementary,
|
||
especially if you happen to be American. If you want to take a picture
|
||
of a snake charmer, for example, it'll cost you 10 dhiram (8.5 to the
|
||
dollar). Young men are always eager to guide you around the shopping
|
||
area - called the medina - in exchange for 10 or 20 dhiram. They're
|
||
very persistent, dragging you to one tannery after another. When you
|
||
can't get rid of them, you can be sure it's gonna cost you a bundle.
|
||
|
||
***
|
||
|
||
Always a pleasure to visit Orlando, the only city in America where
|
||
surly behavior can land you in the slammer on misdemeanor charges. The
|
||
sickly sweet, vacuously pleasant ideology of Disney World has
|
||
permeated Greater Orlando. Oh, to have the lithium concession in this
|
||
town! Every restaurant is filled with families of four, shamelessly
|
||
decked out in Mickey Mouse garb, smiling relentlessly. We had dinner
|
||
one night in a place called the Crab House, a seafood place complete
|
||
with substantial salad and raw bars. My meal was good, but the
|
||
atmosphere was marred considerably by legions of kiddies high on
|
||
Disney smarm, rhythmically banging their crab mallets on the tables.
|
||
Fuck the raw bar - this place could have used a Ritilin bar.
|
||
|
||
|
||
copyright 1994 the harold herald all rights reserved for what it's
|
||
worth
|
||
|
||
|