Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Hunter Becomes Huntee

bloodhound
Back in 2003 Mr. Duane Chapman, known as Dog, the premier American bounty hunter, and his colleagues were charged by Mexican authorities with “deprivation of liberty” and held in jail in Puerto Vallarta before they made bail and slipped out of the country.

All this on charges stemming from his capture in Mexico of Andrew Luster, the Max Factor heir who was eventually convicted of raping three women.

The Luster arrest, which catapulted Mr. Chapman to a new level of celebrity and eventually resulted in A&E signing him for the series, led to a lasting grudge on the part of Mexican authorities, who demanded that the United States extradite the bounty hunter.

Now, with less than a month before the warrant would have expired and in the midst of filming the fourth season of his enormously successful reality series, "Dog the Bounty Hunter", Mr. Chapman was the one being brought to justice.

Yesterday the Chapman family suggested that some horse trading was under way, pointing out that Francisco Rafael Arellano FĂ©lix, part of a Mexican drug cartel, was handed over to United States authorities.

Said Lucas Platt, the supervising producer of the show . .
“Going after Andrew Luster was a risky decision, but he thought it was the right thing to do. Now it has taken an unfortunate turn.”
The turn won’t hurt ratings. A&E plans a special for tomorrow night, and the stories about his travails will only add to the legend. The man who brought vengeance to thousands of bail jumpers found himself on the wrong end of justice.

“Dog the Bounty Hunter” is A&E’s most-watched show.

As Dog himself sees it . .
“I believe in what I do, I am good at what I do, and I want to be able to say that Jesus played a role in it. Never, ever, has anyone ever escaped.”
From an article appearing in the New York Times September 18, 2006 by David Carr (with James C. McKinley Jr. reporting from Mexico).

Man Sets Sights on Eye-Popping Record

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Claudio Paulo Pinto is looking to break an eye-popping record. Literally. Pinto can pop his eyeballs out of their sockets at least 7 millimeters (0.3 inches), a national record for eye-popping according to RankBrasil, an organization modeled after the Guinness Book of World Records that lists Brazilian records.

A former driver, Pinto got a job scaring visitors in a commercial haunted house in Belo Horizonte, 210 miles north of Rio de Janeiro. But he recently was laid off, and now he seeks international recognition for his ability.

Pinto said by telephone Saturday . .
"I was measured by an opthamologist on television in January. I could pop my eyes out 7 millimeters. Since then, my capacities have improved over 50 percent."

That could put Pinto close to the record. The title of "furthest eyeball popper" in the Guinness Book of World Records currently belongs to Kim Goodman of Chicago, who can pop her eyeballs 11 milimeters (0.43 inches) out of her sockets.

Pinto's ability is called "globe luxation." Doctors say it can strain blood vessels and nerves between the eyes and the head and feels unpleasant but usually doesn't cause lasting damage.

Pinto says he's been luxating his globes since he was 9 years old and "it doesn't hurt a bit."

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

Tony Rogers eye popping

Friday, August 04, 2006

The Art of M&M's

A prison artist in California who uses the dye from M&M’s for paint has been disciplined for what a prison official yesterday called “unauthorized business dealings” in the sale of his paintings. The prison has also barred the prisoner, Donny Johnson, from sending his paintings through the mail.

Mr. Johnson’s work has been on display for the last several weeks at a gallery in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Twenty of his paintings have been sold, for $500 each.

Mr. Johnson had donated the paintings to the Pelican Bay Prison Project, a charity which says it will honor Mr. Johnson’s wish that it use the proceeds from the show to help the children of prisoners.

Mr. Johnson, who is 46, is serving three life sentences. He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in 1980 for a drug-related killing, drawing a sentence of 15 years to life. In 1989, he was convicted of slashing the throat of one guard and assaulting another. Those crimes resulted in two additional sentences of nine years to life.

He has been in solitary confinement in a small concrete cell for almost two decades. He paints with a brush he created with plastic wrap, foil and his own hair. He makes paint by leaching the colors from M&M’s in little plastic containers that once held packets of grape jelly. His canvases are postcards.

from an article by Adam Liptak appearing August 4, 2006 in The New York Times

Still Chasing After the Clipper

Joe DiMaggio at 1985 Old Timers GameCan anyone ever touch Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak, what some believe to be the greatest baseball feat of all time?

Chase Utley is the latest to try. Philadelphia's All-Star second baseman has now hit safely in 34 games.

Only Pete Rose has broken 40--he hit in 44 consecutive games in 1978. Paul Molitor hit in 39 straight games in 1987.

Carlos Delgado of the Mets said . .
"There are so many obstacles. One day you're facing a guy throwing 95, then 85 (miles per hour). Then they bring in a lefty, and then a sidearmer. There are so many outside elements, and that's what makes doing it day after day so impressive."

Not to mention the pressure of being compared to the great Yankee Clipper.

from a column by Murray Chass appearing August 4, 2006 in The New York Times

On His Broad Shoulders

Brad GilbertBrad Gilbert, owner of a mediocre professional tennis career, has been called upon to revive the flagging spirits of British tennis.

Gilbert's best performance at a Grand Slam tournament was at the 1987 U.S. Open, where he reached the quarter-finals. Since retiring as a player, though, he has made quite a name for himself as a coach.

Coach to Andre Agassi for eight years from 1994 to 2002, during which Agassi won six Grand Slam singles titles, he shared in the most successful coach-player partnership in the Open era--along side Tony Roche's period as coach of Ivan Lendl. Agassi described Gilbert as "the greatest coach of all time" as a result of the pair's highly successful relationship.

On 26 July 2006, Gilbert was announced as taking over the coaching duties of Scottish teenage sensation Andy Murray through the auspices of the Lawn Tennis Association.

Could this be the beginning of England's return to top form in world tennis?

Dog Mauls Elvis Teddy Bear

'Love Me Tender' Elvis Presley bearLONDON -- At a tourist attraction called Wookey Hole Caves in western England, Barney, a Doberman pinscher guard dog, briefly went berserk, running amok among a collection of teddy bears, including a 1909 German Steiff bear called Mabel reputed to have belonged to Elvis Presley.

A spokesman said . .
"It's a bit ironic, really. A German dog destroying a German bear."
from an article by Alan Cowell appearing in The New York Times August 4, 2006

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Well, Hello Castro

Fidel CastroMIAMI, Florida -- Recent, sizable discoveries of oil in the North Cuba Basin--deep-water fields that have drawn the interest of companies from China, India, Norway, Spain, Canada, Venezuela, and Brazil--may finally force the U.S. to shelve its economic embargo of Cuba.

Since the discovery of quality oil in Cuban waters in 2004, the country divided the area into 59 exploration blocks. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates they contain up to 9.3 billion barrels of oil and 21.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

Exploration blocks have already been leased by Canadian and Spanish companies, while Venezuela has put $100 million into pipeline upgrades across Cuba.

from an Associated Press article appearing July 30, 2006

They've Already Got ID

Since 1871 Mexico has been issuing 'matricula consular' cards to nationals residing in the United States. About 40 banks and 250 police departments around the country accept the document as a valid form of identification.

The Mexican government works very hard to make the I.D. counterfeit-proof. It has 17 visible and invisible security features.

bogus Mexican ID card, 'matricula consular'phony Mexican identification card

from an article by Juan Antonio Lizama appearing in the Richmond Times-Dispatch July 30, 2006

It's On the Church

American Express cardFORT LAUDERDALE, Florida -- Michael J. Fay, the former pastor of St. John Roman Catholic Church in Darien, Connecticut, is under investigation for using church money to fund a lavish lifestyle for himself and his boyfriend.

Fay is accused of misspending $200,000 in parish funds, using the parish American Express card to charge personal items.

According to Broward County, Florida property records, Fay owns a condo with a Clifford Fantini at the Vue, an oceanfront complex with units selling for between $400,000 and $1,000,000. Records show Fay and Fantini paid $449,100 for theirs.

from an article by Phil LaPadula appearing in The Washington Blade, July 28, 2006

Monday, July 31, 2006

'Interesting' Statue Honors Fallen Aviator

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Virginia -- One time a University of Virginia student, James Rogers McConnell, became a 'patriotic adventurer' when he joined the Lafayette Escadrille to fight with the French in the great German offensive at Verdun.

Killed in a dogfight with two German plans above the Somme battlefields in 1917, he died shortly before the United States entered the war.
'The Aviator' statue by Gutzon Borglum
The 12-foot tall statue, sculpted by Gutzon Borglum who had a hand in Mount Rushmore, commemorates his spirited life and courageous death. At U.Va. he had been known for his bagpipe playing and a spirit of bonhomie. He was called a "man of originality" and a "dreamer".

McConnell's life is currently being told at the University's Clemons Library in a display that includes his cap, a strip of cloth from his plan, and bullet fragments from the German guns that downed him.

But most will remember him by this surreal bronze statue on a marble pedestal that depicts a muscular, nude man in aviator headgear--sporting powerful wings that suggest the Greek mythological figure of Icarus. Over the years it has been garbed in an athletic supporter, hung with toilet paper, and festooned with balloons.

Perhaps McConnell wouldn't mind. In a final letter, written before death but never sent, he said:
"My burial is of no import. Make it as easy as possible on yourselves. I have no religion and do not care for any service. If the omission would embarrass you, I presume I could stand the performance. Good luck to the rest of you. God damn Germany and Vive la France."
In 1917, U.Va. President Edwin A. Alderman wrote in a letter of tribute to McConnell's father:
"If he were my boy, though his broken body lies buried in a foreign land, I should be the proudest father in the world today."

from an article by Carlos Santos appearing in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Sunday, July 30, 2006

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Italian Police Free 113 Poles Living in Slave Labor Camps

ROME, July 18 (Reuters) — The police on Tuesday freed 113 Poles living “like slaves” in forced labor camps, where those refusing to work were raped, tortured with metal batons and attacked by dogs.

The authorities in Italy and Poland said that at least four workers appeared to have committed suicide in the camps, in Italy’s southern region of Puglia, but that those deaths were being investigated as suspicious.

Italy’s anti-Mafia chief, Piero Grasso, told reporters in the southern city of Bari.
“To call the situation revealed by the carabinieri investigation simply inhuman does in no way do it justice. We are talking about conditions similar to those of concentration camps, where people were not only exploited for their work, but also kept in a state of slavery.”

Twenty people were arrested for human trafficking, and the police were looking for seven more. They were said to be members of a ring that recruited people in Poland through advertisements in local newspapers promising them agricultural work in Italy.
Nazi slave labor in Poland during WWII
Poland’s national police chief, Marek Bienkowski, said at a news conference in Warsaw that the workers were watched by Ukrainian, Italian and Polish armed guards. He added that there was evidence of rape and of torture with metal batons of those who tried to resist. Dogs were set against some victims.

The Italian police said the Poles were forced to work for up to 15 hours a day and were fed little more than bread and water. The Polish news agency PAP said more than 1,000 Poles may have been victims of the ring. Apart from the four suicides being investigated, the police in both countries did not rule out the possibility that more people might have been killed or died from exhaustion.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Ambassador of Music Dies

HERNDON, VIRGINIA -- Gordon Benson Ramsey was a musician and composer long before he took up an unusually interesting day job. For nearly 30 years, he was a Foreign Service officer with the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Distributing foreign aid around the world, he managed programs to build health clinics and roads. He supervised the evacuation of many Americans, including his own family during the Communist takeover of Laos in 1975.
trumpet player
Throughout it all he could always retreat to the deep well of music within him. Said his State Department colleague Dennis Chandler:
"After a hard day he would sit down at the piano, and the weight of the world would melt away."

Ramsey was hardly a dabbling amateur. He'd been a professional trumpet player since his teens, he was an excellent pianist, and he had a master's degree in composition from the University of Utah. He used the G.I. Bill in the early Fifties to to move to Paris and study with the composer Arthur Honegger.

The need to support his family led him to the U.S. Embassy in Paris to ask for a job, which later led to his first USAID assignment in Indonesia. As his daughter Brinton said of him:
"He was able to fit in in different places. He could be the distinguished diplomat, the intellectual, the cool musician, or he could just sit around and have a beer. When we would all be getting ready to go out, my dad would sit down at the piano and improvise. It's one of my favorite memories."

Gordon Ramsey retired from the State Department in 1980 and died June 19 at 80.

From an obituary by Matt Schudel in The Washington Post July 16, 2006

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Use Your Own Songs as Ringtones

Sony Ericsson W700 cellphoneThe easiest way to use your own song as a ringtone on your cellphone is to use Mobile 17 at:

mobile17.smashsworld.com

Sign up for the free account, enter your phone model and provider, and upload your sound file.

Choose the point in the song at which you want the ring to start and how long a clip you'd like.

In a few minutes, Mobile 17 will send a file in the proper format to your phone by e-mail or text message. You can then save the attachment as a ringtone.

There's been no definitive court ruling on copyright issues--even for your own song(!!)--so keep an eye out for that.

from a report in Popular Science March 2006

"An American Tragedy"

BIG MOOSE LAKE, NEW YORK--The murder that inspired the Theodore Dreiser novel An American Tragedy occurred here one hundred years ago on July 11, 1906.
Chester Gillette
The book was adapted in 1951 for the movie screen in "A Place in the Sun" starring Montgomery Clif, Elizabeth Taylor, and Shelley winters. It won six Oscars.

Said Robert Williams of his great-aunt, Grace Brown, who died at the hands of Chester Gillette out on the lake that day:

"This is very meaningful, especially since so many people in our extended family don't ever talk about it. By memorializing Grace like this, it feels like we're bringing her back into the family."

from an Associated Press report written by William Kates

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Witch of Pungo Cleared

PUNGO, VIRGINIA -- Three hundred years after Grace Sherwood was convicted of being a witch, Governor of Virginia Timothy M. Kaine has pardoned her. Thrown into the Lynnhaven River with her thumbs tied to her feet, the rules of the trial were simple in those days: if you floated, you were guilty of being a witch; if you sank, you were cleared.
Grace Sherwood, 'Witch of Pungo'
She floated and served more than seven years in jail. She's the only person convicted in Virginia by a "witch ducking trial."

Virginia Beach--which today includes the rural section of Pungo--revelled in the decision as the legend of Sherwood is so deeply ingrained in the city's folklore. The tale of the Witch of Pungo is told to schoolchildren. And every year they stage a reenactment of Sherwood's trial.

Because she inherited about 200 acres from her father, and was so successful in raising crops on it when her neighbors weren't, jealousy is considered now the motive behind the accusations.

She was known to heal sick animals, and even more mysteriously, she "worked with herbs".

originally appearing in The Washington Post.

Rembrandt: impoverished artist or brawler?

As the Dutch celebrate Rembrandt's 400th birthday on July 15, some of the myths about his life are being demolished. For centuries, his personal story was shrouded by the romanticism of admirers who preferred to perpetuate the legend of an artist toiling away in obscurity in an all-consuming quest to unravel the secrets of the soul.
Rembrandt
Ernst van de Wetering, author of Rembrandt: the Painter at Work, dismisses the notion of Rembrandt as the impoverished artist driven to heights of creativity by his fiery emotions. Rather, he conceptualized his craft dispassionately, in a constant search for greatness. His inventiveness and originality did not come without hard work. He made small studies of light and shadow, of facial expressions before incorporating them into historical works or biblical allegories.

During his lifetime artist had 25 conflicts with his family, creditors, patrons and even sitters who claimed he cheated them.

Rembrandt was never the poor struggling artist. He won fame from an early age and commissions kept flowing. But he was a miserable money manager and profligate spender. He went bankrupt and was evicted from his home in 1658. Four years later he even sold his wife's gravesite to pay off debts.

He painted self-portraits throughout his life, not to satisfy his ego nor to explore his soul, but because he was a name brand and they sold well.

first appearing in Pravda