Tuesday, November 25, 2008

As President Bush readies to leave office, well-connected lawyers are being hired to press for pardons for their convicted clients. Among the lawyers are former solicitor general Ted Olson, hired to represent former junk-bond king Milchael Milken, the Washington Post reports. Milken pleaded guilty in 1990 to securities violations following an insider trading investigation, the Post says in a blog post at Washington Post Investigations. Another lawyer representing clemency clients is former White House lawyer H. Christopher Bartolomucci, now a partner at Hogan & Hartson in Washington, D.C. Bartolomucci worked on pardons in the White House from 2001 to 2003. The Post article does not name his clients. So far, President George W. Bush has granted only 157 pardons out of 2,064 requests, and six commutations out of 7,707 requests, the story says. Pardons at the end of a term can raise fairness concerns.
http://www.abajournal.com/news/high-profile_lawyers_seek_pardons_for_well-known_white-collar_clients/

U.S. presidential inaugurations took place in March or April until 1937
http://inaugural.senate.gov/history/factsandfirsts/index.cfm

“Greening house by house is already catching on--the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) extended its Leadership in Energy and Design (LEED) rating system to residences to meet the interest in more environmentally friendly homes. But the next steps will be tougher. The sprawl of the suburbs has ensured that much of the energy we consume--and carbon we emit--comes from our dependence on cars. Until we change the layout of our neighborhoods--reversing the suburban ideal of semi-isolated homes--living green won't be easy. 'Having a green neighborhood and a green home are two different things,' says Michelle Moore, a vice president at USGBC."
http://postcarboncities.net/node/2409

From: Grant Barrett (gbarrett worldnewyork.org)
Subject: Word-of-the-Year Nominations Open
The American Dialect Society is now accepting nominations for the "word of the year" of 2008. What is the word or phrase which best characterizes the year 2008? What expression most reflects the ideas, events, and themes which have occupied the United States and its residents? Nominations should be sent to (woty at americandialect.org).
They will be considered for the American Dialect Society's 19th annual word-of-the-year vote, the longest-running vote of its kind in the world and the word-of-the-year event up to which all others lead. It will be held in San Francisco on January 9, 2009.
The best "word of the year" candidates will be:
new or newly popular in 2008
widely or prominently used in 2008
indicative or reflective of the national discourse
Multi-word compounds or phrases that act as single lexical items are welcomed, as well.
Sub-categories for "word of the year" include most useful, most creative, most unnecessary, most outrageous, most euphemistic, most likely to succeed, and least likely to succeed. Past winners can be found on the society's website.

Capitol Hill, White House, National Politics: http://www.c-span.org/

City Council banishes the mayor's wife from City Hall in Kansas City, Missouri
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122723082748846583.html

Google search examples
For specific site, type site:theweek.com
For search in government domain, type "congressional review act" and site:gov
For search in educational domain, type "congressional review act" and site:edu
For search within range of numbers, type "leather shoes" $100..$200
For currency conversion, type 1,000 U.S. dollars in euros

The 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century as listed by National Public Radio
“You can also view a condensed list without descriptions or audio, the original NPR 300 -- the preliminary list of works, or you can find out in text form how we put it all together.” http://www.npr.org/programs/specials/vote/list100.html

November 25 is the birthday of the man who popularized the story of Paul Bunyan, a man named James Stevens, (books by this author) who was probably born on this day on a farm near Albia, Iowa, in 1892. He worked as a logger, and at night in the logging camps, he listened to stories about Paul Bunyan. He wrote an article about the strongman who was a legend in the timber industry, and people liked it. So he wrote a whole book of stories, which he published in 1925 as Paul Bunyan. The Writer’s Almanac

Monday, November 24, 2008

Rules issued by presidents in their final months in office, like most issued by federal agencies, need no congressional approval, and a phrase has been coined to describe them. They became known as “midnight regulations,” after the “midnight judges” appointed by John Adams in the final hours of his Presidency. Under an obscure law passed in 1996, Congress has the power to revoke recently imposed rules. That law has been used successfully only once.
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2008/11/24/081124taco_talk_kolbert

Congressional Research Service Report: Midnight Rulemaking: Considerations for Congress and a New Administration, November 18, 2008
"Summary: At the end of every recent presidential administration involving a change in the party controlling the White House, the level of rulemaking activity by federal agencies tends to increase. On May 9, 2008, White House Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten issued a memorandum to the heads of executive departments and agencies stating that regulations to be finalized in this Administration should be proposed no later than June 1, 2008, and final regulations should be issued no later than November 1, 2008.

Google has released a new feature, called SearchWiki, that allows users to vote search results up or down, remove them entirely, or leave notes with their thoughts. While the rankings appear to only affect the account of the user who made them for now, the notes are public and readable by anyone. http://venturebeat.com/2008/11/21/google-proves-its-search-methods-arent-set-in-stone/

THE 2008 NATIONAL BOOK AWARDS WINNERS
Fiction: Peter Matthiessen, Shadow Country (Modern Library) - Interview
Nonfiction: Annette Gordon-Reed, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family (W.W. Norton & Company) -Interview
Young People's Literature: Judy Blundell, What I Saw and How I Lied (Scholastic) - Interview
Poetry: Mark Doty, Fire to Fire: New and Collected Poems
(HarperCollins) - Interview
http://www.nationalbook.org/

Phrase to remember in winter: “. . . below-zero air as bracing as champagne . . .”
Robert Service (1874-1958) Canadian writer (born in England) from Yukon Gold

Archives at University of Michigan
The Longone Center for American Culinary Research consists of the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive augmented by the rich Americana holdings of the Clements Library, catalogued for their culinary content. There are thousands of menus from restaurants, private dinners and banquets, especially from the Columbian Exposition in 1893. http://www.clements.umich.edu/culinary/about.html

mythologem (mi-THOL-uh-jem) noun
A basic theme of a myth, for example, revenge, honor, betrayal, etc.
From Greek mythologema (mythical narrative), from mythologein (to tell mythical tales), from mythos (myth) + -logos (word or speech) A.Word.A.Day

On November 23, 1783, Annapolis became the U.S. capital and remained so until June 1784. http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/1783/november_23_1783_43785.html

On November 23, 1889 the Jukebox made its debut at the Palais Royale Saloon in San Francisco. It was called a "nickel-in-the-slot player" and was built by the Pacific Phonograph Co. Later that year, jukeboxes were installed in other places around the city and on ferries that traveled back and forth across the bay between San Francisco and Oakland. The jukebox consisted of an electric phonograph inside a free-standing oak cabinet. The technology for amplifiers hadn't been perfected yet, so there were headphones, which looked like stethoscopes. Up to four people could listen to a song at any given time. In 1927, the Automatic Musical Instruments Company introduced the first jukebox with amplifiers. The Writer’s Almanac

Friday, November 21, 2008

Electronic Public Inspection Desk
News release "The Office of the Federal Register has created an Electronic Public Inspection Desk to provide free worldwide electronic access to public documents. For the first time in the 72-year existence of the daily Federal Register, the documents on file are available for viewing anytime, anywhere. Every Federal business day, anyone with access to a computer now can read critical documents governing Federal regulations relating to business, health, and safety as soon as the documents are placed on file. To view these documents, go to www.federalregister.gov. See "View Documents on Public Inspection" on the left hand side. This new desk grants the public access to documents that will be published in the next day's Federal Register as early at 8:45 a.m. EST. Previously, such documents could only be seen by viewing the documents physically located at the Office of the Federal Register in Washington, D.C."

NOAA Declares October Second Warmest for Global Temperatures
News release: "The combined global land and ocean surface average temperature for October 2008 was the second warmest since records began in 1880, according to a preliminary analysis by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration̢۪s (NOAA) National Climatic Data Center. NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and marine resources."
Climate of 2008 - October in Historical Perspective , National Climatic Data Center, 18 November 2008 Related postings on climate change

EPA Action Plan: Looking Toward a More Cost Effective, Energy Efficient Future
News release: "The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Department of Energy are helping states lead the way in an effort to promote low cost energy efficiency. More than 60 energy, environmental and state policy leaders from across the country have come together to produce the updated National Action Plan Vision for 2025: A Framework for Change. The action plan outlines strategies to help lower the growth in energy demand across the country by more than 50 percent, and shows ways to save more than $500 billion in net savings over the next 20 years. These actions may help to reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to those from 90 million vehicles."

FTC Issues 2008 Report on U.S. Ethanol Market Concentration
News release: "The Commission has issued the report, 2008 Report on Ethanol Market Concentration. This is the Commission’s fourth annual report on the state of ethanol production in the United States, as required by the Energy Policy Act of 2005. The report concludes that the U.S. fuel ethanol market, measured on the basis of production or capacity, remains unconcentrated."

NASA Successfully Tests First Deep Space Internet
News release: "Working as part of a NASA-wide team, engineers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., used software called Disruption-Tolerant Networking, or DTN, to transmit dozens of space images to and from a NASA science spacecraft located about 20 million miles from Earth. "This is the first step in creating a totally new space communications capability, an interplanetary Internet," said Adrian Hooke, team lead and manager of space-networking architecture, technology and standards at NASA Headquarters in Washington. NASA and Vint Cerf, a vice president at Google Inc., in Mountain View, Calif., partnered 10 years ago to develop this software protocol. The DTN sends information using a method that differs from the normal Internet's Transmission-Control Protocol/Internet Protocol, or TCP/IP, communication suite, which Cerf co-designed."

The National Republican National Glee Club was organized in 1872 in Columbus, Ohio, to participate in Ulysses S. Grant's presidential campaign
It subsequently took part in his inauguration and entertained at the White House. The organization carried the name of "Grant and Wilson Glee Club," names of the presidential and vice-presidential candidates. The club marched in parades and sang at political affairs. In succeeding campaigns the club adopted the names of presidential candidates and continued to sing and march and was invited to inaugurals. On July 25, 1895, the club was incorporated and chartered as: “The National Republican Glee Club", Columbus, Ohio. Tod “spelled like God” B. Galloway, a Club president in the early days of the organization, was one of the writers of The Wiffenpoof Song.
http://nationalrepublicangleeclub.org/index.htm See various names of the club, lyrics and programs at: http://nationalrepublicangleeclub.org/History.htm

Q. What author writes stories about people living on Earth (referred to as groundhogs or groundlubbers)—people who live on the Moon (referred to as colonials or loonies)—space lawyers, space music, and rolling roads?
A. Robert A. Heinlein
Selective bibliography: The Roads Must Roll, “It’s Great to be Back!”, The Green Hills of Earth, “If This Goes On—“, The Menace From Earth

On November 21, 1620 the pilgrims landed in what is now Provincetown, on Cape Cod. The 102 passengers had been onboard the Mayflower for 65 days.
November 21 is the birthday of Voltaire, (books by this author) the man who helped spark the Enlightenment in France, born François-Marie Arouet in Paris (1694). He was a well-known playwright and poet. He spent most of his late life in exile, and he wrote most of his work from England. In the last year of his life, 1778, he was allowed to return home to Paris. More than 300 people came to visit him his first day in the city, including Benjamin Franklin. Voltaire wrote "Let us read and let us dance ... two amusements that will never do any harm to the world." The Writer’s Almanac

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Court Orders Halt to Sale of Spyware
"Following an EPIC complaint, a federal court has ordered CyberSpy Software to stop selling malicious computer software. In March, EPIC filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission alleging that the spyware purveyor engages in unfair and deceptive practices by: (1) promoting illegal surveillance; (2) encouraging "Trojan Horse" email attacks; and (3) failing to warn customers of the legal dangers arising from misuse of the software. The federal regulators agreed, and asked the court for a permanent injunction barring sales of CyberSpy's "stalker spyware," over the counter surveillance technology sold for individuals to spy on other individuals. The court entered a temporary restraining order on November 6, 2008. Further litigation is expected before the court rules on the government's request for a permanent ban. For more information, see EPIC's Personal Surveillance Technologies page and Domestic Violence and Privacy page."

Live Piracy Map 2008
From the ICC Commercial Crime Services (CCS) - "the anti-crime arm of the International Chamber of Commerce": Live Piracy Map 2008 - "This map shows all the piracy incidents reported by the IMB Piracy Centre in Kuala Lumpur during 2008. Please click on the pins for more details of the specific incident or zoom in for more accurate location information."

New online encyclopedia on Ohio is evolving
You can search by category, topic or click on index for a detailed approach.
http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/

Floripedia is a collection of articles about Florida and Florida history
Most of the articles were written a long time ago. The original source is given at the end of each article. Notice the date when the article was written, and whether it is “promotional.” http://fcit.usf.edu/FLORIDA/docs/docs.htm

The North Carolina Encyclopedia is a work under construction
New text, additional text, and new graphics are being added as often as possible. This encyclopedia is designed to give you an overview of the people, the government, the history, and the resources of North Carolina. The information is organized into broad information categories, and most of these categories offer an opportunity to select either more specific or additional information on a particular topic. http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/NC/COVER.HTM

On November 19, 1863 Abraham Lincoln got up in front of about 15,000 people and delivered the Gettysburg Address, which begins, "Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." A military band played, a local preacher offered a long prayer, and the headlining orator, Edward Everett, spoke for more than two hours. When Everett was finished, Lincoln got up and pulled his speech from his coat pocket. It consisted of 10 sentences, a total of 272 words. The audience was distracted by a photographer setting up his camera, and by the time Lincoln had finished his speech and sat down the audience didn't even realize he had spoken.
There are five known manuscripts of the Gettysburg Address. The earliest version is the copy he gave to his private secretary, John Nicolay, and it's thought to be the version he used for the oration at Gettysburg. It is two pages long—the first page is in ink on official Executive Mansion stationary, and the second is in pencil on lined paper. This version doesn't contain the words "under God" in the phrase "this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom."
Lincoln made one other copy at the time, which he gave to his other private secretary, John Hay, and then he wrote out three more copies in later years one for a benefit book and two for the historian and former statesman George Bancroft. Lincoln had to copy out two because the first one was written out incorrectly—on both sides of the paper—and so wouldn't go in Bancroft's book. The second copy for Bancroft is the only one that Lincoln signed his name to. It's the copy that has been reproduced on a widespread basis in books and photographs and leaflets, and it is considered the standard version of the speech.
November 20 is the birthday of astronomer Edward Hubble, born in Marshfield, Missouri (1889). He majored in math and astronomy in college, then went to law school and started practicing as an attorney. He got bored after just a couple of years and went to get a Ph.D. in astronomy, where he focused his research on nebulae—distant objects in the sky that couldn't be categorized as stars. He moved to California to work with the world's largest telescope, which was in Pasadena. He identified a certain kind of pulsating star, a "Cepheid" in Andromeda—then considered a not-well-defined nebula of clouds of gas. At the time, scientists believed that the galaxy that Earth was in was only about 100,000 light years across. They also believed that the Milky Way was the only galaxy in the universe. Hubble's discovery of the Andromeda Cepheid and his calculation of its distance proved that the universe was billions of times larger than scientists had thought.
On November 20, 1971 a ban was placed on the use of the popular pesticide DDT. The American public's knowledge of DDT and its environmental dangers was in large part due to Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring (1962). The Writer’s Almanac

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Supreme Court of the United States Blog
Find rulings, orders, commentary and cites to articles in the press. http://www.scotusblog.com/wp/

ScotusWiki, companion site to ScotusUSblog.com
http://www.scotuswiki.com/index.php?title=Main_Page

News release: "An update of the widely-cited manufacturing “cost study” has been released by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), The Manufacturing Institute and the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI shows that U.S. manufacturing is making progress in reducing its cost disadvantage against nine major foreign competitors but that high corporate tax rates now account for more than half of the burden."
The Tide Is Turning: An Update on Structural Cost Pressures Facing U.S. Manufacturers, November 2008

Jordan's Queen Rania has received YouTube's first ever Visionary Award
The 38-year-old royal was praised for launching an interactive channel to help dismiss stereotypes and misconceptions often associated with Arabs and Muslims on the video sharing website. http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7013079121

Department of Labor Final Rule on Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993
FR Doc. 2008-26577, Filed 11/14/2008; Publication Date: 11/17/2008: This document provides the text of final regulations implementing the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993. The final regulations also address new military family leave entitlements included in amendments to the FMLA enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2008, which provide additional job-protected leave rights to eligible employees of covered employers who provide care for covered service members with a serious injury or illness and because of qualifying exigencies arising out of the fact that a covered military member is on active duty or has been notified of an impending call or order to active duty in support of a contingency operation.

I love words. It's something I gave up my career in software for. Every morning when I wake up I can't wait to begin exploring words and writing about them. I've been doing that for 14 years and wouldn't want to be doing anything else. Having said that, there are times when I feel I have to be ready to feed this beast -- A.Word.A.Day -- week after week after week. It opens its hungry maw every Monday and I had better be ready with another serving of juicy, delicious words. Anu Garg A.Word.A.Day

From weekly reaction to A.Word.A.Day
Miriam (miriaml savion.cc.huji.ac.il)
My favorite blended word is "huggle". When my kids were little, I always asked them if they wanted a "huggle" -- a combination of a hug and a cuddle.
________________________________________
Susan L. West (westsl aol.com)
"Advertorial" elicited my coined word "gregacious" or "gregaciousness", stemming from "gregarious" and "gracious".
________________________________________
James Welch (gneeby gmail.com)
"Bookazine" is another example of a portmanteau. A bookazine is in the format of a monthly magazine but focused on a single topic and is expected to have a shelf life of six months. Forbes 2009 Retirement Guide is an example of a bookazine.

November 18 is the 80th birthday of Mickey Mouse, as officially celebrated by Walt Disney. Mickey Mouse was actually "born" about six months before his official birthday, debuting in a cartoon where he played pilot Charles Lindbergh, but the cartoon failed to pick up a distributor. And so did a second cartoon, "The Gallopin' Gaucho," in which Mickey rides a rhea around Argentina, smoking, drinking, challenging men to duels, and acting like an outlaw. But in his third reincarnation, released on this day in 1928, the creators of Mickey found success, in a cartoon entitled "Steamboat Willie," shown at New York's Colony Theatre
November 18 is the birthday of novelist and poet Margaret Atwood, (books by this author) born in Ottawa, Ontario (1939). Atwood's first novel, The Edible Woman, came out in 1969. It's about a woman who finds that she can no longer eat after her boyfriend proposes marriage. Atwood is best known for her novel The Handmaid's Tale (1985), about an imaginary America where religious fanatics have taken over the government. The book became an international best-seller. The Writer’s Almanac

Monday, November 17, 2008

Second wildfire
Thousands of people were ordered out of their homes in Sylmar, California, early Saturday, November 15 as a fast-spreading wildfire burned along on the northern boundary of Los Angeles. The flames erupted late Friday in the steep terrain of the Angeles National Forest on the outskirts of Sylmar, about 20 miles north of downtown Los Angeles. The fire covered 1,500 acres just three hours after it was first reported, according to Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman Armando Hogan. A fire official said firefighters first learned of the blaze after it was spotted by CNN affiliate KTLA-TV's helicopter crew.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/11/15/california.wildfires/?iref=mpstoryview

Third fire erupted suddenly in Orange County on Saturday
The flames destroyed hundreds of homes and forced more than 10,000 people along the southern coast to evacuate. The third fire began in Corona, about 50 miles inland from Los Angeles, on Saturday afternoon, forcing evacuations in Corona, Yorba Linda and Anaheim. The Corona blaze, named the Freeway Complex fire, had burned more than 2,000 acres and damaged 94 homes by Saturday night.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/17/us/17calif.html?ref=us

Sundowner winds of Santa Barbara
Sundowners frequently occur in the late afternoon or evening hours–hence the name. Light sundowners create irregular rises in temperature downtown with gentle offshore breezes. Stronger sundowners, occurring two or three times a year, can create sharp temperature rises, local gale force winds, and significant weather-related problems. Rarely, probably about a half dozen times in a century, an “explosive” sundowner occurs.
http://www.wildfirelessons.net/documents/SUNDOWNER_WINDS_S_CA.pdf

Senate Banking Committee Hearing: Oversight of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act: Examining Financial Institution Use of Funding Under the Capital Purchase Program, November 13, 2008
Opening Statement of Chairman Christopher J. Dodd, “Oversight of the EESA: Examining Financial Institution Use of Funding Under the Capital Purchase Program” - "...five trillion dollars have been committed in several forms, including: the guarantee of all non-interest bearing deposit accounts at federally insured banks and thrifts...The Fed alone has committed up to one trillion in tax dollars so far to the recovery effort...I think I speak for many members of the Committee and the Senate in saying that we want to see more progress from our friends in the financial sector – more progress in foreclosure mitigation, in affordable lending, and in curbing excessive compensation."
Washington Post: Bailout Lacks Oversight Despite Billions Pledged "In the six weeks since lawmakers approved the Treasury's massive bailout of financial firms, the government has poured money into the country's largest banks, recruited smaller banks into the program and repeatedly widened its scope to cover yet other types of businesses, from insurers to consumer lenders...Yet for all this activity, no formal action has been taken to fill the independent oversight posts established by Congress when it approved the bailout to prevent corruption and government waste."
Treasury news release: "Today's story in the Washington Post leaves out critical steps taken by Treasury to ensure that there is strong oversight in place as the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act is implemented."
Reuters, Commentary: TARP and Fed facilities unravel "The twin pillars of the rescue program are the multiplicity of liquidity and lending programs being offered by the Federal Reserve and the Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Both programs are now in deep trouble. In fact the various rescue packages risk becoming a textbook example of how poorly designed programs can fail to achieve their objectives."
Joint Letter of Concern to Secretary Paulson After His Announcement to the Change Intent of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, November 13, 2008
Related postings on financial system

On November 13, the Republican National Committee (RNC) filed lawsuits claiming that provisions in the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, which was sponsored by Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), are unconstitutional. In a suit filed in the District of Columbia, the RNC is challenging the law's ban on the use of soft money, or campaign contributions from individuals, corporations, labor unions and advocacy groups that are not regulated by the Federal Election Commission (FEC) because they are not donated to a particular candidate but for "party building" activities.
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7013033366

Two groups of astronomers have taken the first pictures of what they say—and other astronomers agree—are most likely planets going around other stars. Christian Marois of the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics in Victoria, British Columbia is the leader of a team that recorded three planets circling a star known as HR 8799 that is 130 light-years away in the constellation Pegasus. The other team, led by Paul Kalas of the University of California, Berkeley, found a planet orbiting the star Fomalhaut, only 25 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Piscis Austrinus. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/14/science/space/14planet.html?bl&ex=1226898000&en=034c0d653216eb42&ei=5087%0A

November 16 is the birthday of the "First Lady of Radio," mostly forgotten today, Mary Margaret McBride, born in Paris, Missouri (1899). She was one of the first radio interviewers to bring the techniques of newspaper journalism to the airwaves, and in the first 20 years of her syndicated program, she interviewed more than 30,000 guests from the world of politics, literature, arts, and entertainment. In the late 1940s, she had 6 million daily listeners. She never announced in advance the name of the guests who would appear on the show, so people tuned in each day not knowing whom to expect.
November 17 is the birthday of a young man who became a best-selling author as a teenager, Christopher Paolini, (books by this author) born in California (1983) and raised near Paradise Valley, Montana. He was homeschooled, and when he finished high school at age 15, he had a lot of time on his hands, so he decided to write a fantasy novel. He began Eragon, finished it a year later, at age 16. He spent a second year revising that draft, and then gave it to his parents. They loved it, and in 2002 Eragon was self-published through the family company. The Paolini family embarked on an exhausting tour to promote Christopher's book. They went to 135 promotional events that first year, dressed in red and black medieval costumes. Paolini got offers from both Random House and Scholastic, and in August of 2003—when Paolini was still 19—the book was published by a division of Random House/Knopf. The Writer’s Almanac

Friday, November 14, 2008

Health and the Mobile Phone Source: American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Within the next 8 years, annual U.S. expenditure on health care is projected to reach $4 trillion/year, or 20% of the gross domestic product. Whether resource consumption of this order of magnitude is sustainable is an open question, but at the very least it suggests the need for population-level solutions for everything from the primary prevention of disease to improving end-of-life care. By June 2007 there were 239 million users of mobile phones in the U.S. or 79% of the population, and users are highly diverse. Mobile phones are beginning to replace landline telephones for some, and except for very young children, may ultimately reach an effective penetration of “one phone: one person” as is already the case in some countries such as Finland.

Global Census of Marine Life Releases Interim Report
News release: The 2,000-strong community of Census of Marine Life scientists from 82 nations has announced astonishing examples of recent new finds from the world’s ocean depths. As more than 700 delegates gather for the World Conference on Marine Biodiversity (Valencia, Spain Nov. 11-15), organized by the Census’s European affiliate program on Marine Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning, the report details major progress towards the first ever marine life census, for release in October, 2010.
Full Highlights Report: "Eight years into a ten-year initiative to produce the first comprehensive assessment of life in the global ocean, the Census of Marine Life has much to report. The last two years have brought many highlights as Census participants stayed the course toward discovering diversity, charting distribution, and assessing abundance of marine life throughout the world’s seas. Although inquiring waders, swimmers, fishers, and sailors have ventured into the ocean for millennia, an estimated 95 percent of the global ocean remains unexplored...During the first eight years of discovery, Census investigators have found more than 5,300 likely new species, of which at least 110 have gone through the rigorous process needed to award the title of truly “new.”

Today in legal history
On November 14, 1881, Charles Guiteau went on trial for the assassination of President James A. Garfield. The trial of Guiteau pointed up problems with nineteenth century law's treatment of insanity; Guiteau's trial is also problematic in retrospect as Garfield's death was immediately attributable not to Guiteau, but to Garfield's doctors who--before sterilization was well understood-- probed his wound with unwashed hands while searching for an embedded bullet.
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/thisday/2006/11/guiteau-tried-for-assassinating.php

Keepers (books I would read again)
The Man with the Black Worrybeads by George N. Rumanes
The Screwtape Letters by C. S. Lewis
Walden by Henry David Thoreau
A Year Without Time by Cate Allen and Jen Whiting

November 14 is the birthday of cartoonist and author William Steig, (books by this author) born in New York City (1907). He's best known for his children's book Shrek! (1993), about an ugly green ogre who hears the prophecy of a witch that he will marry a princess even uglier than he. It was made into an animated movie in 2002.
The Writer’s Almanac