In 1960, the U.S. State Department was financing
counterrevolutionary broadcasts to Cuba from a radio station on Swan Island in
Honduras. Program content ranged from telling Cubans that their children would
be taken away to warning them that a Russian drug was being added to their food
and milk which would automatically turn them into Communists. My friend Lyle
Stuart was national treasurer of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, which
sponsored a trip to Cuba that December, and he invited me to come
along.
On New Year's Eve, at an outdoor dinner celebrating the
anniversary of the revolution, 15,000 Cubans, including 10,000 voluntary
teachers, were bidding goodbye to the Year of Agrarian Reform and welcoming in
the Year of Education. Although Fidel Castro accused the United States of
planning to attack Cuba, the few hundred Americans who had been invited were
greeted with applause, cheering and kiss-throwing. At midnight the Cubans sang
"The 26th of July Song," and their cardboard plates went scaling through the
air, mingling with a display of fireworks.
There was a full-scale
learn-to-read-and-write campaign. In several industries, every employee would
give one cent a day throughout the year to the Minister of Education. In the
Sierra Maestra, where battles once raged, there were now under construction
schools and dormitories for 20,000 children, to match the 20,000 Cubans who had
lost their lives, many after torture, under the U.S.-supported Batista regime.
At one of these educational communities, some young students removed the string
that had been set up by a landscaping crew to mark off a cement foundation. Next
morning, the school director lectured them about such immorality.
"Even a
little thing like that," he explained, "does harm to the revolution."
The
children of Cuba were being programmed for cooperation rather than competition.
This sense of utter involvement in the revolution provided the rationalization
Cubans gave when I asked about the lack of a free press, critical of the
revolution.
"We get the New York Times," I was told, "and that's
enough."
On January 2, there was a parade, with female soldiers marching
in conga fashion, heavy tanks ripping away at well-paved streets, and a
Macy's-type float that was actually the reconstructed American space rocket
which had been fired from Cape Canaveral the previous November, only to be
destroyed just after launching when it proved defective. Fragments had fallen in
Cuba, killing a cow. Now the revolutionary slogan, "Venceremos" ("We
Will Win") was temporarily changed to "We Will Win, With or Without
Cows."
One evening, there was a reception at the Presidential Palace for
several hundred visitors from around the world. When Castro arrived in the main
ballroom, he was surrounded by an eager, protoplasmic circle of admirers and
well-wishers. He stood tall and handsome in their midst, uniformed but hatless.
The throng of people with Castro at the hub surged forward a few feet at a time
toward the end of the ballroom and finally gave way to a line that formed to
meet him, one by one. Some asked him to pose with them, which he did. A man with
a camera stood on a plush chair for a better angle, but his wife, who was posing
with Castro, yelled at him.
"Max! Don't stand on that chair! This is a
palace!"
I gave Castro a copy of my magazine, The
Realist, and requested an interview. He told me to set it up with his
secretary. Then a palace guard handed him a cablegram from President Dwight
Eisenhower--in the final weeks of his lame-duck presidency--calling off
diplomatic relations with Cuba. I asked Castro for a statement.
"I do not
think it is up to me to comment," he said, "since it is the United States that
has broken relations. I will say only that Cuba is alert."
There was no
official announcement at the Presidential Palace, but the news spread rapidly
among the guests as Castro strode across the ballroom and departed.
I had
brought Lawrence Ferlinghetti's Coney Island of the Mind to Cuba. The
next day, I was in my hotel room, sitting on the bidet and reading his long
poem, "I Am Waiting," while waiting in vain for a call from Fidel Castro's
secretary. But Castro obviously had more important things to do than answer my
questions. In retrospect, though, I would like to have asked him, "How do you
feel about term limits?"
Jim Hightower: THE SCANDAL OF CORPORATE SCOUNDRELS IN IRAQ (jimhightower.com)
When it comes to his war in Iraq, George W keeps telling us that failure is not an option. However, when it comes to the privatized army of Halliburtons, Blackwaters, and other corporations that Bush has hired at great national expense to run operations in Iraq, not only is failure an option - it's the norm!
Poor Elijah (Peter Berger): On the Wrong Track (irascibleprofessor.com)
According to experts and politicians, public schools are expected to raise our lowest ability students up to some acceptable level of proficiency, challenge our brightest students with advanced coursework that will ready them for bona fide university study, and provide the throng in the middle with an education that prepares them for further specialized training or for the workforce, as well as for the duty of self-government.
The kids stay in the picture (film.guardian.co.uk)
Larry Clark's photographs document the secret lives of teenagers - drinking, drug-taking, having sex. Shocking? Not according to their creator. "I'm just telling it like it is.' Interview by Sean O'Hagan.
Michael Buening: review of "Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project" (popmatters.com)
... Rickles is shown preparing for his act. He is a doddering old man. His trademark mug looks like a deflated basketball. He walks on the stage to his signature matador theme and then instantly transforms into a bull, tearing into the audience with the insult comedy for which he is famous
zEN mAN (observing Vicki Iseman, a Republican Lobbyist, who has been linked by the New York Times to a possible romantic involvement with then Senator John McCain some 10 yeras ago..ha ha ha ha ha)
Bad To The Bone Bob's Trivia Question from Yesterday
Who said, "Democracy is the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time".
A: John F. Kennedy
B: Abraham Lincoln
C: Teddy Roosevelt
D: Winston Churchill
E: Mahatma Gandhi
Source
Charlie was first, and correct, with:
D: Winston Churchill
Who also said "I am strongly in favor of using poisoned gas against uncivilized
tribes. The moral effect should be good...and it would spread a lively
terror.... "
Source
DanD was second, but wrong, writing:
I think that this was an East Indian's verion of snark. I'll choose "E,"
Mahatma Gandhi.
mj answered:
Not positive on this, but I'll guess D, Winston (who is no George W. Bush)
Baron Dave ("A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the
subject." -- Winston Churchill) replied:
One of my favorite Churchill quotes.
Bill K answered:
That would have been Churchill. Before I read the choices, I thought it was Mark Twain.
Sandra H responded:
churchill, but i really think it was h.l. mencken or will rogers
S. Bennett said:
The answer is "D", Winston Churchill, Speech in the House of Commons, 11 Nov. 1947. At least that's what my source says.
Sally said:
Winston Churchill (D) said:
"Democracy is the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time."
Winston Churchill also said: "The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter."
Apparently, Mr Churchill was a bit ambivalent about democracy... Kinda like the latter though :)
PS I intend to send you some more money towards your computer fund after taxes! I know that queasy feeling when your computer acts up...
Joe S ("The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is."
~Winston Churchill) replied:
And that would be (tada) D: Winston Churchill
bebo said:
hi--- the answer is D: Winston Churchill
Alan J responded:
Winston Churchill
Dave in Tucson answered:
I believe the correct answer is D, Winnie the Churchill
socdan said:
gotta be churchill
Paul replied:
churchill
And, Marian the Teacher responded:
D. Winston Churchill...what a smart man he was.
Rainy day, but cleared off enough to see some of the eclipse.
Tonight, Thursday:
CBS opens the night with a FRESH'Survivor: Micronesia', followed by a RERUN'CSI: The Original One', then a RERUN'Without A Trace'.
Scheduled on a FRESHDave are Steve Martin and hand shadows performance with Raymond Crowe.
Scheduled on a FRESHCraig are Don Rickles and Joe Mantegna.
NBC begins the night with a RERUN'My Name Is Earl', followed by a RERUN'The Office', then a FRESH'Celebrity Apprentice', followed by a FRESH'Lipstick Jungle'.
Scheduled on a FRESHLeno are Heidi Klum, James McAvoy, and John Fogerty.
Scheduled on a FRESHConan are Barbara Walters, heavyweight-boxing champion Wladimir Klitschko, and Black Mountain.
Scheduled on a FRESHCarson 'The Scab' Daly are Summer Glau and Fat Joe.
ABC starts the night with an 'enhanced' RERUN of last week's 'Lost', followed by a FRESH'Lost', then a FRESH'Eli Stone'.
Scheduled on a FRESHJimmy Kimmel is Taylor Dayne.
The CW offers a RERUN'Supernatural', followed by a FRESH'Supernatural'.
Faux has a FRESH'American Idol', followed by a FRESH'Don't Forget The Lyrics!'.
MY fills the night with the movie 'A Low Down Dirty Shame'.
A&E has 'CSI: The 2nd One', 'The First 48', another 'The First 48', and still another 'The First 48'.
AMC offers the movie 'The Godfather, Part III', followed by the movie 'Letters From Iwo Jima', then the movie 'Heartbreak Ridge'.
BBC -
[12:00 PM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 1 Glasshouse;
[1:00 PM] Cash in the Attic - Episode 9;
[2:00 PM] Bargain Hunt - Ep. 5 France 13;
[2:30 PM] Bargain Hunt - Ep. 6 MacClesfield 7;
[3:00 PM] How Clean Is Your House? - Episode 3;
[3:30 PM] How Clean Is Your House? - Episode 4;
[4:00 PM] You Are What You Eat - Episode 12;
[4:30 PM] You Are What You Eat - Episode 13;
[5:00 PM] My Family - Ep. 2 The Unkindest Cut;
[5:30 PM] Coupling - Ep 4 Circus of Epidurals;
[6:00 PM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 1 La Parra de Burriana;
[7:00 PM] BBC World News America;
[8:00 PM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 5 The Curry Lounge;
[9:00 PM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 4 The Fish and Anchor;
[10:00 PM] BBC World News America;
[11:00 PM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 5 The Curry Lounge;
[12:00 AM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 4 The Fish and Anchor;
[1:00 AM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 5 The Curry Lounge;
[2:00 AM] Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares - Ep 4 The Fish and Anchor;
[3:00 AM] Changing Rooms - Ep. 7 St. Leonards-On-Sea;
[3:30 AM] Changing Rooms - Ep. 8 Hull;
[4:00 AM] Bargain Hunt - Ep. 5 France 13;
[4:30 AM] Bargain Hunt - Ep. 6 MacClesfield 7;
[5:00 AM] Cash in the Attic - Ep. 2;
[5:30 AM] Cash in the Attic - Ep. 3 Hinton;
[6:00 AM] BBC World News. (ALL TIMES EDT)
Bravo has 'Make Me A Supermodel', 'Project Runway', another 'Project Runway', and another 'Make Me A Supermodel'.
Comedy Central has 'Scrubs', another 'Scrubs', an old 'Jon Stewart', an old 'Colbert Report', 'Futurama', 'South Park', another 'South Park', and 'Lil' Bush'.
On a RERUNJon Stewart (from 2/13/08) is Mark Siegel.
On a RERUNColbert Report (from 2/13/08) are David Gracer and Richard Thompson Ford.
FX has the movie 'The Butterfly Effect', followed by the movie 'The Fog', then the movie 'The Fog', again.
History has 'History's Mysteries', 'Modern Marvels', 'Gangland', and 'Ancient Discoveries'.
IFC -
[07:20 AM] A Slipping-Down Life;
[09:15 AM] I Am David;
[10:55 AM] IFC News Special;
[11:05 AM] Girl With a Pearl Earring;
[12:50 PM] IFC News: 2008, Uncut;
[01:00 PM] IFC News Presents: Spirit Awards Nominations Special 2008;
[01:30 PM] A Slipping-Down Life;
[03:25 PM] I Am David;
[05:00 PM] Girl With a Pearl Earring;
[06:45 PM] IFC News: 2008, Uncut;
[06:55 PM] Requiem;
[08:30 PM] Basilisk #7;
[09:00 PM] Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer;
[12:15 AM] Wonderland;
[02:05 AM] Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer;
[05:15 AM] Camp. (ALL TIMES EST)
SciFi has fills the night with the movie 'Arabian Nights'.
Sundance -
[06:00 AM] Southern Belles;
[07:30 AM] Choking Man;
[09:00 AM] Episode 3: Madness in Great Ones;
[10:00 AM] News from Home/News from House;
[12:00 PM] Who Are You Polly Maggoo?;
[02:00 PM] Choking Man;
[03:30 PM] Smiles of a Summer Night;
[05:30 PM] Southern Belles;
[07:00 PM] Ellie Parker;
[09:00 PM] Wynton Marsalis + John Besh;
[10:00 PM] Madeleine Albright + Ashley Judd;
[11:00 PM] Site Specific: Olivo Barbieri;
[12:00 AM] Episode 3;
[12:35 AM] Radiant City;
[02:10 AM] Cities;
[03:00 AM] Madeleine Albright + Ashley Judd;
[04:00 AM] Episode 6;
[05:00 AM] Imagining Argentina. (ALL TIMES EST)
Woody Harrelson, left, and filmmaker Michael Moore pose together at the premiere of 'Semi-Pro' in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008.
Photo by Matt Sayles
Singer-actress Olivia Newton-John plans to walk along the Great Wall of China to raise money for a cancer charity, with celebrities from around the world planning to join the trek, she told reporters on Tuesday.
Newton-John, who survived breast cancer in the 1990s, plans to walk the 228 km (141 mile) distance over 21 days, starting on April 7, ending her trip in Beijing.
Among those Newton-John said had committed to walk at least part of the trek are Britain's pop singer Sir Cliff Richard, actress Jane Seymour, American comedian Joan Rivers and American television host Leeza Gibbons.
The trek, known as the Great Walk to Beijing, aims to raise money for a cancer research and treatment centre in Newton-John's Australian hometown of Melbourne.
The home where the late poet Charles Bukowski used to lay his oft-drunken head is on its way to becoming an official Los Angeles city landmark.
The City Council's Planning and Land Use Management Committee approved the landmarking of the adobe-coloured bungalow during a hearing on Tuesday. The full Council still has to approve the designation.
Bukowski, whose books include "Post Office," "Factotum" and the poetry anthology "Love is a Dog From Hell," lived in the east Hollywood home from 1963 to 1972.
Bukowski was well known for his image as a down-at-the-heels drunk and for pronouncements like, "Sometimes you just have to pee in the sink."
Hollywood director Steven Spielberg's decision to quit the Beijing Olympics over the Darfur crisis is drawing condemnation by China's state-controlled media and a groundswell of criticism from the Chinese public.
Last week, the American director withdrew from his role as an artistic adviser to the opening and closing ceremonies of the Summer Games, accusing China of not doing enough to press for peace in the troubled Sudanese region.
Officially, the Chinese government has not directly criticized Spielberg by name, expressing only "regret" over his decision. But the state-run media and the public have been far less restrained.
In newspaper commentaries and lively Internet forums, they have expressed outrage, scorn and bewilderment that China's Olympics have come under international criticism from Spielberg and others.
"Monk" will be back on the case for a seventh season. USA Network has given a 16-episode order to the light crime drama, and is targeting a July premiere for the first half of the show, and January for the second half.
Tony Shalhoub stars as Adrian Monk, a brilliant detective who suffers from obsessive-compulsive disorder. The role has earned him three Emmys. Also returning are Traylor Howard as his assistant, and Ted Levine and Jason Gray-Stanford as Monk's minders at the San Francisco Police Dept.
USA said "Monk" was up both 22% in the adults 18-49 demo and 15% in adults 25-54 for what the cable channel calls the current "winter season" vs. the same period a year ago.
Fox said Tuesday it ordered additional episodes of the dramas "House" and "Bones" and of the comedies "Back to You" and "'Til Death" to air in the spring and beyond.
The orders for "Back to You" and "'Til Death" are said to be for eight episodes each, some expected to air in early August. "House" will produce four new episodes, while "Bones" will make six new episodes and maybe receive a supersized order for next season.
Also returning to production are the animated comedies "American Dad!" "Family Guy" and "The Simpsons" as well as the real-time drama "24," which won't premiere until January.
With Fox's announcement, ABC is the only broadcast network that hasn't unveiled its post-strike plans for the rest of the season.
A former Florida judge who appears on daytime television as "Judge Alex" to decide minor squabbles lost his own Supreme Court case on Wednesday stemming from a contract dispute with his former manager.
By an 8-1 vote, the high court ruled that Alex Ferrer, a former Florida police officer and trial court judge who is "Judge Alex" on a Fox television network program, must go to arbitration to resolve the dispute.
The case involved Arnold Preston, an entertainment industry lawyer in California. When Preston sought commissions that Ferrer refused to pay, Preston demanded arbitration, as called for in the contract they signed in 2002.
Justice Clarence Thomas (R-Bitter) was the lone dissenter who sided with Ferrer.
In this photo released by the Australian Antarctic Division, brightly colored coralline bryozoans and sponges which forms the habitat for many species of marine life are seen in Antarctic waters in January 2008. Scientists investigating the icy waters of Antarctica said Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008, they have collected mysterious creatures including giant sea spiders and huge worms living in the murky depths. Australian experts taking part in an international program to take a census of marine life in the ocean at the far south of the world collected specimens from up to 2,000 meters (6,500 feet) beneath the surface, and said many may never have been seen before.
Photo by Martin Riddle
Drug hitmen have killed a popular Mexican singer along with his manager and assistant near the U.S. border, authorities said on Wednesday, the latest murder among musicians who sing "narcocorrido" ballads glorifying drug traffickers.
The body of Jesus Rey David Alfaro, known as "The Little Rooster," was one of six that turned up tortured, murdered and pinned with threatening messages for Mexico's army last week in the border town of Tijuana near San Diego.
At least half a dozen Mexican folk singers, who play narcocorridos and upbeat, brassy "grupera" music, have been killed since Mexico's drug war flared in 2006.
PETA thinks Aretha Franklin is no queen of soul when it comes to wearing fur.
Franklin was crowned this year's worst-dressed celebrity by the animal rights organization. Her crime: wearing "yet another vulgar fur" at the Grammy Awards.
The other offenders are Marilyn Manson, Eva Longoria ("in her trashy furs, she looks like the streetwalker of Wisteria Lane"), Lindsay Lohan, Kate Moss and Kylie Minogue.
The inaugural Pocket Film Festival in Japan, showing movies made entirely on mobile phone cameras, will kick off Friday in Yokohama.
Forty-eight films, chosen from more than 400 entries from 18 countries -- including Japan, Singapore, China, South Korea and Germany -- will screen in competition at the weekend event, organized by the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music.
The competition has two categories, one for films to be shown on regular screens and the other for films to be viewed on phones. The winning film will receive 500,000 yen (US$4,500).
Has the Amber Room, the 18th-century chamber decoration the Nazis stole from the Soviet Union in World War II, finally been found? German treasure hunters say they may have solved the decades-old mystery.
Treasure hunters in Germany claim they have found hidden gold in an underground cavern that they are almost certain contains the Amber Room treasure, believed by some to have been stashed away by the Nazis in a secret mission in the dying days of World War II.
The discovery of an estimated two tonnes of gold was made at the weekend when electromagnetic pulse measurements located the man-made cavern 20 meters underground near the village of Deutschneudorf on Germany's border with the Czech Republic.
The Amber Room, made of amber panels backed with gold leaf, was created by German and Russian craftsmen in the early 18th century and given by Prussia's King Friedrich Wilhelm I to his Russian ally Czar Peter the Great in 1716.
Frida Kahlo's self-portrait "Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbirds" (1940) is seen in this undated handout released February 20, 2008. It's the iconic image from the Philadelphia Museum of Art's new Frida Kahlo exhibition, the first major U.S. show of the artist for 15 years, which runs until May 18.
A cheeky artist who uses his penis as a brush has entered a racy self-portrait for Australia's top art prize.
Australian Tim Patch, who calls himself Pricasso, usually exposes his talents at sex product fairs around the world, but has decided to go upmarket by entering a painting for Australia's Archibald Prize -- the nation's top award for portraiture.
Patch entered a painting of a plastic surgeon in last year's Archibald Prize, but failed to impress the judges. This year's entry depicts a nude Patch, wearing only a hat, holding a blank canvas to hide his "brush".
Prime-time viewership numbers compiled by Nielsen Media Research for Feb. 11-17. Listings include the week's ranking, with viewership for the week and season-to-date rankings in parentheses. An "X" in parentheses denotes a one-time-only presentation.
1. (1) "American Idol" (Tuesday), Fox, 29.96 million viewers.
2. (2) "American Idol" (Wednesday), Fox, 24.75 million viewers.
3. (5) "The Moment of Truth," Fox, 14 million viewers.
4. (9) "Lost," ABC, 13.76 million viewers.
5. (20) "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition," ABC, 13.49 million viewers.
6. (15) "Survivor: Micronesia," CBS, 13.18 million viewers.
7. (20) "Deal or No Deal" (Monday), NBC, 13.15 million viewers.
8. (X) "NBC Movie of the Week" (Sunday), NBC, 12.72 million viewers.
9. (15) "60 Minutes," CBS, 12.5 million viewers.
10. (X) "Deal or No Deal" (Thursday), NBC, 12.18 million viewers.
11. (18) "Two and a Half Men," CBS, 11.9 million viewers.
12. (X) "Fox Daytona 500 Post-Race," Fox, 11.76 million viewers.
13. (9) "NCIS," CBS, 11.38 million viewers.
14. (29) "Deal or No Deal" (Wednesday), NBC, 11.07 million viewers.
15. (7) "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," CBS, 10.87 million viewers.
16. (26) "Law and Order," NBC, 10.22 million viewers.
17. (48) "Old Christine," CBS, 9.9 million viewers.
18. (18) "Without a Trace," CBS, 9.65 million viewers.
19. (26) "Cold Case," CBS, 9.57 million viewers.
20. (39) "Dance War: Bruno vs. Carrieann," ABC, 9.16 million viewers.
Yegor Letov, widely regarded as the father of Russian punk music, has died, according to his band's website. He was 43.
Letov was the singer of the noisy and confrontational group "Grazhdanskaya Oborona," which became notorious in the late 1980s as the Soviet Union was gripped by social and political changes.
The band's website said he died Tuesday of heart failure at his home in the Siberian city of Omsk.
The band's name means "civil defence," but often was referred to in short as "grob" - the Russian word for coffin.
The group was forbidden to play in public in Soviet times. But fans distributed cassettes of its songs including "Some Guy Got Killed by a Bus" and one that referred to Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin "rotting in his mausoleum."
In this photo provided by the Zoological Society of San Diego, Kalim-Alam, a 1-year-old siamang whose name means 'generous nature' in Indonesia, used Karen, a 16-year-old orangutan, as a stepping stool at the San Diego Zoo during playtime, Tuesday, February 19, 2008 in San Diego. The siamang is a species of lesser ape that shares the zoo's Absolutely Apes habitat with orangutans, a species of great apes. The two species also share the environment in their native Indonesia.
Photo by Ken Bohn
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