May 24 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Singer – songwriter Bob Dylan is 71.

 

Actor Gary Burghoff (M*A*S*H, Casino, Small Kill) is 69.

 

Singer Patti LaBelle (Patricia Louise Holte; Down the Aisle, Lady Marmalade, On My Own, New Attitude) is 68.

 

Actress Priscilla Beaulieu Presley (Dallas, Naked Gun series) is 67.

 

Actor Alfred Molina (Dead Man, Letter to Brezhnev, Ladyhawke, Raiders of the Lost Ark) is 59.

 

Singer – songwriter Rosanne Cash (Right Or Wrong, King’s Record Shop, Interiors) is 57.

 

Guitarist Rich Robinson (The Black Crowes) is 43.

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On May 24…

1543 – Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus died.

 

1816 – Artist Emanuel Leutze (Washington Crossing the Delaware, Washington Rallying the Troops at Monmouth, Columbus Before the Queen) was born in Würtemberg, Germany.

 

1844 – Samuel F.B. Morse tapped out the message “What hath God wrought” in Morse code, inaugurating America’s telegraph industry.  The message was sent from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, MD.

 

1883 – The Brooklyn Bridge, linking the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn, officially opened.  Designed by John A. Roebling, it took 14 years to build and – at 1,595 feet in length – it was then the world’s longest suspension bridge.

 

1931 – The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) began service on the Columbian run between New York City and Washington, D.C.  The passenger train was the first train with air conditioning throughout.

 

1935 – Major league baseball held its first night game, thanks to recently-installed lights at Cincinnati’s Crosley Field.  The Cincinnati Reds defeated Philadelphia 2-1.

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Cartoon of the Day

What kid needs monsters under the bed when they have politicians?

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Author Explores Religious Sect She Abandoned

Like many people raised under the shackles of a strict and oppressive religion, Anouk Markovits felt compelled to write about it.  In “I Am Forbidden,” her characters grow up in the Satmar Hasidic Jewish sect where people frown upon reading anything outside of religious tomes and girls are expected to wed at a young age.  A native of France, Markovits managed to flee her home and she transfers her experiences into her book’s lead character Atara Stern.  But, “I Am Forbidden” focuses more on those who remain behind.  In this interview with Reuters’ Elaine Lies, she recounts the very personal journey that culminated in this tale.

Q: What inspired the book?  I’ve read that you’ve said 9/11 had something to do with it.

A: I think what happened with 9/11 is that I realized even if I in my private life had (left) fundamentalism, it was out there.  I knew that I had an intimate knowledge of aspects of it… The people inside (the novel) had all made choices so different from my own, and I didn’t know if I could even imagine their inner lives.  But I did feel that I should try, that if I were able to do it maybe I could basically lift a corner onto a world that is really not acceptable to most people in mainstream Western society.

So I just started and it ended up being extremely difficult because it was a world that I had left, and the people were making choices that I had not done.  But then it’s the magic of the novel, it required that I enter these characters and inhabit them.  And the more I was trying to be these people, the more I was also realizing that that very approach, where you allow conflicting voices and multiple voices to express themselves, was itself anti-fundamentalist.

Q: How old were you when you left home, how hard was it?

A: I was 19 when I finally left.  I left because in that world, people marry – arranged marriages.  I felt I couldn’t put it off much longer, I had to make a move or I would be married into that world and I knew that would be completely unfair to whomever I married.

That was extremely traumatic, because you really generally lose everything you have known.  You lose your family, your community, your friends.

Q: How did you come up with the characters, and is there one you feel especially close to?

A: Oddly enough, I would say that there was one character who still breaks my heart, and that’s Josef.  Josef is sort of the man who is almost the battleground and the person who is annihilated by extreme forces and conflict and divided selves.  I would say that he’s a character that I feel I could have been, I feel that I’m happy that I’m not.  Of course Atara is in some senses the character more closely modeled on my trajectory.

Q: When you say that in some ways Josef and how he becomes a battlefield could have been you, what do you mean by that?

A: In many ways I feel that every one of the characters in some sense could have been me – when I think also of what happens to Judit, who finds herself at 17 with basically no valid voice.  Although the specifics of her predicament were totally not mine, in many ways this sense of being trapped… is something which many people who want to leave have.  They all feel at a moment, ‘I can’t do it, I have no choice.’  And then most of them, those who feel they really have no choice, they choose what she did.  At some point you cave in and hopefully desire ticks over and life ticks over and you move on.

Q: I’m interested by what you said that as an architect, you think of the idea of force and counter-force.

A: It’s the idea that of course conflict drives story, and of course conflict can be internal conflict within a character.  It begins with Zalman in conflict with his body.  I pretty much realized as I went along that there was something about the novel that wanted a counter-force, always.  So Atara had Zalman to oppose her.  Mila’s desire for a child is totally driving her, but her faith tells her there’s nothing she can do.  All along, I would say, that it was the structure on which I built the novel.  But I think most novels are built that way. Every writer interprets it differently, but the principle is the same.

Q How long did this take to write?

A: Years.  I would say almost seven years.  Some of those years were spent just working with the language.  It was very hard to put myself in those characters, it was very hard to go there, I didn’t want to make the choices that they were making.  You do have to inhabit that world, and it was a world that I had left.  I didn’t take all that time to write the novel but I took that time to put myself in a position where I could write it.

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Do Books Have More Appeal During Tough Times?

This is a great question, and I believe the answer is a resounding yes.  At the Prague’s 18th International Book Fair and Literary Festival, director Dana Kalinová noted that, despite Europe’s ongoing economic crisis, tickets to the fair sold out for the first time.  When asked why, she simply declared, “Maybe people are looking for something in books.  I don’t know, but I would like to believe that.”

Books often don’t cost as much as other forms of entertainment, even though you can rent a movie DVD for about the same price.  As a writer and an avid reader, I’m naturally biased in favor of more cerebral avenues of pleasure.  But, I know that with literature, people can luxuriate in other worlds and learn something valuable.  Writing has always been a key form of communication.  It’s how ideas are transferred from one person and one place to another.  Written words evoke every single emotion known to humanity, whether for better or worse.  In this Internet-based world, where people think cell phone text messages are a high art, we need to get back to the basic enjoyment of reading.  Let me know what you think in the comments.

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1914 Kodachrome of George Eastman

This is a color portrait of George Eastman, the founder of the Eastman Kodak Company.  It was taken by photographer Joseph D’ Anunzio on September 2, 1914, more than 20 years before Kodachrome film was introduced to the public.  The photograph came to the Smithsonian Institute’s Photographic History Collection by accident.  In 1969, several hundred portraits were donated to the collection by a single person.  Among them were four 8” x 10” glass plates, described as Kodachromes taken in 1914.  Unfortunately, two of the portraits, both of young women, arrived damaged.  One had a cracked corner; the other had a crack in the glass plate from top to bottom.  The donor apologized for packing the glass plates poorly and sent the color portrait of George Eastman by way of compensation.

“Kodachrome” is a type of color reversal film Kodak introduced in 1935.  The company had at least 3 different processes that went by this name, the first in 1914.  In the early years of the 20th century, Eastman Kodak pursued the development of a simple color photography process that could be used by amateur photographers.  Charles Mees, the first director of Kodak Research Laboratories, said that George Eastman was crazy about color.

The 1914 version was devised by John Capstaff, a member of Kodak’s research staff. To make a color image like the museum’s photograph, two 8” x 10” glass plates were sandwiched together.  Two photos were taken at the same time by a special camera through green and orange-red filters that reversed one image with a mirror.  After the negatives were developed the positive images were dyed green and orange-red and bound together with the emulsion sides face to face.  Kodak stopped manufacturing Kodachrome in 2010, but its legacy continues as a hallmark of photography.

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May 23 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Actress – comedienne Jeannie Carson (Red Buttons Show, Hey, Jeannie!, Rockets Galore!, Little Women, Search for Tomorrow) is 84.

 

Actor Nigel Davenport (A Man for All Seasons, Chariots of Fire, Nighthawks, Picture of Dorian Gray) is 84.

 

Actress Barbara Barrie (Barney Miller, Backstairs at the Whitehouse, Private Benjamin, Two of a Kind) is 81.

 

Actress Joan Collins (Dynasty, The Bitch) is 79.

 

Actress Lauren Chapin (Father Knows Best) is 67.

 

World chess champion Anatoly Karpov, International Grandmaster, is 61.

 

International Boxing Hall of Famer “Marvelous” Marvin Hagler (legally changed his name to Marvelous Marvin Hagler) is 58.

Actor – comedian – producer – writer Drew Carey (The Drew Carey Show, Whose Line Is It Anyway?, The Price Is Right) is 54.

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On May 23…

1788 – South Carolina, originally named in honor of Charles I of England, became the eighth state of the union.

 

1810 – Author Margaret Fuller, America’s first true feminist, was born in Cambridge, MA.

 

1846 – Arabella Mansfield, the first woman admitted into the legal profession in the U.S., was born in Burlington, IA.

 

1879 – Iowa State College in Ames, IA, was established as the first veterinary school in the U.S.

1911 – The New York Public Library, the largest marble structure ever built in the U.S., was dedicated in New York City.

 

1934 – Police from Louisiana and Texas killed outlaws Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow near Sailes, LA.

 

1949 – Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin lifted the Berlin Blockade.

 

1960 – Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion announced that Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann had been captured in Argentina.

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Pictures of the Day

This is a first.  Caleb and Candra Pence got married last Saturday evening in a rural Harper County, Kansas, field with tornadoes looming in the background.  Although the weather had started to worsen as the ceremony began, the couple remained determined to go through with it and even posed afterwards for these photos.  Ah – such wedded bliss!  I wish them the best – since their marriage obviously is off to a stormy beginning.

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Shades of Erotic Fascination

E. L. James

Feminists and religious conservatives may not like this, but sex sells.  That’s certainly evident with E. L. James’ “Fifty Shades” erotica trilogy, which is selling faster than expected.  Book suppliers and libraries are having a tough time keeping pace with it.  Even its British author has been surprised by the popularity.  Last month Vintage Books, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, released “Fifty Shades” in paperback.

“Fifty Shades of Grey” has become the most popular book in library circulation, with more holds than anyone can recall for a single title.  The Hennepin County Public Library, which includes Minneapolis, had 2,121 holds as of May 18.  The books tell the tale of a dominant-submissive affair between a manipulative millionaire and a naïve younger woman.  And, while some libraries such as Hennepin County feel the need to make it available to the public, others have no qualms in pulling it from their shelves.  The Brevard County Library in Florida did just that recently, deeming its subject matter inappropriate for public consumption.  As if adults can’t figure out what’s appropriate for themselves, Don Walker, a spokesman for the Brevard County government, said, “We have criteria that we use, and in this case we view this as pornographic material.”

In Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, the library didn’t order copies, saying the books didn’t meet the standards of the community.  In Georgia the Gwinnett County Public Library, near Atlanta, declined to make the books available in its 15 branches, saying that the trilogy’s graphic writing violated its no-erotica policy.

Last week several organizations, including the National Coalition Against Censorship, sent a letter to the library board in Brevard County scolding it for refusing to stock the book alongside standards like “Tropic of Cancer” or “Fear of Flying.”

“There is no rational basis to provide access to erotic novels like these, and at the same time exclude contemporary fiction with similar content,” the letter said.  “The very act of rejecting erotica as a category suitable for public libraries sends an unmistakable message of condemnation that is moralistic in tone, and totally inappropriate in a public institution dedicated to serving the needs and interests of all members of the community.”

Joan Bertin, the executive director of the National Coalition Against Censorship, said in an interview that it was unusual for a library to remove a book from its section for adults.  “The vast majority of cases that we deal with have to do with removing books to keep kids from seeing them,” she said.  “That’s what makes this so egregious.  There are some possible arguments for trying to keep kids away from certain kinds of content, but in the case of adults, other than the restrictions on obscenity and child pornography, there’s simply no excuse.  This is really very much against the norms in the profession.”

Marcee Challener, the manager of materials and circulation services for the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Libraries, said that library officials there carefully considered the book before ordering it, but ultimately decided that it was no different from one of the paranormal romances featuring vampires that have been popular for years.

“There’s sex and eroticism in many well-written literary novels,” she said.  “It’s part of the human experience.”

Indeed, it is, and censorship of any kind is antithetical to the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees free speech and a free press.  As a writer, however, I’m still amazed that some self-appointed moral authoritarians feel the need to determine what’s in my best interest.  I don’t care for any religious texts, such as the Christian Bible or Jewish Torah.  But, I would never prevent anyone from reading them if they wanted. For your own enjoyment, you can check out the “Fifty Shades” series here.

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