Deadly Mt. Haleakala

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastSwim Day
Day 176 of 2008
190 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DY — Ho’okui: Hit
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Boskru bilong balus: Crew of a plane
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “One can enjoy a canoe ride when the paddler is skilled.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “If Beethoven had been killed in a plane crash at the age of 22, it would have changed the history of music…and of aviation.” (Tom Stoppard)

WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein’s Website
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — I’m Voting Republican
NETCASTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein Audio | Gore Vidal’s Article of Impeachment
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — Hawaii Canines

WWII era plane

June 24th, 1941:
Haleakala proves deadly to three Navy planes piloted by Marines who were making a routine night flight over Maui about six months before the U.S. entered World War II. In what is still today a somewhat inexplicable occurrence, all three planes hit the west side of the volcano at about 8,000 feet and the pilots die.

EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 24th
1497: John Cabot claims eastern Canada for England
1509: Henry VIII becomes King of England
1861: Tennessee becomes the 11th (& last) state to secede from the U.S.
1949: “Hopalong Cassidy” becomes the first televised network western (NBC)
1968: “Resurrection City,” a shantytown constructed as part of the Poor People’s March on Washington D.C., was closed down by authorities.
1970: U.S. Senate votes overwhelmingly to repeal the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
1997: The Air Force releases a report on the 1947 “Roswell Incident” that states the alien bodies seen by witnesses were actually life-sized dummies
1998: AT&T Corp. agrees to buy cable television giant Tele-Communications Inc. for $31.7 billion
2004: Federal investigators question President George W. Bush for more than an hour in connection with the news leak of a CIA operative’s name.

BORN ON THIS DAY - June 24th
1771: EI Du Pont, chemist/scientist
1813: Henry Ward Beecher, clergyman/orator
1842: Ambrose Bierce, satirist
1912: Norman Cousins, editor
1915: Fred Hoyle, cosmologist
1916: John Ciardi, poet/critic
1942: Mick Fleetwood, drummer
1944: Bruce Johnston, rocker
1944: Jeff Beck, singer/songwriter
1947: Peter Weller, actor
1950: Nancy Allen, actress
1957: Astro, reggae singer
1961: Curt Smith, rocker
1979: Mindy Kaling actress/producer
1987: Kaitlin Cullum, actress

U.S. Presidents - Andrew Jackson

Maui Curmudgeon, U.S. Presidents No Comments

By the Maui Curmudgeon (7th in a 43-part series)

How do the U.S. Presidents stack up? I thought I’d find out by reading biographies of all 43 presidents, in the order of their administrations. Here are briefly the pros and cons of my discoveries, the interesting bits, and how I’d rank him. For comparison, I give you the 1982 Murrary-Blessing ranking, a survey of hundreds of leading historians who ranked each president by number. This survey is the gold standard of presidential rankings and is most cited when this kind of thing needs bringing up in media.

ANDREW JACKSON: 1829-1837 ~ 7th U.S. President

Andrew Jackson, 7th US presidentWith Andrew Jackson, we come to the first candidate for worst president of the United States. A virulent racist, a corrupt politician, anti-Semite, misogynist, and abusive soldier, he fought most of his public life against the National Bank, refused to take paper currency in any transaction, and tried during his presidency to have paper currency rejected as payment for taxes and other public debts. This from a man who over the the course of the past 150 years has been on the $5, $10, $50 and $10,000 bills before settling on the current $20 bill. During his life, Jackson gave the term “hypocrite” a bad name, if that’s possible.
Read the rest…

Thanks for the Laughs, Truth George

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastUN Public Service Day
Day 175 of 2008
191 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DY — Kolohe: Comic
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Paniman: Funnyman, clown
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “Observe the horizon clouds of the land.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “I think it’s the duty of the comedian to find out where the line is drawn and cross it deliberately.”  (George Carlin)

WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein’s Website
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — I’m Voting Republican
NETCASTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein Audio | Gore Vidal’s Article of Impeachment
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — Hawaii Canines

Geroge Carlin 1972 arrest mug shots 

RADICAL COMEDIAN GEORGE CARLIN DIED YESTERDAY of heart failure at age 71 in Santa Monica, CA.  His most famous comedy bit was probably “The 7 Words You Can Never Say on TV,”  which became the most searched for term on Google today. According to George, the dirty words banned from TV were: shit, piss, fuck, cunt, motherfucker, cocksucker, tits, fart, turd, twat.  Watch Carlin’s comedy  |  Read The Nation Obit.

Advice for Obama #3

Realizing that Barack Obama hasn’t the time to read as much history as he should in preparation for the coming electrion, we thought we’d help him along by sharing the wisdom of the greats. Today’s advice comes from Marcus Aurelius:  “Do what you will. Even if you tear yourself apart, they will continue doing the same things.” – Maui Curmudgeon

EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 23rd
1784: First U.S. balloon flight (13 year old Edward Warren)
1947: Truman’s veto of Taft-Hartley Act overridden by congress
1949: First 12 women graduate from Harvard Medical School
1956: Gamal Abdel Nasser elected president of Egypt
1969: Warren E. Burger was sworn in as chief justice of the United States.
1972: Nixon & Haldeman agree to use CIA to cover up Watergate
1972: President Nixon signs act barring sex discrimination in college sports
1993: Lorena Bobbitt mutilates the genitalia of her husband, John, after he allegedly rapes her
2005: Former Ku Klux Klansman Edgar Ray Killen was sentenced to 60 years in prison for the 1964 Mississippi slayings of three civil rights workers.

BORN ON THIS DAY - June 23rd
1910: Jean Anouilh, dramatist
1912: Alan Turing, mathematician/pioneer in computer theory
1927: Bob Fosse, choreographer/director
1929: June Carter Cash, country singer
1940: Diana Trask, singer
1947: Bryan Brown, actor
1948: Clarence Thomas, Supreme Court Justice/perjurer/pornographer
1956: Randy Jackson, TV personality
1957: Frances McDormand, actress

The Brilliant Naomi Klein

Maui Curmudgeon, Reviews No Comments

Naomi KleinI draw your attention to two items which are available now, and which should be required reading for anyone caring about freedom. Both come from Naomi Klein (http://www.naomiklein.org/main). Ms. Klein is a brilliant Canadian who has written several astonishing books detailing the bad news which comes about when governments use technology to invade an individual’s freedom.

To listen to some of her ideas, please go to  HERE and click on the link “listen to the programme”. It’s a short BBC program, well produced and clearly recorded, and worth your time.

The second is Klein’s book The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism is available in paperback. The shock doctrine may be the finest non-fiction I’ve read in ten years. You owe it to yourself to take a look.

– Maui Curmudgeon

Rover Comes Home Early

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastDog to Work Day
Day 174 of 2008
192 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Ilio: Dog
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Pusi: Cat
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “The gift is sounded.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “Diplomacy is the art of saying ‘nice doggy’ until you can find a rock.” (Will Rogers)

WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein’s Website
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — I’m Voting Republican
NETCASTS OF THE WEEK — Naomi Klein Audio | Gore Vidal’s Article of Impeachment
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — Hawaii Canines

Pet ThisJune 22, 2003: The state of Hawaii finally relents and joins the 20th century regarding animals. Until this date, anyone who wanted to bring to Maui a family pet had to quarantine the animal for 30 to 120 days, depending on the vaccination status. For years, a new process for rabies detection had been in place which validated an animal free or rabies within five days, but the state refused to use the process because of all the civil servants hired to work within the old system. (And yes, that’s a live puppy in the photo.)

EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 22nd
1342: Bilbo Baggins returns to his home at Bag End (Shire Reckoning)
1772: Slavery outlawed in England
1808: Zebulon Pike reaches his peak, Pike’s in Colorado
1847: The doughnut is invented
1870: Congress creates the U.S. Department of Justice
1940: France falls to Nazi Germany; armistice signed, France disarmed
1941: Germany declares war on Soviet Union during WW II
1944: FDR signs G.I. Bill of Rights, benefitting  those who served in WW II
1970: President Richard Nixon signed a measure lowering the voting age to 18
1977: Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell begin sserving a sentence for his role in the Watergate cover-up
1981: Mark David Chapman pleads guilty to killing rock musician John Lennon
2004: A federal judge approves a class-action sex-discrimination lawsuit representing 1.6 million female workers against Wal-Mart 

BORN ON THIS DAY - June 22nd
1757: George Vancouver, explorer/surveyor
1856: H Rider Haggard, author
1858: Giacomo Puccini, operatic composer
1887: Julian Huxley, biologist/philosopher
1898: Erich Maria Remarque, German novelist
1906: Billy Wilder, movie director
1907: Anne Morrow Lindbergh, American aviator/author
1909: Michael Todd, producer
1921: Joseph Papp, stage producer/director
1922: Bill Blass, fashion designer
1928: Orson Bean, comedian
1933: Dianne Feinstein, (Mayor-D-SF, US Senator)
1936: Kris Kristofferson, singer/actor
1941: Ed Bradley, CBS news correspondent
1947: Don Henley, drummer/singer
1948: Todd Rundgren, rock singer
1949: Lindsay Wagner, actress
1949: Meryl Streep, actress
1954: Freddie Prinze, comedian/actor
1964: Amy Brenneman, actress
1964: Dan Brown, author

Say Nothing & Keep Moving

Raphael O'Suna No Comments

Have you ever wondered why “ghosts” almost never speak?

It is one thing to gather together enough subtle substance to materialize; it is quite another–and more difficult–task to reproduce human speech.

It can be done, but anyone who has actually heard a being from this more subtle world speak, will never forget the sound. One can gain an idea of the frightful comicality of ghostspeak, by trying to make animal sounds.

Of course, among themselves, these subtle beings use mental telepathy, which requires neither speech nor a particular language.

There is usually great urgency or significance when a materialized being makes the supreme and awkward effort to speak, and to use a language that you can understand. It is downright silly to think that a ghost is malevolent, just because he is a ghost. Or that a ghost has specifically come to haunt, or to communicate with, you. Usually we have wandered into an area, which is rich in stratified sediments–residues of human activity, thought and speech–and which are being used to construct a temporary form.

One is wise to say nothing and keep on moving.

– Raphael O’Suna

U.S. Presidents - John Quincy Adams

Maui Curmudgeon, U.S. Presidents No Comments

By the Maui Curmudgeon (6th in a 43-part series)

How do the U.S. Presidents stack up? I thought I’d find out by reading biographies of all 43 presidents, in the order of their administrations. Here are briefly the pros and cons of my discoveries, the interesting bits, and how I’d rank him. For comparison, I give you the 1982 Murrary-Blessing ranking, a survey of hundreds of leading historians who ranked each president by number. This survey is the gold standard of presidential rankings and is most cited when this kind of thing needs bringing up in media.

JOHN QUINCY ADAMS: 1825-1829 ~ 6th U.S. President

The only elected president who was the son of a president (no, the current occupier of the White House was appointed and doesn’t count), John Quincy Adams was without a doubt one of the smartest men to hold the office. He amplified his father’s dedication to honesty, fought slavery, and was a great president - who had what most every historian considers to be a failed presidency. Read the rest…

Kalaupapa Saluted

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastVinegar Day
Day 173 of 2008
193 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Sunny: La
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Tulait: Very bright
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “Unsavory is the soup made of little chickens.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “Men trust their ears less than their eyes.(Herodocuts)

WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — All World Clock
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — I’m Voting Republican
NETCAST OF THE WEEK — Podango’s Apple Phone Show
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — The Hunger Site

USS MissouriJune 21, 1998: The “Big Mo,” the USS Missouri, the famed World War II battleship noted most, perhaps, for being the deck on which Japan’s formal surrender was signed by the Japanese government, comes to Hawaii to rest. While it passes Kalaupapa, the peninsula on which the Hanson’s Disease (leprosy) sufferers reside, the ship stops, and dips its flag in salute.

BORN ON THIS DAY - June 21st
1732: Martha Washington, the first first lady
1892: Reinhold Niebuhr, theologian
1903: Al Hirschfeld, cartoonist
1905: Jean-Paul Sartre, philosopher/Nobel writer
1912: Mary McCarthy, novelist
1922: Judy Holliday, comedienne/actress
1925: Maureen Stapleton, actress
1927: Carl Stokes, (Cleve-Mayor)
1931: Margaret Heckler, U.S. Secy of Health & Human Services
1931: Olympia Dukakis, actress
1944: Ray Davies, singer/guitarist
1947: Meredith Baxter, actress
1965: Larry Wachowski, filmmaker
1982: Prince William Arthur Philip Louis Windsor of Wales

EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 21st
1633: Galileo Galilei is forced by the Inquisition to “abjure, curse, and detest” his Copernican heliocentric views (never rescinded)
1684: Massachusetts Bay Colony’s charter is revoked
1768: First U.S. Bachelor of Medicine degree is bestowed on Dr. John Archer
1788: The U.S. Constitution goes into effect as New Hampshire becomes the 9th state to ratify it
1917: The Hawaiian Red Cross is founded
1945: Japanese forces on Okinawa surrender to the U.S. during WW II
1948: First stored computer program is run, on the Manchester Mark I (England) (Frank Turing made the machine)
1964: Three civil rights workers (Michael H Schwerner, Andrew Goodman & James E Chaney) disappear after release from a Mississippi jail (3 days later, their burnt-out car was found; their bodies were found buried in an earthen dam six weeks later; eight members of the Ku Klux Klan went to prison on federal conspiracy charges; none served more than six years)
1977: Former White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman enters prison
1985 Scientists announced that skeletal remains exhumed in Brazil were those of Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele.
1989: The Supreme Court rules that burning the American flag as a form of political protest is protected by the First Amendment.
2005: Edgar Ray Killen, an 80-year-old former Ku Klux Klansman, iss found guilty of manslaughter in the deaths of three civil rights workers in Philadelphia, Miss., 41 years to the day earlier. (He is serving a 60-year prison sentence. 

First Day of Summer

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastWorld Refugee Day
Day 172 of 2008
194 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Kauwela: Summer
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Sanglss: Sunglasses
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “When the head of the child is warmed by the sun.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “The sun - my almighty physician.(Thomas Jefferson)

WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — All World Clock
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — I’m Voting Republican
NETCAST OF THE WEEK — Podango’s Apple Phone Show
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — The Hunger Site

SUMMER SOLSTICE - 01:52pm - 1st Day of Summer: Summers Solstice occurs once a year, when the tilt of the Earth’s axis is most oriented toward the Sun in the northern hemisphere, causing the Sun to reach its northernmost extremes and also the longest day of the year. The name is derived from the Latin sol (sun) and sistere (to stand still), because at the solstices, the Sun stands still in declination; that is, its apparent movement north or south comes to a standstill. Above the Arctic Circle today there is 24 hours of daylight.

EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 20th
1782: Congress approves Great Seal of U.S. & the eagle as it’s symbol
1837: Queen Victoria at 18 ascends British throne following death of uncle King William IV. She ruled for 63 years, until 1901
1863: First bank chartered in U.S. (National Bank of Davenport Iowa)
1863: The Western half of Virginia is re-admitted to the Union as the state of West Virginia. (the 35th U.S. state)
1867: President Andrew Johnson announces purchase of Alaska
1930: Bobby Jones wins the British Open
1944: Congress charters Central Intelligence Agency
1947: President Truman vetoes Taft-Hartley Act
1963: U.S. and USSR agree to set up a “Hot Line”
1967: Muhammad Ali convicted of violating draft law in Houston
1968: Jim Hines becomes first person to run 100 meters in under 10 seconds
1994: O.J. Simpson pleads innocent in Los Angeles to killing his ex-wife, Nicole, and her friend Ronald Goldman
1997: The tobacco industry agrees to a massive settlement in exchange for major relief from mounting lawsuits and legal bills
2001: American Lori Berenson is convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison by a Peruvian court for collaborating with Leftist guerrillas
2002: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that executing mentally-retarded murderers is unconstitutionally cruel

BORN ON THIS DAY - June 20th
1894: George Delacorte, philanthropist/publisher
1907: Lillian Hellman, playwright
1909: Errol Flynn, actor
1920: DeForest Kelley, actor
1924: Chet Atkins, guitarist
1928: Martin Landau, actor
1933: Danny Aiello, actor
1942: Brian Wilson, singer
1945: Anne Murray, singer
1950: Lionel Richie, singer
1952: John Goodman, actor
1953: Cyndi Lauper, singer
1960: John Taylor, rocker
1967: Joseph William Cathcart, rock guitarist

Advice to Obama #2

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Click for Kahului, Hawaii ForecastWorld Sauntering Day
Day 171 of 2008
195 days left in this year


HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY — Papehi a make: Kill
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY — Kilim i dai pinis: Kill
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY — “Life is in the mouth; death is in the mouth.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY — “We kill because we are afraid of our own shadow.(Henry Miller)


WEB SURF SPOTS OF THE WEEK — All World Clock
WEB VIDEO OF THE WEEK — MSNBC - Meet the Press
NETCAST OF THE WEEK — Podango’s Apple Phone Show
GOOD DEED SITE OF THE WEEK — The Hunger Site

ADVICE TO OBAMA #2: Realizing that Barack Obama doesn’t have much time on his hands, we’d thought we’d help him with his quest for the presidency by passing along advice which he may have missed during his reading years. Given that the current occupier of the White House has been a traitor to the U.S. Constitution, we thought it only appropriate to begin with advice from Niccolo Machiavelli:
“He who founds a republic and does not kill the sons of Brutus will only reign a short time.”
 
EVENTS ON THIS DAY - June 19th
1862: Slavery is outlawed in U.S. territories.
1934: The Federal Communications Commission is created.
1953: Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are executed at Sing Sing Prison in Ossining, N.Y. They had been convicted of conspiring to pass U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviet Union.
1961: The Supreme Court strikes down a provision in Maryland’s constitution requiring state officeholders to profess a belief in God.
1964: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 is approved after surviving an 83-day filibuster in the U.S. Senate.
1987: The Supreme Court strikes down a Louisiana law requiring any public school teaching the theory of evolution to teach creationism science as well.
1999: Britain’s Prince Edward marries commoner Sophie Rhys-Jones in Windsor, England.
2000: The Supreme Court, bars officials from letting students lead stadium crowds in prayer before football games.

BORN ON THIS DAY - June 19th
1623: Blaise Pascal, mathematician/physicist
1900: Laura Hobson, writer
1903: Lou Gehrig, baseball player1935: Gena Rowlands, actress
1945: Salman Rushdie, author
1949: Al Wilson, R&B singer1949: Phylicia Rashad, actress
Actress (”The Cosby Show”)
1951: Ann Wilson, rock singer (Heart)
1954: Larry Dunn, rock musician
1955: Kathleen Turner, actress
1957: Doug Stone, country singer
1963: Paula Abdul, singer
1976: Poppy Montgomery, actress (”Without a Trace”)
1985: Paul Dano, actor (”Little Miss Sunshine”)

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