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Saturday, November 25, 2006

How Pope Night Died and Was Reborn

Pope Night was a—perhaps the—major holiday in colonial Boston, especially for working-class teenaged boys. After 1765 it became an occasion to protest Crown officials, thus squarely within the Revolutionary movement. But by the end of the 1770s it was gone. What happened to this elaborate celebration?

After all, New England anti-Catholicism deeply entrenched, especially after decades of fighting the French. Paranoid Whigs suggested that the French king was behind the whole political conflict (as did paranoid Loyalists). Colonial governments used the threat of a French attack to justify building up their militias. Whigs shared rumors that London was recruiting francophone soldiers in Canada to sweep down on New England. In the Suffolk County Resolves of September 1774, one grievance was how the Quebec Act guaranteed French Catholics the freedom of worship.

But that same year, with Boston's port shut and folks expecting war between the troops and the populace, town fathers leaned on the young men to forgo Pope Night. The times were too serious for such revelry. And then public attitudes and values started to change.

In November 1775, a New England army was preparing to invade Canada, expecting the francophone population would help them drive out the British authorities. Gen. George Washington issued these general orders:

As the Commander in Chief has been apprized of a design form'd for the observance of that ridiculous and childish custom of burning the Effigy of the pope—He cannot help expressing his surprise that there should be Officers and Soldiers in this army so void of common sense, as not to see the impropriety of such a step at this Juncture; at a Time when we are solliciting, and have really obtain'd, the friendship and alliance of the people of Canada, whom we ought to consider as Brethren embarked in the same Cause. The defence of the general Liberty of America: At such a juncture, and in such Circumstances, to be insulting their Religion, is so monstrous, as not to be suffered or excused; indeed instead of offering the most remote insult, it is our duty to address public thanks to these our Brethren, as to them we are so much indebted for every late happy Success over the common Enemy in Canada.
The holiday enjoyed a last gasp in 1776 and 1777, after the British military had sailed away. It might have been politically awkward to commemorate a British king's deliverance at the same time the town was reviling a British king and celebrating a republic. But in Boston the ideological fuel for Pope Night was anti-Catholicism anyway, and locals could still get into that.

Until the French fleet arrived. In 1778 Benjamin Franklin and Silas Deane negotiated an alliance in Paris. Eventually the French king's money, weapons, fleet, and soldiers decided the war. (There were more French soldiers at Yorktown than American.) The ports of Portsmouth, Boston, and Newport were the main conduits for that aid.

With a little trepidation at first, New Englanders welcomed the same Frenchmen they had feared a few years earlier. Rich householders in Boston and Cambridge fêted French officers. In 1783, a priest established Boston's first Catholic parish in what had been the Huguenots' church at the corner of School Street and Cornhill (now Washington Street, where the godawful Irish Famine Memorial now stands). In that atmosphere, it became politically incorrect to revile the Catholic Church—at least as publicly and crudely as the Pope Night gangs had done.

But Pope Night wasn't entirely dead. One element of the celebration survived, and continues in altered form today. That element appears in many reminiscences of the holiday, but overshadowed by the giant effigies and rolling wagons and (in Boston) brawling gangs. A writer in the 9 Nov 1821 Boston Daily Advertiser recalled:
boys in petticoats...swarmed in the streets and ran from house to house with little Popes in their hands, on pieces of board and shingle, the heads of which were carved out of small potatoes.
Harrison Gray Otis told his granddaughter that "A few days before the anniversary [of 5 November], boys ran around to every front door in town ringing handbells and singing:

‘Don’t you hear my little bell
Go chink, chink, chink?
Please to give me a little money
To buy my Pope some drink.’”
This was the local equivalent of English children's "Penny for the guy?"

That part of Pope Night kept going: young boys dressing up and going door to door, asking for coins. So did bonfires; teens didn't need a papal effigy to have fun burning things. In the late 1800s, folklorists spotted children in old New Hampshire towns following these rituals on what they called "Pork Night," with no knowledge of the holiday's older name and roots. These traditions also shifted a few days on the American calendar—from the fifth of November to the last of October

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

GOOD GAME!!

The boys played a relatively good game today, defeating their division rivals - the Redskins. It really was iffy going into the game today with how they’ve played their last 3 games. Guess that bye week did the trick! Of course their game playing wasn’t perfect and there were a couple of iffy calls in our favor, but I always have a hard time understanding why the commentators have a hard time giving the Birds their due.

There are some other good games happening around the league today, too. That Chargers/Bengals game looked to be crazy! The Chargers really pulled it out at the end though. And the Colts - barely edging out Buffalo to become the first team in NFL history to have back to back 9-0 starts. And how about them Jets beating the Patriots (hee hee!)? It was good to see the Packers win one. I’m excited to watch the Bears/Giants game tonight - that is going to be a great matchup.

Check Designs

So you open up a new checking account or your checks are going to run out. It’s time to order some new checks and maybe make a change and get a new check design. I’ve never been a big fan of fancy check designs. The simpler the better I say. After all, checks are made to pay things, not so the banks can earn some more money by charging extra for these designs.

The only place where I’d see a check design as useful are company checks. There I think you’d want to place your logo on the check, it seems to give your company credibility. In a strange way, the people you do business with will be more likely to accept a check from you, since it’s a professional looking check with your letterhead on it.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Credit Score

In an effort to get more credit and raise my credit score. I’ll be taking a very small step and begin to use my Capital One Visa credit card more often now. While the difference in my score may be minimal, it’s worth it, any amount is worth it. As time goes by, I’ll become more accustomed to using a credit card, that I’ll open up additional cards too - of course making sure I can make the payments on time.

You never want to live above your means, if you care about your credit score.

Another thing that can help your credit score is opening a new loan, then paying it off. This is one option I will most likely not do. First of all, I have no need to borrow money, second of all, even if the interest rate I borrow at can be very low - it’s not going to be as low as what I’d earn at a savings account. So there’s no profit to be made.

For now, it just looks like I’ll use my credit card more often now.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

How to do link popularity???

you want to increase your link popularity.??Well Just having a blog will increase your link popularity. I have helped several clients so far set up corporate blogs for their web sites. These sites generally start off by just selling a product. The owners of these sites usually have a passion behind the reason they are selling said products. So what a better way for them to express this passion than through a blog? They can talk about their expertise on the product and help sell their product more than just having that buy now button. There credibility is increased by actually expressing their passion and sharing in their expertise to the prospective buyer.

Friday, November 10, 2006

SO That's Where My Drugs Come From

Yesterday, a company I had never heard of before recalled 11 million bottles of acetaminophen because it found pieces of metal the size of a couple grains of salt in the pills.

Nothing life threatening, mind you. But as with E. coli-tainted spinach, yesterday's recall taught me a lot about where many of the medicines and supplements I take come from.

The substance in this case is generic painkiller sold under store brands at more than a hundred retailers nationwide such as CVS, Safeway, and Wal-Mart.

The company that recalled the drug, Perrigo Co. of Allegan, Mich., makes just about every generic version of popular over-the-counter medicine and nutritional supplement you can think of: NyQuil, Sudafed, Claritin, Centrum vitamins, even Garlique.

In fact, according to Perrigo CEO Joe Papa, every man, woman and child in the U.S. takes an average of one Perrigo-made tablet every four days!

It's not hard to believe. While writing the story, I reached into my desk drawer and pulled out my stash of CVS extra-strength non-aspirin pain reliever. The bottle fell within the recalled expiration dates but it wasn't part of an implicated lot.

The funny thing is that nowhere on the bottle does it say who makes the pills, only who distributes them, so as consumers you have no way of knowing where the heck it actually comes from.

Then, there are the things drug makers do before they put them in the bottle.

Some of the lots involved in the recall are for pills sold as long as three years ago. So when did the company discover the problem? From what it said in its press release, the company told the FDA on Nov. 2. Perrigo noticed some tablet-making equipment was wearing out prematurely. Somehow, this led the company to run 70 million pills through a metal detector, of all things, which turned up the metal fragments.

Granted, you don't feel the same shock when you learn that one little-known company makes your headache medicine, decongestant and daily vitamin, as you do when you find out the chicken you had for lunch didn't come from some nice farm but an industrial feedlot operation where it didn't see the light of day and was pumped full of hormones.

But it did raise a similar issue, which is when you have centralized production combined with national distribution, a small problem can easily turn into a much larger-scale one.

It turns out that this was Perrigo's 11th recall for the year and its 23rd since 2001. A previous acetaminophen recall involved pills contaminated with bits of acrylic mirror.

How did that happen?

It falls to the Food and Drug Administration, which oversees drug-manufacturing operations, to find out.

The FDA seems to have been keeping an eye on Perrigo, inspecting them seven times over the past five years--that's more often than their usual frequency of about once every two years.

Sidney Wolfe of Public Citizen says inspections don't mean much if FDA can't fine the companies when they find violations.

It isn't cheap for drug makers to do these recalls, which cost million of dollars. Not to mention the damage done to their reputations. In the case of Perrigo, though, the retailers keep lining up to buy the company's drugs, regardless of its recall record, and the company appears to be doing well financially, with annual sales topping $1 billion.

Marc Scheineson, a former FDA official and food and drug law expert, assures me that the prospect of getting sued by personal injury lawyers is incentive enough for drug makers to be conservative about recalling their products. But if that was truly enough, would Perrigo really have had so many recalls?

Do you think the FDA needs more teeth? Or is the fear of John Edwards enough to make sure companies do the right thing?

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

PS3!!! I really wanted one!!

Demand outstripped supply at the store because Sony, which halved its 2006 shipments forecast to 2 million because of a shortage of parts, limited initial deliveries in Japan to 100,000. The company said last month it would cut the new machine's price to 49,980 yen ($425) from 59,800 yen after complaints from gamers. The Playstation 3 goes on sale in the U.S. on Nov. 17.

``When Sony announced the Playstation 3 I really wanted one, but thought I should wait because of the high price,'' Okawa said. ``When they cut the price, I decided to go ahead.'' The Tokyo resident told reporters he bought the console along with the ``Gundam'' game.

Yodobashi's Akihabara store had 1,980 consoles available, the most in Japan, according to store manager Shinichi Adachi.

``Even if we had 4,000 we'd still sell out today,'' Adachi said. ``I'd like to know when we'll get another delivery from Sony, but they're not saying.''

The Playstation 3 employs a new Cell processor 40 times faster than the chip in its predecessor. Sony is also betting game fans will prefer the PlayStation 3's souped-up graphics and more lifelike characters over a competing console from Japanese rival Nintendo Co.

Digital Home

Sony spent 200 billion yen ($1.7 billion) to develop the Cell processor with International Business Machines Corp. and Toshiba Corp. making it faster than rival chips thanks to nine processing cores that let it carry out more instructions simultaneously.

The Cell chip is part of Sony's strategy to beat Microsoft Corp. and Apple Computer Inc. in controlling the digital home, a future network in which appliances are connected to each other and to the Internet.

Nintendo's Wii console, which goes on sale in the U.S. on Nov. 19 and two weeks later in Japan, uses less-sophisticated graphics but woos game fans with an innovative wireless control system based on hand motions.

The PlayStation 3's ``graphics capability is probably two generations ahead of the other consoles,'' Hirokazu Hamamura, chief executive officer at researcher and publisher Enterbrain Inc. told reporters in September.

Battery Woes

Sony will need all the help it can get. The company is in the process of recovering from a 51.2 billion yen recall of 9.6 million laptop batteries on concern they catch fire. The cost contributed to Sony cutting its net income forecast for the year ending March 31 to 80 billion yen from 130 billion yen.

The games business generated 918 billion yen in sales in 2006, 12 percent of Sony's 7.48 trillion yen revenue. Sales at the games unit gained an average 31 percent in the past two years, the second fastest after financial services, which averaged 34 percent. By contrast, Sony's consumer electronics business shrank by an average 0.9 percent during the past two years.

At 49,980 yen the Playstation 3 is almost double the cost of its rivals. Microsoft sells a version of its Xbox 360 for 29,800 yen, while Nintendo will offer the Wii console for 25,000 yen.

Cupertino, California-based Apple plans to sell a $299 device called iTV in the first quarter of 2007 that lets viewers see movies on their TV sets by using a connection to a computer.

High Cost

``It could be expensive if you think this is just a games machine,'' said Yuuki Sakurai, who oversees investment planning at Fukoku Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Tokyo.

Sony and Toshiba have talked about building televisions and home-networking boxes using the Cell to pump several video channels to different outlets in the home.

The Cell would be unable to compete on price with chips from STMicroelectronics NV or Zoran Corp. which can already handle the most processor-intensive video compression rates, said Paul O'Donovan, Gartner Inc.'s London-based analyst on emerging technologies and semiconductors.

``Home networking won't reach the mass market for another four to five years,'' O'Donovan said. ``These companies talk about products that will contain the Cell in the future but none of them will hit the mainstream anytime soon.''

Parts Shortage

The processor isn't the only hardware Sony gambled on with the PlayStation 3. A shortage of laser components for its Blu-ray DVD device, which offers at least five times the data storage capacity of earlier DVDs, caused the company to delay the PlayStation 3's debut in Europe until March.

Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft has sold more than 6 million Xbox 360s worldwide since introducing the console a year ago, helped by its Xbox Live online service. The company is targeting 10 million units this year.

Microsoft this week said users will be able to rent and own high-definition movies and television shows from CBS, MTV Networks and Warner Bros. on its Xbox Live service from Nov. 22.

Kyoto-based Nintendo will get exclusive games from Walt Disney Co. for its Wii console.

``Giving rivals a head start in an industry like this gives them an opportunity to come out with an even more competitive product,'' said Fukoku Mutual's Sakurai. ``Sony will make up the lost ground only if its rivals remain stationary, and that is wishful thinking.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

PS3 launch imminent --But will anybody purchase one?

Even though the Xbox 360 is coming up on its first birthday, the “Next-gen” race for gamers’ thumbs and wallets begins in earnest this week. Japanese enthusiasts may already be lining up outside stores to be the first to own a Playstation 3.

But, what will be the PS3 buyers’ motivation for adopting Sony’s offering straight away?

Sure the 30 odd release games are a satisfying mix of action, sport, racing and shooting. If you have a HD TV to fire up, they will look fantastic.

However, only marginally better than the slimily HD enabled Xbox 360. With a year of gaming behind it, boasts a wider selection choice for your gaming buck. Furthermore, if gaming is your thing, and game play is more important than graphical superiority, then maybe save your cash for a Wii – Hell, you will have more to spend on games anyway.

So that is the gamers out of the way. What about that cheap Blu-ray drive? A bargain at $830 here in Australia, compared to the dedicated players currently on the market. Will the early PS3 purchases be lured by that?

I will be surprised. In my opinion, this HD DVD versus Blu-ray war is not like the VHS versus Betamax one of the early eighties. Consumers are wary of these types of conflicts, and the more informed technophiles that are the target of Microsoft and Sony are going to go one of two ways during this period.

Either they will look for a manufacture to develop a player capable of both formats. Or bypass the technology completely and adopt a process of getting their HD another way. Most likely online downloads hard drives, in some form.

So where will that leave Sony and their new box? We will have to wait and see. Wait until developers get more of a handle on dealing with the complexities and power of the device, to produce compelling content.
Wait to see what happens to pricing of HD TV’s and dedicated optical players. In this country at least, wait for direction on broadband internet services.
And, not to mention, a wait until March for PS3 to arrive here, three months after release of the Nintendo Wii.

It is all in the hands of you, the buying public. You have some decision making to do in the next short period. Interesting times ahead for electronic gaming entertainment. Finally we can call Next-Gen, Current-Gen.