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Sea you later, etc. (and other fishy puns)

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On This Day: January 26

Updated January 25, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On Jan. 26, 1950, India proclaimed itself a republic.

Go to article »

On Jan. 26, 1880, Douglas MacArthur, the American general who achieved acclaim as a grand strategist in World War II and in Korea, was born. Following his death on April 5, 1964, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1788 The first European settlers in Australia landed in present-day Sydney.
1802 Congress passed an act calling for a library to be established within the U.S. Capitol.
1837 Michigan became the 26th state.
1861 Louisiana seceded from the Union.
1870 Virginia rejoined the Union.
1925 Actor Paul Newman was born in Cleveland, Ohio.
1950 India proclaimed itself a republic.
1979 Former Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller died at age 70.
1988 The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical “Phantom of the Opera,” the longest-running show in Broadway history, opened at the Majestic Theater in New York.
1993 Former Czechoslovak President Vaclav Havel was elected president of the new Czech Republic.
1996 First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton testified before a grand jury connected to the Whitewater probe.
2001 An earthquake hit the Indian subcontinent, killing more than 13,000 people.
2005 Condoleezza Rice was sworn in as secretary of state.
2006 Confronted by Oprah Winfrey on her syndicated talk show, author James Frey acknowledged lies in his addiction memoir “A Million Little Pieces.”
2009 “Octomom” Nadya Suleman of Whittier, Calif., gave birth to octuplets conceived by in vitro fertilization. Suleman was already a mother of six.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Eddie Van Halen, Rock musician (Van Halen)

Rock musician Eddie Van Halen (Van Halen) turns 57 years old today.

AP Photo/Charles Sykes

Mark Dayton, Governor of Minnesota

Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton turns 65 years old today.

AP Photo/Jim Mone

1935 Bob Uecker, Sportscaster-actor, turns 77
1939 Scott Glenn, Actor, turns 73
1949 David Strathairn, Actor (“Good Night, and Good Luck”), turns 63
1950 Jack Youngblood, Football Hall of Famer, turns 62
1953 Lucinda Williams, Country singer, turns 59
1958 Ellen DeGeneres, Talk show host, comedian, turns 54
1961 Wayne Gretzky, Hockey Hall of Famer, turns 51
1963 Andrew Ridgeley, Rock musician (Wham!), turns 49
1977 Vince Carter, Basketball player, turns 35
1978 Sara Rue, Actress, turns 34
1989 Emily Hughes, Figure skater, turns 23


Historic Birthdays

Douglas MacArthur 1/26/1880 – 4/5/1964 American general.Go to obituary »
71 Jean-Baptiste Pigalle 1/26/1714 – 8/21/1785
French sculptor
56 Claude-Adrien Helvatius 1/26/1715 – 12/26/1771
French philosopher
81 Charles XIV John 1/26/1763 – 3/8/1844
French general and later king of Sweden and Norway
68 Benjamin Franklin Keith 1/26/1846 – 3/26/1914
American impresario
87 Samuel Hopkins Adams 1/26/1871 – 11/15/1958
American journalist and author
85 Julia Morgan 1/26/1872 – 2/2/1957
American architect
82 Frank Costello 1/26/1891 – 2/18/1973
American syndicate gangster
33 Bessie Coleman 1/26/1892 – 4/30/1926
American aviator
83 Sean MacBride 1/26/1904 – 1/15/1988
Irish statesman and winner of 1974 Nobel Peace Prize
77 Jimmy Van Heusen 1/26/1913 – 2/7/1990
American songwriter
71 Nicolae Ceausescu 1/26/1918 – 12/25/1989
Romanian dictator


 

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289/365/01

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The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

Jeffrey Eugenides’ third novel is another brilliant work of art that will undoubtedly find its place in the canon of great American literature right next to the likes of David Foster Wallace and Jonathan Franzen.  This is a story of coming of age– in every which way– from the physical to the intellectual, the emotional, and the spiritual.  It is a grand journey that is made via the characters of two young men and one young woman whose lives intersect throughout four years of college and across the landscape of suburban, small town, and big city America to the grand boulevards of Paris and other such places in Europe, and eventually even to the filthy streets of Calcutta and Varanasi.

It isn’t a new theme, really– we know that in order to arrive, one must first go away– but it is presented with such finesse that one might think Eugenides invented it!  And so that is what our trio does– they go away, each of them looking for love and the meaning of life.  But as we know again, it is never the destination but the journey itself that reveals the answers to those elusive concepts that actually do not come wrapped, labeled, and ready for the taking.  The greatest lesson in the pursuit of love and the meaning of life is perhaps the truth that what you see is not what you get– and what you get might be just what you need.

I truly savored this novel on so many levels:  the frequent references to Michigan– Detroit, in particular; the world travels that included my own motherland, India; and the deep and thoughtful spiritual journeys undertaken were illuminating through and through. 

The title, by the way, might be a bit misleading, because the plot one encounters in this novel is a much bigger one. 

Thanks to Eugenides, the genre of the novel is very much alive and kicking! 

The_marriage_plot-eugenides


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William Galston: SOTU 2012: An Analysis of President Obama's Speech

In his 2012 State of the Union Address, Barack Obama issued a ringing call for government to take the lead in rebuilding an economy that works for all Americans and to revive the promise of a more cooperative politics that carried him to the White House in 2008. While many of the specific measures he urged are likely to resonate with the public, it remains to be seen whether he can persuade the majority of Americans to set aside their long-festering mistrust of government and give him a mandate to pursue an aggressive policy agenda.

What about the specifics? In advance of President Obama’s State of the Union address, I laid out five things to listen for. Against that template, let’s look more closely at what he said.

#1: For better or worse, an incumbent president’s record is at the heart of his reelection prospects. He cannot run away from that record; he must run on it. So what is the narrative that links the crises of 2008-2009 and the disappointments of 2010-2011 to our hopes for a brighter future?

Toward the beginning of his speech, Obama offered his account of our recent economic history. Even before the recession, he said, jobs began going overseas while wages and incomes for most American were stagnating. And then the crisis hit, sparked by mortgages sold to people who couldn’t afford them and inadequately regulated financial institutions who made bad bets with other people’s money. He reminded the country that in the six months before he took office, the economy lost four million jobs, and another four million in the early months of his presidency. Since then, however, the private sector — led by manufacturing — has created millions of new jobs. And so, he concluded, “The state of our Union is getting stronger. And we’ve come too far to turn back now.” Rather than changing course, the task before us is to “build on this momentum.”

#2: The American people know that the U.S. economy has changed fundamentally and that the “success story” of the future will differ from those in the past. But what is that story?

In broad terms, Obama is betting on the continued revival of U.S. manufacturing, backed by targeted public investments in sectors such as clean energy and infrastructure. As he has before, he called for a major effort in the areas of education and training as well as support for basic research. While globalization is here to stay, he added, we cannot allow our competitors to victimize us with unfair trade practices, and he advocated a new Trade Enforcement Unit that will be charged with investigating “unfair trade practices in countries like China.” And to accelerate domestic job creation, he urged corporate tax reform that ends subsidies for outsourcing while reducing taxes for companies that remain, and hire, in America.

#3: The plight of hard-working Americans — those struggling to remain in the middle class and those struggling to get there — must be front and center. How did the president frame his appeal to this bedrock of our economy and society?

As he did in his Kansas speech last month, Obama invoked a country and economy where “everyone gets a fair shot, everyone does their fair share, and everyone plays by the same set of rules.” Symbolizing these principles, he called for tax reforms that follow the “Buffett rule” — namely, “If you make more than $1 million a year, you should not pay less than 30 percent in taxes.” At the same time, the president virtually dropped the theme of inequality, which had figured centrally in the Kansas speech. This was a wise shift: in America’s public culture, the principle of fair opportunity is more powerful than is equality of wealth and income.

#4: Public trust in our governing institutions is at or near all-time lows. To the extent that Obama’s agenda revolves around an activist government, how did he seek to persuade Americans that its policies can actually improve their lives?

While acknowledging public cynicism about government and calling for reforms of Congress and the executive branch, the president appeared to be hoping that the content of his economic agenda would trump doubts about the effectiveness of the public sector. He may well be underestimating the intensity of negative public sentiment and overestimating its willingness to accept what many will portray as a new burst of activism.

#5: Barack Obama is not just a candidate; he’s the president, and the people expect him to speak as the president. How did he balance his strategy of drawing the line with the Republicans against the imperative of conducting himself as the president of all the people?

For the most part, Obama addressed the country as president rather than party leader. While giving no ground on his key priorities, he spoke of differences between the parties more in sorrow than in anger and tried to identify some common ground, even on the core issue of the role of government. He called on everyone to “lower the temperature in this town” and to “end the notion that the two parties must be locked in a perpetual campaign of mutual destruction.” And he observed that “when we act together, there is nothing the United States of America can’t achieve.

Throughout his speech, Obama invoked the principles of fairness, collective action, and common purpose. Conspicuously absent was the theme on which the Republican Party rests its case — namely, individual liberty — a contrast that prefigures a 2012 general election waged over clashing partisan orientations as well as competing accounts of the president’s record.

Cross-posted from Brookings.edu. Read more from the Brookings Institution here.

Sotu

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Mariska Hargitay: Personal Fouls

In September 2011, less than two months before the dismaying news started emerging from State College, Pennsylvania, NBC aired an episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit that tackled the rarely discussed topic of sexual abuse of boys and men. “Personal Fouls” told the story of a long-time, respected coach sexually abusing the boys on his teams over many years. Then came Penn State. Then came Syracuse. Then Poly Prep in Brooklyn. The stories of predators and prey, of complicity and cover-ups, of shame and fear and pain and isolation, are harrowing. Unfortunately, they won’t be the last. We cannot change what happened, but we can change how willing we are to talk about it. And before our attention turns elsewhere, we can seize this moment to shed some light into the darkness that surrounds this issue.

An estimated one in six men, or nearly 19 million adult males in the United States, have had an unwanted or abusive sexual experience in childhood. The median age for reported sexual abuse, male and female, is 9 years old. Male survivors are even more likely than women to bear the burden of their trauma alone, as they are less likely to disclose their abuse. And perhaps most startlingly, men are far less likely to know they have been abused. In a study of men and women with documented histories of sexual abuse — abuse so serious it warranted the intervention of a social service agency — 64 percent of the women considered themselves to have been sexually abused. Only 16 percent of the men did.

The FBI recently took a significant step to break through the secrecy that surrounds male survivors of sexual abuse and violence by changing how the Uniform Crime Report defines rape. For the first time in its 80-year existence, the definition of rape will include male victims, allowing our national statistics on sexual violence to reflect more accurately what is happening in our communities.

We as a society must build on this achievement and take further steps to acknowledge that sexual violence affects men and boys. We must commit ourselves to engaging men in the movement to address, prevent and, one day, end all sexual violence. Two organizations are already leading the way in this effort: 1in6 is a national organization that helps men who have had unwanted or abusive sexual experiences in childhood live healthier, happier lives; and A CALL TO MEN is galvanizing a national movement of men committed to ending violence and discrimination against women and girls. Each in their own way, these organizations use information, support and compassion to dispel the isolation that male survivors experience. They promote healthy relationships, and they boldly redefine “manhood.”

At Joyful Heart, the foundation I started in 2004 to help survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse heal and reclaim their lives, we are proud to share in the vision of one day ending violence against all people. We hope to send this message to all survivors: We hear you. We believe you. We feel for you. You are not alone. And your healing is our priority.

I invite you to watch the re-airing of “Personal Fouls” tonight on NBC, guest starring the NBA’s Carmelo Anthony and Chris Bosh. I hope it will inspire you to think and talk about the issue of sexual abuse of boys and men. And I hope it will inspire you to take action — on behalf of your child, your spouse, your friend, your co-worker, yourself — and join me in the effort to engage men in the movement to end sexual abuse and violence. To learn more about this important issue, please visit men.joyfulheartfoundation.org.

Mariska Hargitay is the Emmy Award-winning star of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit on NBC and the founder of the Joyful Heart Foundation. Joyful Heart’s mission is to heal, educate and empower survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse and to shed light into the darkness that surrounds these issues.

Mariska

 

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Wheat Dalia Savory Pongal With Peanuts: Who Says You Need Rice?

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Think You're All That? Why Being Narcissistic May Put Your Heart at Risk

Kathrin Ziegler / Getty Images

Kathrin Ziegler / Getty Images

Everybody knows somebody like this: the self-obsessed, self-congratulatory type with an outsize sense of entitlement and a deluded sense of superiority. He turns every conversation back to himself, prattling on about his own opinions and thoughts, but never deigns to ask about you.

That narcissistic personality can take a toll — and not just on the listeners. It turns out that the more narcissistic a person is, the more likely he (and, yes, it’s especially true of men) is to have health problems like heart disease and hypertension.

Sara Konrath, a psychologist at University of Michigan, studied 106 male and female undergraduate students, measuring their levels of narcissism and the stress hormone cortisol. Previous studies have found that people who score high on the narcissism scale show elevated levels of cortisol when threatened. So Konrath and her colleagues wanted to plumb the cortisol connection more deeply, to see if narcissists have higher levels of the stress hormone overall.

MORE: Narcissists Know They’re Obnoxious, But Love Themselves All the Same

Indeed, that’s what they found. The researchers measured cortisol levels in the students’ saliva and then gave them a 40-item questionnaire to assess their narcissistic tendencies. The test assessed variously adaptive forms of narcissism: some narcissistic qualities can be useful, leading to stronger leadership and authority skills as well as self-confidence, while others are less so because they are more focused on exploitation and entitlement.

Interestingly, Konrath and her team found that people who scored higher on the exploitative aspects of narcissism showed higher levels of cortisol, while those who scored higher on the more positive aspects of narcissism did not. And the trend was more pronounced in men than in women, probably due to the fact that more men tend to be narcissistic.

The consequences of chronically high cortisol levels have been well documented in previous studies. Cortisol, which tends to rise when people feel threatened or anxious, activates the body’s stress response, elevating the heart rate, sharpening the senses and burning a lot of energy to keep the body on alert. Activating this system when it’s needed — if you’re being chased by a saber-toothed cat, for example — is critical for survival. But a constant flow of cortisol can take a toll on the body, stressing the heart and the blood vessels and setting the stage for heart disease.

People who are narcissistic tend to be defensive, becoming aggressive when their superiority is threatened, says Konrath, and that style of coping can elevate cortisol and make the heart more vulnerable to disease.

Biologically, she says, narcissists with negative personality traits looked very similar to people with anxiety disorders. But they differed in one respect that may make them even more susceptible to cortisol’s damaging health effects. “When people have anxiety disorders, they recognize [it] and talk about feeling anxious and under stress,” she says. “For people who are narcissistic, this seems to be happening at a physiological level but for some reason the people aren’t feeling stress, which makes it potentially more toxic because they don’t seek help.”

MORE: Is TV Teaching Kids to Value Fame Above All?

The higher cortisol levels found among the higher-scoring narcissists suggest that they perceived even the task of filling out a questionnaire in the lab to be a potentially threatening situation, and one in which they needed to be on their guard in order to appear superior or in control, compared with the other participants.

Maintaining the narcissistic personality, in other words, is similar to keeping the body under stress, and Konrath says that’s particularly worrisome given the rising rates of narcissism in the U.S. “It makes me wonder what the long term health implications of this will be,” she says.

The findings also suggest that both primary care physicians and mental health professionals need to be more aware of the connection between mind and body, and appreciate that personality can influence our health in potentially serious ways. “People who work with mental health populations should realize that if people show signs of narcissism, then that personality is probably taking a toll on their body,” she says, and those individuals might benefit from some simple stress-relieving therapies.

MORE: Why Are College Students Reporting Record-High Levels of Stress?

Narcissism