Archive | May 4, 2009

We Shall Remain: Geronimo

4 May

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Don’t forget to tune into PBS tonight for Episode 4 of We Shall Remain:

In February of 1909, the indomitable Chiricahua Apache medicine man Geronimo lay on his deathbed. He summoned his nephew to his side, whispering, “I should never have surrendered. I should have fought until I was the last man alive.” It was an admission of regret from a man whose insistent pursuit of military resistance in the face of overwhelming odds confounded not only his Mexican and American enemies, but many of his fellow Apaches as well.

Congrats

4 May

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BACKPACKER won three National Magazine Awards last week: General Excellence Online, Personal Service Online for their Maps Project, and Best Essay for Tracy Ross’s “The Source of All Things.”  BACKPACKER tied with Wired, The New Yorker, and Esquire for most wins.

Read more at the Daily Dirt Blog

Pete Seeger

4 May

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New Yorker, April 17th, 2006: Here is a story told to me lately by a man named John Cronin, who is the director of the Pace Academy for the Environment, at Pace University. Cronin has known Seeger for thirty years. “About two winters ago, on Route 9 outside Beacon, one winter day, it was freezing—rainy and slushy, a miserable winter day—the war in Iraq is just heating up and the country’s in a poor mood,” Cronin said. “I’m driving north, and on the other side of the road I see from the back a tall, slim figure in a hood and coat. I’m looking, and I can tell it’s Pete, He’s standing there all by himself, and he’s holding up a big piece of cardboard that clearly has something written on it. Cars and trucks are going by him. He’s getting wet. He’s holding the homemade sign above his head—he’s very tall, and his chin is raised the way he does when he sings—and he’s turning the sign in a semicircle, so that the drivers can see it as they pass, and some people are honking and waving at him, and some people are giving him the finger. He’s eighty-four years old. I know he’s got some purpose, of course, but I don’t know what it is. What struck me is that, whatever his intentions are, and obviously he wants people to notice what he’s doing, he wants to make an impression—anyway, whatever they are, he doesn’t call the newspapers and say, ‘I’m Pete Seeger, here’s what I’m going to do.’ He doesn’t cultivate publicity. That isn’t what he does. He’s far more modest than that. He would never make a fuss. He’s just standing out there in the cold and the sleet like a scarecrow. I go a little bit down the road, so that I can turn and come back, and when I get him in view again, this solitary and elderly figure, I see that what he’s written on the sign is ‘Peace.’”

Cold Splinters: The River Is Wide

MP3: Pete Seeger – The Flowers Of Peace

Justice Souter in New Hampshire

4 May

What a cool judge.

NYT:

Justice Souter was born in Massachusetts but moved to New Hampshire when he was 11, settling into his grandparents’ farmhouse on Cilley Hill Road. After going to college and law school at Harvard, he returned to New Hampshire to practice law and quickly became the state’s attorney general, scaling the White Mountains in his down time.

“A lot of people would live up here and hate it,” said Wilbur A. Glahn, a lawyer who has known Justice Souter since 1975 and still hikes with him in the summer. “But David has got a real love for the people and the land and the simple things here. I’m not sure I know a lot of people who are more connected to a place than he is. It’s a very strong, kind of visceral feeling that he has.”