Sunday, June 29, 2008

Protests in Thailand - Did You Even Know This Was Happening?

A Thai teacher friend sent an email answering someone's questions about the protests going on in Thailand against the current government.

Thanks so much for concerning on Thai Politics, it has been our big problem for 8 yrs. Do you know Thai former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra ? He is very clever, but his cleverness is dangerous for Thailand and Thai people . During 5 yrs of his government, many projects were corrupted. Some policies damaged Thai people , economic development and Thailand etc. He could do everything for his power, earning much more money without getting worried or caring about the bad effect . The anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) has been protested since 2006. Finally , his party was punished by the the court in 2007 to be canceled. He gave a lot of money to covetous officers and someone who are greedy . This present government is his nominee. Mr Samak Sundaravej , the priminister announced by himself before the election . We can't let his system be longer anymore . The more this government adminsteres, the more bad effect damages our country . This government works only 4 months, but he tried to revise the Constitution of Thailand made in 2007. Just only want to help his Boss ( Mr. Thaksin Shinawatra and his staff ) . He doesn't mind or concerns on the other problem based on Thai people life and tried to do some projects mainly benefit to himself and his staff .
I'd like to attach you some events confirmed my telling .
( I'm quite Sorry that my English is not good enough to tell you completely. )
Stay Well,


Thai Pundit blogged the June 20th protests live.


My teacher friend also added this, though I'm not sure where it's from:

By Thinida Tansubhapol
The embattled Foreign Affairs Ministry may seek to appeal against an injunction granted by the Administrative Court against its support for Cambodia's proposal to list Preah Vihear temple as a World Heritage site.

The court decision came after the anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) asked it last week to rule on the matter, alleging that the support for Cambodia's bid is in return for business concessions in the neighbouring country for former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra who was ousted in a 2006 coup. Mr Thaksin and both the Thai and Cambodian governments deny the claims.

The court order could affect a joint declaration Foreign Minister Noppadon Pattama signed with Cambodia. In the joint communique, Thailand expressed ''active support'' for Cambodia's plan to unilaterally list the the 900-year-old Khmer ruins at a Unesco meeting in Quebec which begins on Wednesday. Yet it remains unclear how the order will affect the heritage push by Vientiane.

Mr Noppadon, who is to head a Thai delegation to the Quebec meeting, called an urgent meeting with officials at the Foreign Ministry yesterday to discuss the ministry's response after the court issued the injunction.

However, the minister cancelled a press conference and refused to answer reporters' questions in a show of respect for the court decision.

Permanent secretary for Foreign Affairs Virasakdi Futrakul said Mr Noppadon would ask for a cabinet decision on Tuesday to see if it would appeal against the court order.

Mr Virasakdi said a change could be made to the delegation's composition, apparently a reference to Mr Noppadon as delegation head.

The opposition and other government critics yesterday hailed the Administrative Court's injunction.

Opposition and Democrat leader Abhisit Vejjajiva said he would lodge a petition tomorrow with 21 country members of the World Heritage Site Committee.

He said the petition is aimed at stopping Cambodia's bid to unilaterally list the Preah Vihear temple and averting any possible damage to Thailand.

He said removal of the foreign minister from office is not now a priority.

Mr Abhisit yesterday lodged a petition objecting to the minister's signing of the joint declaration, which had bypassed parliament.

The petition was submitted to the Constitution Court via the parliament president. The petition was also signed by Democrat MPs and some senators.

Pikulkaew Krairiksh, chairwoman of the Senate committee on foreign affairs, said the injunction must be presented to Unesco.

She said the court order was a blessing for the government as it was likely to deter people who had considered joining the PAD-led anti-government campaign.

Chart Thai's Somsak Prisanananthakul agreed that the court order would ease political tension, saying the Foreign Ministry should use this opportunity to clarify the matter with the public.

Academic Preecha Suwannathat called on the government to resign as a show of responsibility.

Mr Preecha, former dean of Thammasat University's law faculty, said the government must review or cancel the joint declaration which it signed with Phnom Penh, or it would be violating the constitution and breaching the Criminal Code.

Historian Nidhi Eowseewong urged the government to forward the court injunction to Unesco.

He also called on Mr Noppadon to step down and warned that Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej will face pressure if he allows Mr Noppadon to stay on.

He said he believed Cambodia's unilateral bid to list Preah Vihear temple would be rejected.

''It is not easy. Normally, surrounding areas should also be listed.

''I think they will not approve it,'' he said.

He suggested Thailand should seek the listing of Prasat Phanom Rung and Prasat Hin Phimai historical parks as World Heritage sites along with Preah Vihear temple if possible.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Before I Forget - Avant que j'oublie

I walked out of the theater in something of a daze. If Eleven Minutes played at 78 rpm, then Whirlwind was 45, and Before I Forget was 33. Things moved very slowly. The director (and lead actor) Jacques Nolot probed deeply into one man's life. A man, who at 60, faces the uncertainty of old age as the inheritance he expected slips away and his body is no longer young, beautiful, or healthy.

I was a little squirmy during the movie, it really was moving at a speed unknown in American films. Not for those with attention deficit disorder. But it was powerful and unrelenting. This was not light entertainment, this was a harsh contemplation of the meaning of life for this one individual and those of us watching.

Elliott Stein
at the Village Voice writes:

Why is it that nearly all the best recent gay-themed movies are French, while most American gay flicks these days turn out to be empty wastes of time?


Of the three features we saw this week at Out North, this was the only one that took a central human question and dealt with it with enough universal depth that it will have meaning in 10 or 50 years. Eleven Minutes dealt with a relatively trivial question in a technically snappy and entertaining picture. Whirlwind took on issues that were closer to Before I Forget's issues, but was a high school level essay compared to Forget's polished, professorial treatment of the subject. It was complex, deep, subtle, an ambiguous in its examination of a life.

Warning: This was one of those movies where my tastes probably differ greatly from most people's. It's slow, has subtitles, digs deep, and has no answers.


And again, Anchorage gets to see the newest of the new. It plays tomorrow afternoon in New York. For more specifics on what the movie is about, you can go read Drier than dry, 26 October 2007 7/10 by Chris Knipp from Berkeley, California on IMDB.

Thanks Rob. This goes so much faster without video to edit.


Avant que j'oublie - Bande-annonce 1 - Français - kewego
Avant que j'oublie - Bande-annonce 1 - Français - kewego

Oil Companies S(p)end Their Messages Through ADN





The AGIA plan had its mini
state tour with stops in Anchorage, Juneau, Barrow, Fairbanks, Kenai, Matsu, and Ketchikan. Since it doubled as a legislative information session as well and legislators traveled around the state to be present, the costs of presenting the state's findings to the people of Alaska were pretty high. Wesley Loy wrote in the Anchorage Daily News


Nobody has an overall cost estimate for the trip.
Legislators and legislative support staffers say they won't know the full tally until after all the travelers file for payment of their expenses.

The most expensive destination is Barrow, a predominantly Inupiat village of more than 4,000 people about 725 miles north of Anchorage.

As of Tuesday, 37 lawmakers had signed up to go to Barrow for a hearing on July 1. At about $800 for a round-trip ticket, airfare alone for the group will total some $30,000.

[Double click any picture to enlarge it.]





And now the various oil companies and oil support groups are paying to give their side of the story. But while the State provided days and days of information all backed up on the internet, the advertising campaign by the oil companies - at least what is covered in the ADN ads - is long on pictures and feel good text and short on information.
















Only one of the ads offered a website address - www.allalaskapipeline.com was on the Alaska Gasline LNG ads. But if you link to it, you'll see it is just a bunch of oil industry related links. Even the link to gasline map has no map.
So, the most popular links on the AllAlaskaPipeline.com site are for computer notebooks, music downloads, and online dating? This is a serious attempt to educate the public on the gasline issues I see.




























All of you who have heard of Udelhoven raise your hands.











Here's how I figured the costs from the ADN's NAA quick fact sheet.

2 The information and statistics contained in this document are intended to provide a general overview of our products, their market and their readers. These rates only represent an overview of rates and ad units this newspaper accepts. Please contact a sales representative (or refer to the Media Kit) for a complete listing of all category rates, ad units and other specifications. While the data is correct overall, a salesrepresentative should be contacted for further details and/or clarification.


As footnote 2 suggests, there are lots of contingencies for determining the cost of ADN ads. The ones I could calculate directly were: weekday v. Sunday; color or black and white; and size. Well, there are prices for full page ads, but less than full page ads I had to approximate with square inch comparisons. Other contingenices that I had no way to figure were related to discounts for multiple ads. There are other pages with tables and numbers that I can't figure out at all. I'm sure if you're in advertising you've learned the code, but there is not enough information on the web to make sense out of it. And footnote 2 seems to acknowledge that the numbers in the chart are just general numbers.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Whirlwind - the Movie

I liked this movie. It was an entertaining 99 minutes. It took me into a different world that turned out not that different at all. And all of the characters were likable, even the villain, though they all had their issues. It's not a great movie and I'm going to explain why I think that, but I did want to say it is well worth seeing.

This was another feature in the Anchorage Pride Fest Film Festival at Out North. (The link shows the current scheduled events, so if you look at this after June 28, you probably won't get anything about the film festival.) No one's competing for awards, but rather it's a chance for people in Anchorage to see films that wouldn't normally be shown here, or we wouldn't see until years from now. This film, for example, was first shown in New York and L.A. this month.

I enjoyed watching Whirlwind. It's not a great film. It's not even a good film, as films go. OK, I'm picky. With a good film, I get so caught up in the film that I forget I'm watching a movie. The actors ARE the characters. The music helps tell the story, but it never calls attention to itself. The same with the camera work. It moves the story along, but not in ways that pull you out of the story to think, "Wow wasn't that a cool shot?"

But, I enjoyed this one. I like the look of not as polished independent films. You don't need $100 million to tell a good story. If we rate movies on a scale of product per dollar spent making it, this would be much better than most Hollywood movies.

The acting was good most of the time, but there were a few times when I felt the actor and the character separated. words were being recited rather than spoken naturally.

That the story follows a formula, by itself, isn't a problem. But it shouldn't be quite so close to the surface. And the explanation for Drake's behavior, and his one-night stand counterpart in the group (he's the one character whose name escapes me - Desmond is in my mind, but I'd remember that if it were really Desmond), were the opposite of subtle.

Here we have a group that appears to be working well. Then something comes in to disturb and test them. They face the challenge and overcome it. It made me think of the tv show Friends. And The Big Chill. There the friends had scattered and it's the death of one of the group that brings them back together and tests them. Whirlwind's group is five gay men and a couple of women who sometimes hang out with them. They're planning a 25th Anniversary party for a gay couple they know, when sexy Drake slips into their circle and attempts to destroy it by exploiting each of their weaknesses. (I'm not giving anything away that wasn't on the blurb in the brochure, and that you can't figure out pretty quickly.)

I knew exactly where things were going. But it was ok. I wanted to see how it got there. I cared about the characters. I think that was the strength of the movie. They were all real people with a real mix of strengths and weaknesses trying to be happy. We can all identify. Not every movie has to end badly. It's just when that happy ending is totally improbable that there's a problem. Here there is no reason why these folks shouldn't get back together and shouldn't be stronger for the challenge.

This is NOT a gay movie. It's a movie about human beings who just happen to be gay. One could change the script slightly and film it over again with completely straight characters.





I had my Canon Powershot with me at the movie, but after emailing back and forth with Rob Tate, one of the directors of Eleven Minutes [see added comments under the YouTube trailer that replaces the video I posted], I've decided to try out just sticking with the trailers I can find online rather than using my own video. I think the video is useful in conveying the feel of the movie. While I understand Rob's concern that the quality of the video I post is terrible and doesn't reflect what he worked so hard to create, I think mine gives the feel of being in the theater watching the movie and the readers here understand that. And as I look at the trailer for Whirlwind (and this is no different from other movies) it also distorts the movie in a different way.

I don't know how television movie reviewers select the video they show in their reviews, or if they just take what is given to them. But it seems to me that if you are going to review a movie, you should be picking out the shots you want to talk about. Of course, if you have a whole movie to choose from, it could take a while to pick exactly the right shots. Fortunately, my memory disk doesn't hold too much video so I have to make do with the shots I get by trying to anticipate what might be good. An iffy proposition at best. Anyway, I don't know that my clips are more of a distortion than the trailer. Each just distorts the film in different ways.

The Film Panel Note Taker has an interview with Director Richard LeMay & Screenwriter Jason Brown. The Rob Tate link above goes to a brief YouTube video of the two directors and Jay McCarroll.

[Update: In my review of Before I Forget (Avant Que Joublie), a couple days after seeing Whirlwind, I was able to explain why my review of Whirlwind was just lukewarm. "Before I Forgot" was a much more penetrating look at the human condition.]

Church of Cod



A friend shot this while on a short business trip to Seldovia.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Etaoin Shrdlu - Thai Keyboard Update

Etaoin Shrdlu is:

A place for McClatchy editors and others to talk about the changing news media landscape.
I stumbled onto this blog while I was posting about McClatchy and the Anchorage Daily News. I knew the title had to have some meaning, but I couldn't figure out the code. Fortunately, they have a link to Wikipedia explaining the letters:
Etaoin Shrdlu is the approximate order of frequency of the twelve most commonly used letters in the English language
Back in Thailand I did a post about finding stick on letters so I could have a Thai letters on my keyboard without getting a new keyboard. Well, time has not been kind to my Thai key labels. But we can use the keyboard to test Etaoin Shrdlu



Pretty close.

Someone told me I could get stick on letters with a plastic coating. I guess that's what I'll have to do next time

EXXON SHIPPING CO. ET AL. v. BAKER ET AL. Syllabus

Below is the Syllabus of the Supreme Court Decision on the Exxon-Valdez Case. I have not read it as carefully as I'd like yet. But I have changed the format slightly. I've enlarged and bolded the numbers of the sections and bolded some of the lines that seemed to be the essence. But that's just my take. I'm still trying to figure out how everyone voted. I'll have to look at the whole thing to figure that out. The link should take you to the PDF file with the whole decision.

I should probably read the whole thing before I start commenting. Their formula for determining the punitive as no more than the compensatory seems a little arbitrary. For me, punitive should mean that it would discourage the company involved and other companies from doing damage. Which means that the award should spur them on to be careful and to take proactive steps to make sure that they aren't going to have an accident. Not simply that they shouldn't do it intentionally. Therefore, punitive damages shouldn't be connected to the compensatory damages as much as it should be connected to an amount high enough to get the company's (and those companies watching) attention. It should be high enough to hurt, but not to put the company out of business. Given Exxon's profits, $500,000,000 is a relief, not a deterrent.

But the Supreme Court needs to make its decisions based on the law, so I have to see what it is that led to that particular formula.




Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
EXXON SHIPPING CO. ET AL. v. BAKER ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE NINTH CIRCUIT
No. 07–219. Argued February 27, 2008—Decided June 25, 2008

In 1989, petitioners’ (collectively, Exxon) supertanker grounded on a
reef off Alaska, spilling millions of gallons of crude oil into Prince
William Sound. The accident occurred after the tanker’s captain, Jo-
seph Hazelwood—who had a history of alcohol abuse and whose blood
still had a high alcohol level 11 hours after the spill—inexplicably ex-
ited the bridge, leaving a tricky course correction to unlicensed sub-
ordinates. Exxon spent some $2.1 billion in cleanup efforts, pleaded
guilty to criminal violations occasioning fines, settled a civil action by
the United States and Alaska for at least $900 million, and paid an-
other $303 million in voluntary payments to private parties. Other
civil cases were consolidated into this one, brought against Exxon,
Hazelwood, and others to recover economic losses suffered by respon-
dents (hereinafter Baker), who depend on Prince William Sound for
their livelihoods. At Phase I of the trial, the jury found Exxon and
Hazelwood reckless (and thus potentially liable for punitive damages)
under instructions providing that a corporation is responsible for the
reckless acts of employees acting in a managerial capacity in the
scope of their employment. In Phase II, the jury awarded $287 mil-
lion in compensatory damages to some of the plaintiffs; others had
settled their compensatory claims for $22.6 million. In Phase III, the
jury awarded $5,000 in punitive damages against Hazelwood and $5
billion against Exxon. The Ninth Circuit upheld the Phase I jury in-
struction on corporate liability and ultimately remitted the punitive
damages award against Exxon to $2.5 billion.


Held:
1. Because the Court is equally divided on whether maritime law
allows corporate liability for punitive damages based on the acts of
managerial agents, it leaves the Ninth Circuit’s opinion undisturbed
in this respect. Of course, this disposition is not precedential on the
derivative liability question. See, e.g., Neil v. Biggers, 409 U. S. 188,
192. Pp. 7–10.
2. The Clean Water Act’s water pollution penalties, 33 U. S. C.
§1321, do not preempt punitive-damages awards in maritime spill
cases. Section 1321(b) protects “navigable waters . . . , adjoining
shorelines, . . . [and] natural resources,” subject to a saving clause re-
serving “obligations . . . under any . . . law for damages to any . . . pri-
vately owned property resulting from [an oil] discharge,” §1321(o).
Exxon’s admission that the CWA does not displace compensatory
remedies for the consequences of water pollution, even those for eco-
nomic harms, leaves the company with the untenable claim that the
CWA somehow preempts punitive damages, but not compensatory
damages, for economic loss. Nothing in the statute points to that re-
sult, and the Court has rejected similar attempts to sever remedies
from their causes of action, see Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 464
U. S. 238, 255–256. There is no clear indication of congressional in-
tent to occupy the entire field of pollution remedies, nor is it likely
that punitive damages for private harms will have any frustrating ef-
fect on the CWA’s remedial scheme. Pp. 10–15.
3. The punitive damages award against Exxon was excessive as a
matter of maritime common law. In the circumstances of this case,
the award should be limited to an amount equal to compensatory
damages. Pp. 15–42.
(a) Although legal codes from ancient times through the Middle
Ages called for multiple damages for certain especially harmful acts,
modern Anglo-American punitive damages have their roots in 18th-
century English law and became widely accepted in American courts
by the mid-19th century. See, e.g., Day v. Woodworth, 13 How. 363,
371. Pp. 16–17.
(b) The prevailing American rule limits punitive damages to
cases of “enormity,” Day v. Woodworth, 13 How. 363, 371, in which a
defendant’s conduct is outrageous, owing to gross negligence, willful,
wanton, and reckless indifference for others’ rights, or even more de-
plorable behavior. The consensus today is that punitive damages are
aimed at retribution and deterring harmful conduct. Pp. 17–21.
(c) State regulation of punitive damages varies. A few States
award them rarely, or not at all, and others permit them only when
authorized by statute. Many States have imposed statutory limits on
punitive awards, in the form of absolute monetary caps, a maximum
ratio of punitive to compensatory damages, or, frequently, some com-
bination of the two. Pp. 21–23.
(d) American punitive damages have come under criticism in re-
cent decades, but the most recent studies tend to undercut much of it.
authorized by statute. Many States have imposed statutory limits

Although some studies show the dollar amounts of awards growing
over time, even in real terms, most accounts show that the median
ratio of punitive to compensatory awards remains less than 1:1. Nor
do the data show a marked increase in the percentage of cases with
punitive awards. The real problem is the stark unpredictability of
punitive awards. Courts are concerned with fairness as consistency,
and the available data suggest that the spread between high and low
individual awards is unacceptable. The spread in state civil trials is
great, and the outlier cases subject defendants to punitive damages
that dwarf the corresponding compensatories. The distribution of
judge-assessed awards is narrower, but still remarkable. These
ranges might be acceptable if they resulted from efforts to reach a
generally accepted optimal level of penalty and deterrence in cases
involving a wide range of circumstances, but anecdotal evidence sug-
gests that is not the case, see, e.g., Gore, supra, at 565, n. 8. Pp. 24–
27.
(e) This Court’s response to outlier punitive damages awards has
thus far been confined by claims that state-court awards violated due
process. See, e.g., State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
538 U. S. 408, 425. In contrast, today’s enquiry arises under federal
maritime jurisdiction and requires review of a jury award at the level
of judge-made federal common law that precedes and should obviate
any application of the constitutional standard. In this context, the
unpredictability of high punitive awards is in tension with their pu-
nitive function because of the implication of unfairness that an eccen-
trically high punitive verdict carries. A penalty should be reasonably
predictable in its severity, so that even Holmes’s “bad man” can look
ahead with some ability to know what the stakes are in choosing one
course of action or another. And a penalty scheme ought to threaten
defendants with a fair probability of suffering in like degree for like
damage. Cf. Koon v. United States, 518 U. S. 81, 113. Pp. 28–29.
(f) The Court considers three approaches, one verbal and two
quantitative, to arrive at a standard for assessing maritime punitive
damages. Pp. 29–42.
(i) The Court is skeptical that verbal formulations are the best
insurance against unpredictable outlier punitive awards, in light of
its experience with attempts to produce consistency in the analogous
business of criminal sentencing. Pp. 29–32.
(ii) Thus, the Court looks to quantified limits. The option of
setting a hard-dollar punitive cap, however, is rejected because there
is no “standard” tort or contract injury, making it difficult to settle
upon a particular dollar figure as appropriate across the board; and
because a judicially selected dollar cap would carry the serious draw-
back that the issue might not return to the docket before there was a
business of criminal sentencing. Pp. 29–32.
need to revisit the figure selected. Pp. 32–39.
(iii) The more promising alternative is to peg punitive awards
to compensatory damages using a ratio or maximum multiple. This
is the model in many States and in analogous federal statutes allow-
ing multiple damages. The question is what ratio is most appropri-
ate. An acceptable standard can be found in the studies showing the
median ratio of punitive to compensatory awards. Those studies re-
flect the judgments of juries and judges in thousands of cases as to
what punitive awards were appropriate in circumstances reflecting
the most down to the least blameworthy conduct, from malice and
avarice to recklessness to gross negligence. The data in question put
the median ratio for the entire gamut at less than 1:1, meaning that
the compensatory award exceeds the punitive award in most cases.
In a well-functioning system, awards at or below the median would
roughly express jurors’ sense of reasonable penalties in cases like this
one that have no earmarks of exceptional blameworthiness. Accord-
ingly, the Court finds that a 1:1 ratio is a fair upper limit in such
maritime cases. Pp. 39–42.
(iv) Applying this standard to the present case, the Court takes
for granted the District Court’s calculation of the total relevant com-
pensatory damages at $507.5 million. A punitive-to-compensatory
ratio of 1:1 thus yields maximum punitive damages in that amount.
P. 42.
472 F. 3d 600 and 490 F. 3d 1066, vacated and remanded.



SOUTER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS,
C. J., and SCALIA, KENNEDY, and THOMAS, JJ., joined, and in which STE-
VENS, GINSBURG, and BREYER, JJ., joined, as to Parts I, II, and III.
SCALIA, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which THOMAS, J., joined. STE-
VENS, J., GINSBURG, J., and BREYER, J., filed opinions concurring in part
and dissenting in part. ALITO, J., took no part in the consideration or
decision of the case.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Press Reports: Obama Coming to Alaska

The Anchorage Press reports online:

Tuesday night, in a conference room in the Loussac library, Barack Obama State Director Kat Pustay told about 50 Alaskans that Obama would be coming to campaign here sometime before November.

Once he does, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee will be the first major party nominee to campaign here since Richard Nixon did in 1960.

Pam of Grassroots Science Visits Anchorage

An example of blogging networks at work. Pam from Grassroots Science is in town. She emailed me before coming and I invited her to lunch yesterday. She had a beautiful day, probably the nicest we've had all summer and we were able to eat on the deck.

And she told me about things she's working on/interested in. She lives in Bethel, is a Biological Anthropologist by degree, and she tries to make science understandable so people can benefit from it.



It was clear there were people in Anchorage she should know, so we went over to ISER (Institute for Social and Economic Research), the Institute for Circumpolar Health Studies, and to ANSEP (Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program).

The ANSEP program is run by Professor Herb Schroeder and has been phenomenally successful in doing what few higher education programs have been able to do - recruit, retain, and graduate Alaska Native students. In Engineering this is even more unusual. Herb has done this by recruiting at high schools around the state, working with the high schools to make sure students get the curriculum they need to do the work, having summer prep programs, dorm space for the students participating so they can lessen the shock of moving from village Alaska to Anchorage and so they can eat some of their traditional food together.

The program got a cover story in the December 2007 issue of PE (The Magazine for Professional Engineers.) Herb said it was the engineering equivalent of being on the cover of Rolling Stone. (The PE song hasn't come out yet.)



We also stopped at the UAA Bookstore where she (and I) picked up a copy of Traditional Food Guide. And I went upstairs to the Apple store and finally got Leopard. But I've been too busy to install it.




The book is really quite amazing, combining Western knowledge about nutrition with Traditional knowledge about the various animals and plants that Alaska Native peoples have eaten for centuries. Here are some examples. Books can be purchased through ANTHC.




So now I know what to do with all the cow parsnips we have around here.





I've picked out some of the more exotic foods for non-Native people.





























She was staying with a friend whose RV is parked downtown at the Ship Creek Landings RV Park, a place I never knew existed. It's at the end of Ingra on First Avenue. It was surprisingly well surrounded by trees to hide it from its industrial surroundings. But it is basically a parking lot.

My way of thinking about transportation has made a serious shift since we got back from Thailand and I found myself hesitating before offering to drive her around. I thought about us taking bikes to do our errands, but eventually I was going to have to get her downtown and come back alone.

Anchorage 2008 Pride Fest Film Festival - Eleven Minutes

There were about eight other people for Eleven Minutes, the feature documentary about Project Runway winner Jay McCarroll's first fashion show. There wasn't time to get bored as the film rushed through the year of preparation for the 11 minute show.



[June 27: I got an email from Rob Tate, one of the directors of Eleven Minutes in which he said that he didn't have the rights to post anything on the Video and directing me to take down the clips I had up. Since I've been in murky waters on this I took it down immediately. He redirected me to a YouTube trailer of this movie. I must say his email was very polite and decent. This does raise some issues of free speech. Book reviewers regularly put short passages of the book into their reviews. TV reviewers also put clips of the movies they review. Without the clips it is difficult to give the reader a sense of the movie. Some film makers from the Anchorage International Film Festival have linked to my comments (and short video clips) on their own websites. So some people do appreciate the coverage and overlook the video issue. I've assumed all along that what I did was pretty low on the priorities of the big film companies and for small film makers it would generally bring more attention to their films. But I will think about what Rob has emailed carefully as we try to work out how technology affects things.]
So why were so few people there? Some guesses.

  1. It was too nice a day to go to the movies.
    We stayed for the second show - a series of shorts, some of which I didn't need to see and others (like "Tryout" the Israeli film about a father who has his kid for the weekend and his lover wants to meet the kid; or "Fabulousity", about parents who are about to have a special baby and the advice they get) were outstanding. Since we were the only ones who did stay, we offered to go home and let the projectionist go home early, but he said no. So we had the whole place to ourselves. By the time we got out from it was starting to rain for our bike ride home.
  2. It was a Tuesday night.
    You get the theater to yourself.
  3. So much else to do.
    So you won't get it all done anyway. Go see some mind stretching movies instead.
  4. Tired.
    It's dark. You can sleep there.
  5. Don't want to see gay movies.
    Well, none of these were 'gay' movies. They were movies that had a gay theme - some only barely. Gay marriage is a big issue these days still. Here's a chance for people on all sides of the issue to get to know what gay folks are saying, what their lives are like. There was nothing icky in any of these films - well there were some same sex kisses for the very squeamish.
  6. Someone might think I'm gay if I go to these movies.
    Come on now. This is 2008. There are gay people who go to these films. But so do lots of straight folks. If this is a worry for you, then you really need to go. Get out of your comfort zone, live dangerously. And so what if they do? Keep 'em guessing.
  7. It's too expensive.
    Online it is $6.50 a show, it's $7 at the door. Less than a regular movie discount price.


5pm Wednesday - Out Late - about gays coming out in their 50's, 60's, and 70s.

7pm Wednesday - Ask Not - Asks why the military lowers its standards to meet recruiting goals and takes in convicted felons, but not gays.

9pm Wednesday - Women Shorts - five short films.

For the whole list of films - the festival goes through Friday - go to OutNorth.