Monday, February 18, 2013

ATIT Reheated: My visits with Richard Nixon in NYC

By Jack Brummet, Editor-in-Chief
with research by Pablo Fanque, National Affairs Editor




Frank Curran, Claudia Curran, Nick Gattuccio, and Jack outside Richard Nixon's House, 1980 - click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

One of my favorite things when I lived in NYC was to visit President Richard Nixon.

The President had a sweet townhouse at 142 East 65th Street on the Upper East Side. We probably stopped by five times while I lived there. I would drag friends there in a taxi, or car, if someone had one. The President never actually came out to greet us, although I often hoped he'd come out and say hi to the kids, and hang with us like the time he visited the students at the Lincoln Memorial. Maybe we'd have another one of those uncomfortable Nixon moments where he is bound and determined to seem like a regular guy. . .an almost laughable goal.


A few years after he resigned, he returned east from his California exile. This is the President who wanted to send me to Vietnam, so I had mixed feelings, indeed, about this man. He kept the Great Society funded, even as he lied and weaseled his way to disgrace. What could you think of the ex red-baiter who went to China and opened diplomatic relations? He was a two-edged sword, which made him endlessly fascinating. And I went there to pay homage to both Good King Richard and Evil Dick.

These visits often occurred around closing time. I seem to recall often having a bottle or go cup in hand, as we stood outside the townhouse for ten or fifteen minutes and pondered the dark and magnificent phenomenon of President Nixon.

In all of those visits, the Secret Service never came near us. We saw them a few times, but no matter how loud and raucous we got, they never approached. I guess that makes sense. There were 20 million people living within an easy car drive. We were probably not the only knuckleheads in the region to stop by.


In the mid-eighties, Richard Nixon and I both moved from Manhattan. He moved to Saddle River, New Jersey and wrote a lot of books, and advised every President in some capacity.  RMN died in 1994, in NYC.
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Happy Presidents Day - Selected Presidential Photos

Selected Photos by Pablo Fanque and Mona Goldwater

Presidents Gerald R. Ford and William J. Clinton

President William H. Taft

Presidents Eisenhower, Coolidge, Nixon, Taft, and Johnson

President Warren G. Harding

President Barack H. Obama

President Dwight D. Eisenhower

President Harry S. Truman (with Lauren Bacall)

President George W. Bush (with Karl Rove)

President John F. Kennedy

Presidents Richard M. Nixon and Lyndon B. Johnson

President Theodore Roosevelt


President Ronald W. Reagan

President Zachary Taylor

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Faces No. 362 - Soroptimists

By Jack Brummet


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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Beautiful, a sweet video from some Ballard youth

By Jack Brummet, Ballard Metro Editor

wow. Wow. WOW.  Althea and Augie, my niece and nephew appear in this oh so sweet  video (age 11)  created by their friends in the 'hood.  I *think* some of the kids (and probably the actual creators) hailed from a family that runs a dance school on 15th NW..  In any case, everyone who worked on this video was very young--there appears to be no old codger interference.  They did an amazing job.


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Friday, February 15, 2013

In the kitchen with Jack: Harira

By Jack Brummet

I first had this soup in Morocco in 1982.  It's one of the world's great soups.  My rendition is not necessarily 100% faithful, but it's close, and very tasty.  You can easily make it vegetarian by leaving out the lamb, vegan by leaving out the lamb and eggs, and gluten-free by substituting rice for the vermicelli.


Jack's Harira

 1+ pound cubed lamb meat (chicken OK too) 
 2 cloves garlic, crushed
 1 teaspoon ground turmeric (I sometimes add a little saffron too)
 1 1/2 teaspoons ground black pepper
 2 teaspoon ground cinnamon (or 2-3 sticks of cinnamon)
 2 tsp.cumin
 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger, or better yet a few hearty gratings of fresh ginger
 1/4 teaspoon ground cayenne pepper (or a doze of your favorite chilis or Tabasco)
 2 tablespoons olive oil
 3/4 cup chopped celery
 1 onion, chopped
 1 red onion, chopped
 1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro
 1 (29 ounce) can diced tomatoes
 7 cups water
 3/4 cup green lentils (French De Puy are the best, but any green or brown lentil works)
 1 (15 ounce) can garbanzo beans, drained (better: soak and cook the dried ones)
 4 ounces vermicelli pasta, or thin spaghetti, or rice (Basmati or short grain) for GF folk
 2 eggs, beaten
 1 lemon, juiced (note: if you have access to preserved lemons, chop one up and add it...it's a great addition)


1. Place the olive oil, lamb, turmeric, garlic, black pepper, cinnamon, cumin, ginger, cayenne, butter, celery, onion, and cilantro into a large soup pot over a low heat. Stir frequently for 5 minutes. Pour tomatoes (reserve juice) into the mixture and let simmer for 15 minutes.
2. Pour tomato juice, 7 cups water, and the lentils into the pot. Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat to simmer. Let soup simmer, covered, for 2 hours.
3. About 10 minutes before serving turn the heat to medium-high, place chickpeas and noodles into the soup, let cook about 10 minutes (until noodles are al dente). Stir in lemon and eggs, let eggs cook 1 minute. Add some freshly chopped parsley and cilantro.
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Gravity wins: 'planes coming down





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Poem: Tethers

By Jack Brummet
Your tenuous hold on earth
Is disguised in your shadow
Tethered to the ground
By the soles of your feet
And a theory of gravity. 
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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Happy Valentine's Day - The Beach Boys "Kiss Me Baby"



Painting: That is love - Happy Valentine's Day everyone

Illustration by Jack Brummet [editor in chief, ATIT]


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The Needle - a poem by "Robert Service" a/k/a Ken Kesey

By Jack Brummet, ATIT Poetry Ed.



Cover of the last supplement to the Whole Earth Catalog - click to enlarge

Ken Kesey contributed this poem (among his other wonderful contributions) to The Last Whole Earth Catalog and supplement.  I read The Needle when it came out in 1971, attributed to Robert Service. It was undoubtedly written by Ken Kesey (maybe in conjunction with Ken Babbs).


Ken Kesey, back then


The Needle

by "Robert Service" 

First, brothers and sisters and spirits of our sphere,
I wish to make one thing perfectly clear;
During these last ten turnings of a year
I have been
Jacked-up, jerked-off, brought down, strung-out,
And I've
Holed up, come on, cooled off and hung out,
And I've
Rushed and flashed and flushed and twitched
And I've
Sniveled and snorted and bellowed and bitched
And I've
Been spaced out atoms in the heartless void
And a slightly-plotted tightly-knotted paranoid,
I've watched friends grin goodby as I spiraled down the drain?
I've had doctors shake their fingers at the fungus on my brain;
And I have called, friends and doctors, oh I have roared out my soul
From the compass busting bottom of the false magnetic pole,
But it was a place beyond friends or medicine's reach--
A senseless 3-D cry from a binary breach--
And the heartless void can listen but doesn't seem to care
And my call was never answered until the needle turned to prayer.
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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Marco Rubio's drinking problem

By Pablo Fanque, National Affairs Editor

During Marco Rubio’s official GOP-Tea Party response to the President’s State of the Union address last night, it was clear he was struggling with cotton mouth, and at one point, wiped a drop of sweat away.  So, yeah, he took a drink of water.  Now, a day later, there are hundreds or articles, blog posts, talk show rants, tweets, memes and of course, a now-famous animated GIF of him drinking the water. 


"His words may or may not be long remembered, but 
Senator Marco Rubio's swig lives on and on and on."  (Reuters)

Interestingly, FDR drank water during one of his speeches, and was roundly praised for it.  As David Michael Ryfe wrote in "Franklin Roosevelt and The Fireside Chats,":  "He often employed such personal touches as stopping to take a drink of water during the broadcasts."
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