Health and Fitness News

Welcome to the Stars Hollow Health and Fitness weekly diary. It will publish on Saturday afternoon and be open for discussion about health related issues including diet, exercise, health and health care issues, as well as, tips on what you can do when there is a medical emergency. Also an opportunity to share and exchange your favorite healthy recipes.

Questions are encouraged and I will answer to the best of my ability. If I can’t, I will try to steer you in the right direction. Naturally, I cannot give individual medical advice for personal health issues. I can give you information about medical conditions and the current treatments available.

You can now find past Health and Fitness News diaries here and on the right hand side of the Front Page.

A Better Way to Serve Eggs

Photobucket

If you avoid eggs because you think they’re bad for you, you should reconsider. It was never clear that dietary cholesterol had a significant impact on heart health; saturated fat in the diet is thought to be a bigger culprit (how big is also a matter of dispute these days). The government’s new dietary guidelines acknowledge as much, advising that eating an egg every day will not affect blood cholesterol or cardiovascular health.

Onion and Thyme Frittata

Frittata With Grated Zucchini, Goat Cheese and Dill

Ricotta and Spinach Frittata With Mint

Carrot and Leek Frittata With Tarragon

Spinach and Red Pepper Frittata

General Medicine/Family Medical

  • Music and Laughter May Help Lower Blood Pressure

    By  Bil Hendrick

    Study Suggests Music and Laughter Sessions May Be Another Way to Reduce Hypertension

    March 25, 2011 — Middle-aged men and women may be able to lower their blood pressure readings by laughing more and listening to music they enjoy, new research indicates.

    Researchers at Osaka University in Japan set out to determine whether music and laughter interventions would reduce blood pressure in one of two situations: immediately after listening to music or laughing and after three months of one-hour interventions that took place once every two weeks.

  • Mini-Strokes’ May Increase Risk of Heart Attack

    By Denice Mann

    Study Shows Transient Ischemic Attacks Are Linked to Greater Risk of Heart Attack

    March 24, 2011 — “Mini-strokes” or transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) are known to increase risk for stroke, and now new research shows that they may also double your risk for heart attack.

    The findings appear in the journal Stroke.

  • New Pancreatic Cancer Treatment Activates Immune System

    By Kathleen Dohenny

    In Early Study, Strategy Shrank Tumors in Some Patients

    March 24, 2011 — A novel approach to pancreatic cancer treatment that activates the immune system works in some patients, according to a new study.

    The treatment works by destroying the ”scaffolding” around cancer cells, says researcher Robert H. Vonderheide, MD, DPhil, an associate professor of medicine in the division of hematology/oncology and the Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute, University of Pennsylvania.

  • New Muscular Dystrophy Treatment Offers Hope

    By Daniel J. DeNooon

    Study Shows Patients With Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy Are Walking Better With PRO051 Treatment

    March 23, 2011 — Exciting findings from an early-stage clinical trial offer new hope to patients with Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy, the most common but incurable and devastating form of muscular dystrophy.

    Patients who received three months of weekly injections with PRO051 had a modest improvement in their ability to walk, reports a research team led by Judith C. van Deutekom, PhD, vice president for discovery at Prosensa Therapeutics, which funded the study.

  • Asthma May Raise Risk of Diabetes, Heart Disease

    By Denise Mann

    Study Shows Link Between People With Asthma and Diabetes, Heart Risk

    March 21, 2011 — Asthma may increase your risk of developing diabetes and heart disease, shows new research presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology in San Francisco.

    The common denominator between these conditions appears to be inflammation, according to researchers led by Young J. Juhn, MD, MPH, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

  • Stem Cell Transplants May Treat Aggressive MS

    By Brenda Goodman

    Study Shows Improvements in MS Patients Who Replace Bone Marrow With Stem CellsMarch 21, 2011 — Replacing bone marrow with the body’s own stem cells may help patients with aggressive forms of multiple sclerosis (MS) go for years without seeing their disease progress, a new study shows.

    Researchers in Greece are following a group of 35 patients who received experimental stem cell transplants for multiple sclerosis.

  • Melanoma Rates May Be Higher for the Rich

    By Salynn Boyles

    Study Shows Link Between Melanoma and Higher Income Levels

    March 21, 2011 — Many lifestyle-related cancers disproportionately affect the poor, but new research finds the opposite to be true for the most lethal form of skin cancer: melanoma.

    In a California study, non-Hispanic, white teens and young women living in the most affluent neighborhoods were nearly six times as likely to be diagnosed with melanoma as white teens and young women living in the poorest neighborhoods.

  • Working with mustard gas linked to lung cancer

    By Amy Norton

    (Reuters Health) – Workers involved in mustard-gas production during the World War II era showed heightened odds of lung cancer at a relatively young age — with the excess risk fading in old age, a new study finds.

    Japanese researchers found that of workers employed at a poisonous-gas factory between 1929 and 1945, those directly involved in producing mustard gas saw their risk of lung cancer, while still rare, increase earlier in life compared with other workers.

  • Mysterious digestive disease peaks in the summer

    By Kerry Grens

    (Reuters Health) – Summertime sees the greatest number of patients hospitalized for a common and sometimes painful digestive problem called diverticulitis, a new study finds.

    The results are puzzling researchers already stumped by this disease.

  • Work problems from arthritis may come and go

    By Amy Norton

    (Reuters Health) – Many people with arthritis have periodic difficulties on the job, but the problems might not make them less productive, a new study suggests.

    And in many cases, simple changes in the workplace can be helpful.

  • Warnings/Alerts/Guidelines

  • Delta Cribs recall re-announced after infant death

    By Wendell Marsh

    WASHINGTON Reuters) – The Consumer Product Safety Commission re-announced on Tuesday the recall of Delta Enterprise “Safety Peg” Drop-Side cribs after a second infant death associated with the crib.

    The original 2008 recall included more than 985,000 drop-side cribs. CPSC said in the original recall that cribs where safety pegs were missing could cause entrapment and suffocation.

  • WHO sees Japan food safety situation as “serious”

    By Sui-Lee Wee

    (Reuters) – China and South Korea announced on Monday they will toughen checks of Japanese food for radioactivity, hours after the World Health Organization said the detection of radiation in some food in Japan was a more serious problem than it had expected.

    China will monitor food imported from Japan for signs of radiation, state news agency Xinhua reported, citing the national quality watchdog, while South Korea will widen radiation inspections to dried agricultural and processed food from fresh agricultural produce.

  • Study: Spiriva Beats Serevent for COPD Flare-ups

    By Denice Mann

    Drug Is More Effective at Preventing Flare-ups of Chronic Pulmonary Obstructive Disease

    March 23, 2011 — Once-daily Spiriva (tiotropium) may be more effective at reducing risk for exacerbations among people with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) than Serevent (salmeterol), a new study shows.

    The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

  • Xolair May Treat Milk Allergy in Kids

    By Brenda Goodman

    Study Shows Xolair May Be Effective for Children Who Are Severely Allergic to Milk

    March 21, 2011 — A small new study suggests that children with severe milk allergies may be able to rapidly overcome their sensitivities with the help of a biologic drug that helps to quiet an overly aggressive immune response.

    The study appears to be so promising that if larger trials, which are under way, are able to duplicate the results, the drug, Xolair, might become the first treatment to help the increasing numbers of kids who react to common foods like milk, egg, or peanuts.

  • FDA Approves New Melanoma Treatment Yervoy

    By Danial J. DeNoon

    First Drug to Extend Survival in Late-Stage Skin Cancer

    March 25, 2011 — The FDA has approved Bristol-Myers’ Yervoy for the treatment of late-stage, metastatic melanoma, a deadly skin cancer.

    Yervoy (ipilimumab) is the first drug ever shown to help late-stage melanoma patients live longer. However, it does not cure the disease.

  • Strattera May Treat ADHD in Some Young Kids

    By Denise Mann

    Study Shows Non-stimulant Drug Is Effective for Some Kids Aged 6 and Younger

    March 21, 2011 — The non-stimulant ADHD drug Strattera (atomextine) is approved for children aged 6 and older, but until now little was known about how this medication affects children younger than 6.

    In a new eight-week study of 101 children aged 5 to 6 with ADHD, the drug was safe and reduced some ADHD symptoms in children, according to reports by their parents and teachers.

  • Seasonal Flu/Other Epidemics/Disasters

  • U.S. misses goal of wiping out TB by 2010

    By Julie Steenhuysen

    (Reuters) – Despite steady improvements, the United States has failed to make its goal of eradicating tuberculosis by 2010, government researchers said on Thursday.

    U.S. TB rates last year fell to 11,181 reported cases, or 3.6 cases per 100,000 people, a one-year drop of 3.9 percent and an all-time low since national reporting began in 1953, according to a report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

  • Radiation fears mount again in Japan after plant workers injured

    By Mayumi Negishi and Kazunori Takada

    (Reuters) – Radiation fears escalated in Japan on Friday after workers suffered burns as they tried to cool an earthquake-crippled nuclear plant, while the government sowed confusion over whether it was widening an evacuation zone around the facility.

    Prime Minister Naoto Kan, making his first public statement on the crisis in a week, said the situation at the Fukushima nuclear power complex north of Tokyo was not getting worse but described it as “nowhere near the point” of being resolved.

  • Japan post-tsunami humanitarian relief turns corner

    By Chisa Fujioka and Jon Herskovitz

    (Reuters) – Food aid is flowing, refugees are restoring daily routines, and even mobile banks are appearing in north Japan as the nation rallies around victims of the March 11 double disaster.

    Nearly two weeks after an earthquake and tsunami plunged the Asian nation into its worst crisis since World War II, an increasingly thorough and successful humanitarian relief operation is replacing the scenes of suffering and devastation.

  • Aid organizations struggle to bring help to Libya

    By Adam Tanner

    (Reuters) – International aid organisations are struggling to deliver humanitarian aid supplies to areas of Libya most affected by fighting, but have managed to bring in a few shipments in low-profile operations, aid officials say.

    Many officials say the most dire need is in Misrata, Libya’s third largest city where the main hospital is inundated with wounded yet does nit have electricity or water.

  • Libyans lack food, health care: aid agencies

    By Stephanie Nebehay

    (Reuters) – Libyans increasingly lack access to medical care and life-saving drugs, and food prices are rocketing as the conflict deepens, aid agencies said on Tuesday.

    Most of Libya remains off limits to aid workers, who say they have sketchy information about the humanitarian situation, especially since Western air strikes began at the weekend.

  • Women’s Health

  • Pregnancy complication deaths drop, but not equally

    By Genevra Pittman

    (Reuters Health) – Deaths from a dangerous pregnancy complication in which the embryo implants outside the womb have decreased in recent decades, according to a new study.

    However, the authors found that the chance of dying from an ectopic pregnancy is almost seven times higher in black women than white women.

  • Heart drug linked to higher breast cancer risk

    By Geneva Pittman

    (Reuters Health) – Women taking the heart drug digoxin have an increased risk of breast cancer, according to a study of more than 2 million Danes.

    Digoxin, marketed as Lanoxin and Digitek, is used by people with heart failure or with abnormal heart beats. But it can also act like the female hormone estrogen in the body, leading researchers to wonder if it might up cancer risk the same way estrogen treatment does in older women.

  • Five years on breast cancer drug tamoxifen beats two

    By Frederik Joelving

    (Reuters Health) – A new study has a bit of good news for most women who’ve had breast cancer surgery.

    It turns out that sticking with the older and relatively cheap drug tamoxifen for the recommended 5 years instead of just 2 will cut the risk of having the cancer return.

  • Rheumatoid arthritis makes getting pregnant harder

    By Amy Norton

    (Reuters Health) – Women with rheumatoid arthritis may have a somewhat harder time becoming pregnant, a new study suggests.

    The study, of more than 68,000 pregnant women, showed that those with rheumatoid arthritis generally had a tougher time conceiving compared to women without the disease.

  • Fertility treatment can use semen from men with HIV

    By Genevra Pittman

    (Reuters Health) – Fertility treatments can be done safely and effectively in couples where the man is infected with the AIDS virus and the women isn’t, according to a new review of past studies.

    Over the last 2 decades, researchers have improved methods of “washing” the semen of men infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Unwashed semen could pass HIV to the woman or their baby.

  • Men’s Health

  • Cosmetic Surgery on the Rise in Men

    By Bill Hendrick

    Study Shows Increase in Facelifts, Ear Surgery, and Soft Tissue Filler

    March 21, 2011 — Growing numbers of male baby boomers are fighting harder than ever against the effects of aging by enthusiastically embracing facelifts, liposuction, and other cosmetic surgical procedures aimed at making them look younger, new research suggests.

    While overall cosmetic surgery procedures in men rose 2% in 2010 over the previous year, many types of operations, such as facelifts, increased dramatically, says a new report by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

  • Testosterone gel shows effects on diabetes

    (Reuters Health) – Testosterone treatment appears to improve the underlying problem in some men with type 2 diabetes, according to a study funded by UK drugmaker ProStrakan.

    The problem — called “insulin resistance” — is that the body doesn’t know how to use insulin to process sugar. Researchers found that applying testosterone in a gel reduced this problem in diabetic men who had low levels of testosterone to begin with, or in similar men without diabetes but with a cluster of heart disease risk factors called metabolic syndrome.

  • Pediatric Health

  • Hearing screening misses some deaf kids

    By Geneva Pittman

    (Reuters Health) – Passing a newborn hearing test is no guarantee against deafness, U.S. researchers say.

    They found nearly a third of kids with cochlear implants — a device that transmits sound directly to the auditory nerve — had initially checked out on mandatory screening.

  • Epileptic Kids Have More Psychiatric Symptoms

    BY Salynn Boyles

    Girls With Epilepsy Have More Depression, Boys More ADHD, Study Finds

    March 25, 2011 — Children with epilepsy are at increased risk of having psychiatric problems, with girls more likely to exhibit symptoms linked to depression and anxiety and boys more likely to have symptoms of ADHD and difficulty getting along with peers, new research suggests.

    In the study, epilepsy was a stronger risk factor for psychiatric problems than poverty, living with a single parent, or having another chronic disease. The study examined children with and without epilepsy living in Norway.

  • Teen ER Visits Due to Ecstasy Are on the Rise

    By Bill Hendrick

    Study Shows More Than 17,000 ER Visits by Teens and Young Adults Because of Drug Ecstasy

    March 24, 2011 — Ecstasy use is rising among teens and young adults, causing a significant increase in emergency room visits by users of the street drug, a new federal study shows.

    Hospital emergency department visits involving ecstasy increased from 10,222 in 2004 to 17,865 in 2008, a 74.8% increase.

  • Birth Order May Affect Risk of Allergies

    By Jennifer Warner

    Study Suggests First-Born Children Are More Likely to Have Allergies

    March 21, 2011 — First-born children may be more likely to develop certain types of allergies than their younger brothers or sisters, a study suggests.

    Researchers found the prevalence of several types of allergies, such as allergic rhinitis (hay fever or seasonal allergies), allergic conjunctivitis (eye inflammation due to allergies), and food allergy decreased as birth order increased in a large group of Japanese schoolchildren.

  • More boys than girls wet their beds

    By Leigh Krietsch Boerner

    (Reuters Health) – About five in 100 kids wet the bed at night, but boys are more than twice as likely to do it than girls, a new study says.

    In a study of about more than 6,000 children, researchers found that about seven out of 100 boys and three out of 100 girls wet their beds at least once a month.

  • Aging

  • FDA: Shingles Vaccine OK at Age 50 and Up

    By Daniel J. DeNoon

    Merck’s Zostavax Vaccine Approved for 50-Somethings

    March 24, 2011 – People age 50 and older can now get Merck’s Zostavax shingles vaccine, the FDA today ruled.

    The vaccine already was approved for people age 60 and older. The approval is based on a Merck clinical trial that showed the vaccine to be about 70% effective in preventing shingles in the younger age group.

  • Nutrition/Diet/Fitness

  • ‘Added Sugar’ May Add to Weight Gain in U.S.

    By Brenda Goodman

    Study Sees Link Between Weight Gain and Eating Foods With Sugar Added to Ingredients

    March 24, 2011 — Researchers taking nutritional snapshots of the population around a major metropolitan area for more than 30 years say they’ve noticed something interesting: as consumption of added sugars has increased, so too, have body weights.

    Researchers parsing the myriad reasons for America’s collective growing girth have looked at the contributions of total calories and fat, experts say, but less is known about what role added sugars might play.

  • Cocoa Rich in Health Benefits

    By Bill Hendrick

    Cocoa Consumption May Decrease Blood Pressure, Improve Cholesterol, Researchers Say

    March 23, 2011 — Cocoa, used throughout history as a folk medicine, may actually have significant health benefits, according to a new study by Harvard researchers.

    Their analysis of 21 studies with 2,575 participants shows that cocoa consumption is associated with decreased blood pressure, improved blood vessel health, and improvement in cholesterol levels, among other benefits.

  • Breakfast Cereals Play Role in Lower Heart Risk

    By Brenda Goodman

    Studies Suggest Whole Grains and Dietary Fiber in Cereals May Cut Hypertension Risk

    March 22, 2011 — High intake of whole-grain cereal is linked to a lower risk of high blood pressure and hefty helpings of dietary fiber are linked to a lower risk of heart disease, especially for young and middle-aged adults, new studies show.

    Breakfast cereal, in particular, may be an important way to fill up on both whole grains and dietary fiber.

  • Unhealthy Diet Raises Heart Risk for Obese Teens

    By Bill Hendrick

    Study Shows Obese Teens Don’t Eat Enough Vegetables, Dairy, and Fiber

    March 22, 2011 — Obese teens don’t have enough fresh produce, dairy products, or fiber in their diets and may be more likely than normal-weight teens to develop heart and other health problems, new research indicates.

    This doesn’t mean they don’t feel well as youngsters, but that their diets aren’t good for long-term good health.

  • Exercise, Sex Can Boost Heart Attack Risk

    By Kathleen Dohenny

    Overall, Increased Heart Risk Is Small, Especially for Regular Exercisers, Experts Say

    March 22, 2011 — Exercise and sex can boost the risk of heart attack and sudden cardiac death, according to a new report, although the increased risk is small and transient, the researchers say.

    The risk is higher for those who are occasional exercisers compared to habitual exercisers, says researcher Issa Dahabreh, MD, a research associate at the Center for Clinical Evidence Synthesis, Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies at Tufts Medical Center in Boston.

  • Exercise May Cut Salt’s Effect on Blood Pressure

    By Brenda Goodman

    Study Shows Physical Activity Helps Keep Blood Pressure From Rising in Response to a High-Salt Diet

    March 23, 2011 — Regular exercise and a low-sodium diet are two lifestyle changes that are often recommended to lower high blood pressure.

    Now a new study shows that one appears to influence the other.

  • Sleepy People Overeat

    By Daniel J. DeNoon

    Study: Too Little Sleep Makes You Eat More Fatty Foods

    March 23, 2011 — People who get too little sleep tend to overeat, a Columbia University study suggests.

    And sleepy, hungry people don’t make wise food choices, find Marie-Pierre St-Onge, PhD, and colleagues at New York Obesity Research Center.

    “Short sleep may make you more susceptible to overeating,” St-Onge tells WebMD via email. “Keep that in mind when trying to manage your weight.”

  • Counting carbs may help with type 1 diabetes

    By Amy Norton

    (Reuters Health) – Tallying the number of carbohydrates in the diet may be helpful to people using an insulin pump to treat type 1 diabetes, a small study suggests.

    The study, of 61 adults on insulin pump therapy, found that those who learned to count carbs had a small reduction in weight and waist size after 6 months.

  • Facial expressions, weight may sway kids’ eating

    By Amy Norton

    (Reuters Health) – If you want your kids to eat their broccoli, you might try smiling when you eat your own veggies, a small study suggests.

    The French research team asked 120 adults and children to look at various photos of people eating. In the kids, the effect of the photos was much more complicated than in the adults.

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    Punting the Pundits

    “Punting the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

    Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Punting the Pundits”

    Rep. John Conyers: Marking the 100th Anniversary of the Triangle Factory Fire

    Today marks the 100th anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, the deadliest industrial disaster in the history of New York City and one of the deadliest industrial accidents in the history of the United States.

    This occasion has particular resonance in the present political landscape. Across this country, working men and women are under assault by the conservative agenda. We have all heard the reports from the states — in Wisconsin, Ohio, and my home state of Michigan, the labor movement is under siege.

    Joe Ciricione: Hiroshima to Fukushima: The Illusion of Control

    On March 11, there were 443 nuclear reactors operating around the world. On March 12, that number shrunk by four.

    An earthquake, a tsunami and a record of poor safety management converged to create one of the worst nuclear accidents in history. The crisis at the Fukushima nuclear plant is still unfolding and, after some progress earlier this week, has again taken a grim turn with signs that at least one of the reactors may have been breached. Even under the best of circumstances, it is likely that four of the six Fukushima Daiichi reactors are a total loss. Japanese officials are considering what some believe inevitable–entombing the reactors in mounds of sand and concrete, as was done at Chernobyl. If so, the four sarcophagi on the Japanese shoreline will become stark reminders of the limits of human control.

    Leonard Pitts Jr.: Gay marriage is a matter of rights

    We are gathered here today to look a gift horse in the mouth.

    It seems a majority of the American people now favor allowing gay men and lesbians to wed. That majority, according to a Washington Post/ABC News survey released last week, is slender, just 51 percent. But even at that, it represents a significant increase from just five years ago, when only 36 percent of Americans approved.

    Other polling organizations have reported similar trends, and for those who believe gay men and lesbians ought to be free to solemnize and formalize their relationships, that is very good news. It means they are – we are – winning the argument. That is cause for celebration.

    Tula Connell: The Triangle Fire: Still Burning Before Our Nation

    When word got out that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker had ordered the windows of the state Capitol building bolted shut during the protests against his attacks on public employees, it was a chilling reminder of how employers of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company had locked their factory doors, preventing the young, mostly immigrant women from escaping the deadly fire that killed 146. Employer groups like the Manufacturers’ Association had fought legislative efforts to install sprinklers in buildings, and garment manufacturing owners had resisted attempts by workers to form unions and gain bargaining rights so they could address job safety issues and improve wages and hours.

    As we commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist fire on March 25, it’s sobering to realize many of the lessons we thought had been absorbed must be learned again-and again. The Triangle fire, a symbol of unfettered Gilded Age greed, still stands burning before us. From the lack of job safety and health protections to the treatment of immigrant workers to the attacks on the right to form a union and bargain for a better life-the issues raised by the Triangle fire still have not been resolved.

    Mary Botarri: Have You No Decency, Scott Walker?

    William Cronon is a professor of history, geography and environmental studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is the prize winning author of many books such as Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England, which revolutionized the study of environmental history. He is known as a guy with such a deep and abiding love of the Wisconsin and its traditions that he leads the “get to know us” bus tour of the state offered to new faculty each year. Glaciers, rocks and history are on his agenda; politics and cheese he leaves to fellow-Wisconsinite and Capital Times editor John Nichols.

    But this mild-mannered professor kicked a hornet’s nest this week with an op-ed in the New York Times (the op-ed is below) this week on Governor Scott Walker, and the push back was immediate. The Wisconsin GOP is now demanding his emails.

    Facts Will Not be Tolerated

    Professor Cronon is not known as a raging leftie. To the contrary, his recent support for Chancellor Biddy Martin and, by extension, her controversial plan to partially privatize the University of Wisconsin system, put him firmly in the more conservative camp of the debate raging on campus over the proposal.

    William Cronin: Wisconsin’s Radical Break

    NOW that a Wisconsin judge has temporarily blocked a state law that would strip public employee unions of most collective bargaining rights, it’s worth stepping back to place these events in larger historical context.

    Republicans in Wisconsin are seeking to reverse civic traditions that for more than a century have been among the most celebrated achievements not just of their state, but of their own party as well.

    Wisconsin was at the forefront of the progressive reform movement in the early 20th century, when the policies of Gov. Robert M. La Follette prompted a fellow Republican, Theodore Roosevelt, to call the state a “laboratory of democracy.” The state pioneered many social reforms: It was the first to introduce workers’ compensation, in 1911; unemployment insurance, in 1932; and public employee bargaining, in 1959.

    Kristin Wartman: ADHD: It’s The Food, Stupid

    Over five million children ages four to 17 have been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in the United States and close to 3 million of those children take medication for their symptoms, according to the Centers for Disease Control. But a new study reported in The Lancet last month found that with a restricted diet alone, many children experienced a significant reduction in symptoms. The study’s lead author, Dr. Lidy Pelsser of the ADHD Research Centre in the Netherlands, said in an interview with NPR, “The teachers thought it was so strange that the diet would change the behavior of the child as thoroughly as they saw it. It was a miracle, the teachers said.”

    Dr. Pessler’s study is the first to conclusively say that diet is implicated in ADHD. In the NPR interview, Dr. Pessler did not mince words, “Food is the main cause of ADHD,” she said adding, “After the diet, they were just normal children with normal behavior. They were no longer more easily distracted, they were no more forgetful, there were no more temper-tantrums.” The study found that in 64 percent of children with ADHD, the symptoms were caused by food. “It’s a hypersensitivity reaction to food,” Pessler said.

    C.W. Gusewelle: How Phelps’ Westboro Church dishonors its faith

    The justices of the U.S. Supreme Court regularly profess ardent devotion to what they divine as having been the intentions of the framers of our nation’s Constitution.

    Yet the court, with Justice Samuel Alito Jr. the sole dissenter, recently ruled it a protected right of the Fred Phelps clan and their Westboro Baptist Church to inflict further pain on grieving families by staging hateful demonstrations at the funerals of members of the American military, who gave their lives in the service of this country.

    Surely there’s a contradiction here.

    Round of 16 Day 1

    NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament 2011

    Tuesday (was it just Tuesday?) was a good night for underdogs.  For once it’s easier to list the favorites who advanced- Connecticut, Texas A&M, and Baylor.  That’s it.

    I don’t know why they’ve scheduled Tip Off for Stanford/North Carolina at 11:30 pm, but I suspect that if I’m even awake I’ll be concentrating more on Formula One.

    Tuesday’s Results

    Seed Team Record Score Seed Team Record Score Region
    1 *Connecticut 34 – 1 64 9 Purdue 21 – 12 40 East
    3 Miami (Fla.) 28 – 5 83 6 *Oklahoma 23 – 11 88 Southeast
    2 Xavier 29 – 3 75 7 *Louisville 22 – 12 85 West
    4 Maryland 24 – 8 57 5 *Georgetown 24 – 10 79 East
    3 Florida State 24 – 9 59 6 *Georgia 24 – 10 61 Southwest
    4 Michigan State 27 – 6 56 5 *Wisconsin-Green Bay 34 – 1 65 Southwest
    2 *Texas A&M 29 – 5 70 7 Rutgers 20 – 13 48 Southwest
    1 *Baylor 33 – 2 82 9 West Virginia 24 – 10 68 Southwest

    Current Matchups

    Time Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
    Noon 1 Tennessee 32 – 2 4 Ohio State 23 – 9 Southeast
    2:30 pm 2 Notre Dame 27 – 7 6 Oklahoma 23 – 11 Southeast
    9 pm 7 Louisville 22 – 12 11 Gonzaga 29 – 4 West
    11:30 pm 1 Stanford 30 – 2 5 North Carolina 26 – 8 West

    Follow the 2011 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament on The Stars Hollow Gazette.

    If you don’t like squeeky shoes you can look for alternate programming here-

    If you like a more traditional bracket try this NCAA one, they also have a TV schedule.

    This Week In The Dream Antilles

    Nothing like Internet interruption to get the priorities re-oriented.  Nothing like the Mac announcing that it’s “looking for networks” and the persistent message from Vonage that things are not well in VOIP land.  Friday brought high winds.  First, phones out.  An otherworldly, beeping, static laden dial tone.  And then, when the phones mysteriously returned all on their own, no Internet.  Red lights on the modem.  Whirling beach ball email symbols.

    According to the consoling voice at the so-called “Internet Help Center,” they are very sorry, very sorry indeed, but your bloguero might be disconnected until, wait for it, Monday or Tuesday.  This news raises the specter of no Port Writers’ Alliance digest this week, or writing it on the crusty Blackberry, or scouting out a local Internet hotspot.  It also raises the fear of no Netflix on demand.  It only occurs to your bloguero after he realizes that no Internet might mean he has a legitimate excuse for no Digest this week and that maybe he will finish reading the first book of Eduardo Galeano’s masterful trilogy, that he first wonders how he will be able to do any work this weekend.  Exactly how good an excuse, your bloguero wonders, is no Internet?

    These fertile introspections, of course, can’t last.  They can’t get played out.  No.  The phone rings on Saturday morning and the tech guy at the “Internet Help Center” says all is well and that your bloguero should now re-cycle the router.  Of course, he’s right.  It works.  Your bloguero’s growing reveries about being Robinson Crusoe on an island without WiFi  are shattered.

    This week the Dream Antilles marked the passing of a lawyer hero, Leonard Weinglass.  He was held in contempt 14 times by Judge Julius Hoffman during the Chicago 8 7 trial, inspiring me and dozens of other lawyers with his fearlessness in defense of his clients.

    Haiku about clouds.  These were inspired by a brief passage by Galeano.

    Our Nominee For Understatement Of The Week is about the administration’s pathetic understanding of the US role in the centuries long oppression of Latin America.  Your bloguero thinks he should make a reading list for US officials and take them on a tour of Central and South America so that they can understand how dreadful and anti-democratic US policy has been in the region.

    Cops of the World is about Simultaneous War III in Libya.  It was written on Wednesday.   The questions remain unanswered.  One might wonder why the US isn’t lobbing million dollar missiles at Syria, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen this morning.  Meanwhile, Phil Ochs’s song of more than  40 years ago fits the situation.

    And an obituary for Pinetop Perkins, a helluva blues piano player.

    Your bloguero notes that this Digest is a weekly feature of the Port Writers Alliance and is now posted early Saturday morning.   See you next week if the creek don’t rise if there’s still Internet.

    Have a wonderful weekend.

    On This Day in History March 26

    This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

    Find the past “On This Day in History” here.

    March 26 is the 85th day of the year (86th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 280 days remaining until the end of the year.

    On this day in 1964, the musical, Funny Girl makes its premiere on Broadway.

    Funny Girl is a musical with a book by Isobel Lennart, music by Jule Styne, and lyrics by Bob Merrill. The semi-biographical plot is based on the life and career of Broadway, film star and comedienne Fanny Brice and her stormy relationship with entrepreneur and gambler Nicky Arnstein. Its original title was My Man.

    The musical was produced by Ray Stark, who was Brice’s son-in-law via his marriage to her daughter Frances, and starred Barbra Streisand.

    Don’t Rain On My Parade

     1026 – Pope John XIX crowns Conrad II as Holy Roman Emperor.

    1484 – William Caxton prints his translation of Aesop’s Fables.

    1552 – Guru Amar Das becomes the Third Sikh Guru.

    1636 – Utrecht University is founded in the Netherlands.

    1808 – Charles IV of Spain abdicates in favor of his son, Ferdinand VII.

    1812 – An earthquake destroys Caracas, Venezuela.

    1830 – The Book of Mormon is published in Palmyra, New York.

    1839 – The first Henley Royal Regatta is held.

    1881 – Thessaly is freed and becomes part of Greece again.

    1913 – Balkan War: Bulgarian forces take Adrianople.

    1917 – World War I: First Battle of Gaza – British troops are halted after 17,000 Turks block their advance.

    1934 – The driving test is introduced in the United Kingdom.

    1942 – World War II: In Poland, the first female prisoners arrive at Auschwitz.

    1945 – World War II: US forces declare Iwo Jima secure.

    1953 – Jonas Salk announces the first successful test of his polio vaccine on a small group of adults and children.

    1958 – The United States Army launches Explorer 3.

    1958 – The African Regroupment Party is launched at a meeting in Paris.

    1967 – Ten thousand people gather for one of many Central Park be-ins in New York City

    1971 – East Pakistan declares its independence from Pakistan to form People’s Republic of Bangladesh and the Bangladesh Liberation War begins.

    1974 – Gaura Devi leads a group of 27 women of Laata village, Henwalghati, Garhwal Himalayas, to form circles around trees to stop them being felled and giving rise to the Chipko Movement in India.

    1975 – The Biological Weapons Convention comes into force.

    1976 – Queen Elizabeth II sends the first royal email, from the Royal Signals and Radar Establishment.

    1979 – Anwar al-Sadat, Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter sign the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty in Washington, D.C..

    1982 – A groundbreaking ceremony for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial is held in Washington, D.C..

    1991 – Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay sign the Treaty of Asuncion,

    establishing Mercosur, the South Common Market.

    1995 – The Schengen Treaty comes into effect.

    1997 – Thirty-nine bodies are found in the Heaven’s Gate cult suicides.

    1998 – Oued Bouaicha massacre in Algeria: 52 people are killed with axes and knives, 32 of them babies under the age of 2.

    1999 – The “Melissa worm” infects Microsoft word processing and e-mail systems around the world.

    1999 – A jury in Michigan finds Dr. Jack Kevorkian guilty of second-degree murder for administering a lethal injection to a terminally ill man.

    2005 – The Taiwanese government calls on 1 million Taiwanese to demonstrate in Taipei, in opposition to the Anti-Secession Law of the People’s Republic of China. Around 200,000 to 300,000 attend the demonstration.

    2006 – The military junta ruling Burma officially names Naypyidaw, a new city in Mandalay Division, as the new capital. Yangon had formerly been the nation’s capital.

    2010 – 46 die as a South Korean warship sinks, allegedly after an attack by North Korea.

    Holidays and observances

       * Christian Feast Day:

             o Emmanuel and companions

             o Felicitas

             o http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S… Larissa]

             o Ludger

             o Margaret Clitherow

             o March 26 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

       * Independence Day and National Day (Bangladesh), celebrates the declaration of independence from Pakistan in 1971.

       * Prince Kuhio Day (Hawaii)

       * Prophet Zoroaster‘s Birthday (Zoroastrianism)

       * Synaxis of the Archangel Gabriel (Eastern Christianity)

    Six In The Morning

    Fear and devastation on the road to Japan’s nuclear disaster zone

    Daniel Howden travels through a post-tsunami wasteland to the gates of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi power station

    Saturday, 26 March 2011

    Once this road was thronged with traffic: an expressway, one of the arteries of a nation’s economic life, as familiar and modern a sight as you would find anywhere in Japan. The only barriers on the route to Fukushima Daiichi were the other people heading in the same direction.

    Today the journey is different. It is a journey to the heart of a catastrophe. About 10 kilometres beyond the half-deserted city of Iwaki, the coastal road is blocked not by commuters but by landslides; the satellite navigation system that might once have flashed up traffic jams shows clusters of red circles that denote barred roads.

    Libya rebels ‘recapture key town’



    Libyan rebels backed by allied air raids say they have seized control of the frontline oil town of Ajdabiya from Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces.

    The BBC  26 March 2011

    The BBC’s Ben Brown in Ajdabiya says there are scenes of jubilation among the insurgents.

    Gaddafi loyalists seized the town last week as they advanced east to quell an uprising now in its fifth week.

    Saturday’s breakthrough came after a seventh night of bombardment by allies enforcing a UN-mandated no-fly zone.

    There were a series of massive coalition air strikes around Ajdabiya overnight, targeting Gaddafi forces.

    Gaddafi ‘promotions’

    Our correspondent counted about 20 Libyan government tanks, armoured vehicles and artillery pieces which have been either abandoned or destroyed.

    20 reported killed as Syrian troops open fire on protesters

    The Irish Times – Saturday, March 26, 2011

    MICHAEL JANSEN

    SHOTS WERE fired yesterday in the southeastern Syrian city of Deraa after funerals of people killed on Wednesday passed off peacefully. Security forces reportedly shot at youths trying to set fire to a statue of former president Hafez al-Assad. In nearby Sanamein village a witness told al-Jazeera 20 people were killed when villagers tried to reach Deraa.

    In Damascus, Hama and Homs security forces broke up protests while pro-government demonstrators brandishing portraits of current president Bashar al-Assad rallied.

    Rescuers battle to reach Burma quake areas



     March 26, 2011 – 5:00PM

    Rescuers today struggled to reach remote Burmese towns hit by a powerful earthquake that killed 75 people as rare images from the area showed roads torn apart and wooden homes reduced to piles of timber.

    The 6.8 magnitude earthquake struck in the east of the country near the borders with Thailand and Laos and was felt as far away as the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi.

    The towns of Tarlay, Tachileik and nearby villages in Burma’s Shan state appear to have been most severely affected by the quake, which flattened hundreds of houses and toppled monasteries and government buildings.

    Madonna’s Malawi charity ‘squandered millions’



    Mar 26 2011 07:02

    The damning audit came as Raising Malawi confirmed it has scrapped plans for a $15-million elite academy for girls.

    The charity’s executive director Philippe Van den Bossche, the boyfriend of Madonna’s former trainer, left in October after criticism of his management style and spending at the school, according to the New York Times.

    “These included what auditors described as outlandish expenditures on salaries, cars, office space and a golf course membership, free housing and a car and driver for the school’s director,” the paper said.

     

    Blow Out Over the Blowout Preventer

    (10 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

    Somehow, I have a feeling that BP will use this as a defense to stop any liability suits. Meanwhile the Obama regime, ever bowing to their corporate masters, continues to issue permits for deep water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico with absolutely no safe guards.

    Tests on BP Well Blowout Preventer Confirm Redesign a Necessity

    By Bob Cavnar at The Daily Hurricane

    Yesterday, the Department of Interior released Det Norske Veritas’ (DNV) report on the forensic testing that it conducted on the blowout preventer (BOP) that failed to shut in BP’s blown out Macondo well almost a year ago.  I’m still going through the 500-plus page report to find answers to my many questions about the failed BOP, but I do agree with the over riding recommendation to the industry from DNV:

       “The finding of these studies should be considered and addressed in the design of future Blowout Preventers and the need for modifying current Blowout Preventers.”

    DNV was addressing a recommendation to the industry that it study the causes and results of “elastic buckling” of the drill pipe within the Macondo BOP that pushed it to the side of the wellbore, preventing the blind shear ram, or the ram that is supposed to cut the pipe and seal the well, from doing so.  During the time of the blowout, the forces within the well were so strong that it lifted the drill pipe, causing it to buckle and push over to the side of the BOP bore, positioning it outside of the shearing faces of the rams.

    BP Can Do More Tests on Deepwater Horizon Blowout Preventer, Court Rules

    By Laurel Brubaker Calkins and Allen Johnson Jr. at Bloomberg News

    BP Plc (BP/) can conduct additional tests on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig’s blowout prevention equipment now that government examiners have finished their own forensic testing, a judge ruled.

    “The additional BOP testing shall be performed in a manner that preserves the evidence to the maximum extent possible,” U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier said in his order, referring to the blowout prevention equipment. He ruled that other companies involved in the disaster could also now run additional tests, so long as everyone is allowed to monitor the procedures and share in the results.

    The 300-ton stack of valves failed to seal off BP’s runaway well last April, triggering a fatal rig explosion and the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history. BP asked Barbier for permission to partially dismantle and conduct laser scans on the blowout preventer, which was recovered from the sea floor off the Louisiana coast last year.

    BP is clearly looking for any liability they can pin on the BOP,” said Houston lawyer Brent Coon, one of the lawyers marshalling evidence for the consolidated oil-spill damages lawsuits against BP and other companies involved in the failed drilling operation, referring to the blowout preventer.

    (emphasis mine)

    Deep Water Permits Issued With No Lessons Learned

    In an exclusive investigation Rachel Maddow shows how the Department of the Interior is issuing deep water drilling permits despite a report finding the blow-out preventer design is flawed and despite drilling companies submitting emergency response plans that pre-date the Deep Water Horizon spill and therefore reflect none of the lessons of that disaster

    DocuDharma Digest

    Regular Features-

    Featured Essays for March 25, 2011-

    DocuDharma

    Popular Culture (Music) 20110325. The Who Sings My Generation

    This is the first part of a comprehensive treatment of the albums released by The Who.  This promises to be an extremely long series, but I shall intersperse it with other topics from time to time, to keep it from being too monotonous.

    I know, but still can not understand why, some folks are not fans of The Who.  LOL!  This was their first album, and was quite good in some respects, and weak in others.  They had already had some hit singles, but nothing astounding as of yet.  Note that I am using the U.S. discography by default, since I am in the United States.  Where possible, I shall cross reference it to the U.K. one.  Note that we shall take the studio albums first, then the live ones, and then attempt the very long list of compilations.

    I have written about The Who many times before, but have never started at the beginning of their album career to cover it from then to now.  I hope that you like the effort, and some of the excellent music that I shall embed.

    This was their first album, and it worked for a very young band.  Released in the UK in 196512, it was called simply My Generation there, on Brunswick Records.  I the US, it was released in 196604 on the Decca label with the title referenced in the title of this piece.  Here are pictures of the two album covers:

    Here is the UK release one:

    Photobucket

    Here is the US release one:

    Photobucket

    I take a bit of issue with using a group proper noun and using the singular for it.  The title should have been The Who Sing My Generation.  But that is just the grammarian geek in me.  Before you ask, it IS acceptable to begin a sentence with a conjunction IF it relates to previous material.  Just do not get carried away with doing that.

    This was the first and last album of theirs to be produced by the horrible opportunist Shel Talmy.  I have mentioned him in passing before, and the kindest words that I have for him is that he no longer is in the picture.  He was, and since he is still with us, is a horrible person, taking advantage of anyone gullible enough to fall for his contracts.

    Enough of that.  Let us look into the music itself.  There were some differences in song lineup betwixt the US and the UK release, viz.:

    Here is the UK lineup:

    Side one

      1. “Out in the Street” – 2:31

      2. “I Don’t Mind” (James Brown) – 2:36

      3. “The Good’s Gone” – 4:02

      4. “La-La-La-Lies” – 2:17

      5. “Much Too Much” – 2:47

      6. “My Generation” – 3:18

    Side two

      7. “The Kids Are Alright” – 3:04

      8. “Please, Please, Please” (James Brown-John Terry) – 2:45

      9. “It’s Not True” – 2:31

     10. “I’m a Man” (McDaniel) – 3:21

     11. “A Legal Matter” – 2:48

     12. “The Ox” (Townshend/Keith Moon/John Entwistle/Nicky Hopkins) – 3:50

    Now, here is the US lineup:

    Side one

      1. “Out in the Street” – 2:31

      2. “I Don’t Mind” – 2:36

      3. “The Good’s Gone” – 4:02

      4. “La-La-La-Lies” – 2:17

      5. “Much Too Much” – 2:47

      6. “My Generation” – 3:18

    Side two

      7. “The Kids Are Alright” – 2:46

      8. “Please, Please, Please” – 2:45

      9. “It’s Not True” – 2:31

     10. “The Ox” – 3:50

     11. “A Legal Matter” – 2:48

     12. “Instant Party” – 3:12

    As you can see, I’m a Man from the UK versions was replaced by Instant Party for the US one.  Both are somewhat forgettable, so let us not quibble.  If any readers would like to post embeds of either or both in the comments, please do so.  I do not intend to embed all of these songs, but only the ones that I like very much.  Hey, it is my post, so I get to choose what goes here!  LOL!

    As a matter of interest, everything from here was written by Peter Townshend, unless qualified.  He was always the sparkplug for the writing, although the others sort of wrote a bit, and I strongly suspect that Keith Moon’s were ghost written by Pete.  Daltrey did write some material, and Enwistle was an excellent writer, but later.

    Before we listen to tunes, we need to see who else was playing.  For this album, the only other, as far as I can tell, was Nicky Hopkins, who I have written about before.  He is no longer with us, but was one of the best keyboard players, especially piano, that you could ever find.

    With that done, let us just take the songs that I like from the top.  I really like Out on the Street, pretty good music for a band of youngins!

    This sounds like to me to be the album one, but Shel Talmy still controls those performances, and is very miserly about them getting out with his cut.  He is a very bad man.  Anyway, here it is:

    Here is a “live” version.  You can tell the lipsynched ones by the way that Keith plays.  When he holds his sticks up like that, you KNOW that is was synched.

    The next on the lineup was the James Brown cover of  I Don’t Mind. If you are interested, You Tube has it.  I do not consider it that good.  Next was The Good’s Gone, and whilst it is OK, not one of their best pieces.

    However, I just LOVE the next song, La-La-La-Lies.  Many people would consider it to be a throwaway piece, but I really like the way that the bouncy rhythm and clever writing worked.  Call me sentimental, but I think that this is great.  Tell me what you think after listening.

    It also showcases Keith hitting those drums, and HARD!  Nicky was on piano.

    Here is what sounds to me to be the studio version:

    I could not find a “live” version.  Perhaps readers will supply one in the comments.

    By far the most influential song on the album was My Generation, the last one on the first side.  Because of its importance, we shall defer it to the end of this piece.  Next, the first song on the second side, was The Kids are Alright.  The long version is one of the most hauntingly beautiful songs that I have ever heard, and I NEVER tire of listening to it.  Please join me with a nice drink of your choice to enjoy it.  These kids were only in their 20s at most when this was created.

    This piece is obviously lipsynched, but it does contain the original, studio content.  I like it mostly because of the folks in the background who obviously did not know what was happening.  If you can find actual studio footage of them recording at the time, please post it.  I think that Talmy has some, but will not release it.  I also like it because it acutally shows them playing, except for Keith, who just hated it, and mostly how young that they were then.

    Here it is again, 40 years later, and it still sounds fresh.  My god, what a wonderful piece of music, and extremely under appreciated.  Note that the drummer is Zac Starkey, Ringo Starr’s son, with whom Keith used to play puzzles and drums with when Zac was just little.  I strongly suspect that if Zac had not contributed, many, many fewer live performances of the three (now two, with John no longer with us) would never had been.  My entire family, all three boys and the lovely, generous, and love of my life former (I shall NEVER use the term “ex”) mate saw them with me in Dallas, TX only a year or two before John died.  Oh well.  Her it is:

    The next song was It’s Not True, perhaps a throwaway, but I like it very much.  It is sort of prescient, because one of the lines has to do with saying that the protagonist was not born in Baghdad.  Please enjoy.

    Here is the album cut with extraneous video.

    Here is a “live” version, and I am not sure that it is not really live.  Keith seems to be using his sticks properly.  Unless any of you know better, I am going to say that this piece looks quite live.

    They did not always sing.  This piece was written by The Who, with the exception of Daltry, with input from Nicky Hopkins.  It is one hell of an instrumental!  It is also one of my favorite pieces from that era.  My former mate thought that it was too noisy, but I love it.  Please tell me what you think.  It is called The Ox, and John took that name as his alter ego until he expired.

    Here is the original sound from the album, but once again I was unable to find original video.  The video here is from the motion picture, The Kids are Alright, from many years ago.  Still, it is a pretty throbbing instrumental piece.

    <

    The next song, A Legal Matter, is one of my favorites.  Pete wrote and sang it, and his voice was just perfect for it.  It is also bouncy, but extremely witty and uses very interesting imagery, like “maternity clothes and baby’s trousers”.  I will admit that the protagonist is being a bit of a cad here.  I do not think that this one was autobiographical, but I could be wrong.  Please notice the strong piano from Nicky Hopkins.

    <

    This is the original studio release, and I chose this one not because of the album cover stills, but of the stills later on in it of the band.  Some of those are from very early in their careers, and some just before Keith expired.

    I have put this last song that I wish to cover at the very last for several reasons.  The first reason is that it was amongst the first to show what The Who really were about at the time.  Second, it showcased the talents of each of the members of the band.  Third, it was sort of prescient in that Keith lived it.  Finally, I do not think that The Who would have ever gone anywhere without this song.  It was their standard, their anthem, and spoke for an entire generation of disaffected young people at the time.  This is one the most iconic songs EVER, and without further ado, please allow me to present the seminal My Generation.  I shall develop some themes about it after we watch and listen.

    Here is the studio version with lyrics.  I chose to put it first because that is what you would have heard from the album (by the way, I have it in vinyl, CD, AND of 8-Track!).

    They played this song live many times, and here are two selections.  The first is from the Monterrey Pop festival from 1967, and the second from the recently restored Isle of Wight performance  from 1970.

    Note that Pete was playing a Fender on the first one and what appears to be a Gretch on the second one.  The sound is quite different, but so were the amplifiers.

    One of the most famous videos of them playing this song was from The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1967.  I chose this video because it has the interview before the song, as I think that it is funny, although the audio could use more gain.  However, if you look very closely, it is lipsynched.  The drums on camera never match the sound that is heard.  And even though Keith HATED to lipsynch, he made a pretty good effort this time, for a reason.  He had a surprise awaiting everyone, and as it turned out, even himself.

    He had loaded one of his bass drums with a pyrotechnic composition, to be triggered at the end of the number.  Legend has it that he bribed a stage hand to load it again, but no one really knows the true story as far as I can tell.  The end result was what you see in the video.  The facts that are established are that Keith was knocked off of his drummer’s throne and injured by a piece of flying debris (contrary to the accepted story, I do not think that is was a piece of cymbal, but more likely a drumhead clamp piece).  Pete had his hair singed (you can see him beating it out in the video) and likely suffered hearing damage because he was so close.  The other two were relatively unaffected physically, but obviously were startled, to say the least.

    Let me, as a professional pyrotechnician, tell you what the flash powder used in those effects can do.  This material is what is used in conventional firecrackers, and it is one of the most treacherous mixes that a pyrotechnician can be asked to prepare.  I will not go into the formulation, but will say that to mix it safely it has to be mixed in extremely small batches, either by hand on a conductive sheet, or remotely in a tumbler.  The latter is much preferred.  This stuff can go high order (in other words, detonate rather than deflagrate) instantly.  It is also extremely spark and heat sensitive.  By the looks of the detonation, and that WAS a detonation, I would estimate that at least 30 grams were in the bass drum.  A firecracker has only less than 100 milligrams of flash powder.

    In any event, that was spectacular.  Now for more analysis of the song itself.  It is very fast paced, and no one artist dominates the entire piece, but time is allowed for each of them, except for Daltrey, but that is not unusual for the singer.  The stutter, viz., “…mmmmmy ggggeneraton…” is a direct reference to the widespread use of amphetamines by the subculture in London at the time, called the Mods.  They loved snappy clothes, partying all night, and not eating.  There are lots of similarities betwixt them and the folks who go to raves now, and use MDMA (“ecstasy“) for pretty much the same reasons.

    I alluded to the the “…hope I die before I get old…” part earlier.  That was a very popular mindset at the time, and I suspect that it is still in certain circles.  I do not any longer subscribe to that philosophy.  My one is pretty simple:

    I hope I die before I become useless to others, or live in wracking pain.

    It is hard to make that rhyme with anything, but that is my philosophy.

    Finally, this song was associated with its band more than any other of which I can think.  Essentially, it was their signature piece.  Many other bands have pieces that are sort of identified with them, but my memory does not identify such a strong link to a single song, for major bands.  Certainly, lesser ones have that one big hit that people remember, but since The Who had so many monster hits, it is interesting to me that this one still remains their opus, and from early in their career.

    It is interesting that AARP, the powerful lobbying group, once attempted to use My Generation as their newsletter title.  I can find no reference to it on the web, but I know that I remember them attempting it.  If you have links, please post them in the comments.  It was a bad idea, since the part about “I hope I die before I get old.”  is sort of antithetic to their membership.  However, that is a fact, but I just have not been able to find links about it.

    To close this piece, I think that this is likely one of the very best debut albums from any band.  Several pieces have withstood the test of time, and My Generation is as fresh today as it was in 1965.

    Please chime in on the comment section for more of their work from this period.  Please do not reference later works, because I shall get to them, one album at a time.

    Warmest regards,

    Doc

    from firefly-dreaming 25.3.11

    (Midnight – promoted by TheMomCat)

    Essays Featured Friday the 25th of March~

    Late Night Karaoke has ‘Bout to Get Fruit Punched Homie, mishima DJs

    Six Brilliant Articles! from Six Different Places!! on Six Different Topics!!!

                    Six Days a Week!!!    at Six in the Morning!!!!

    Topsy-Turvy are slksfca‘s Friday Open Thoughts

    Gha!

    In Memoriam: Elizabeth Taylor from TheMomCat

    dsteffen has another Brilliant edition of How Regulation Came To Be this edition its The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

    from Timbuk3: The 100 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time!

    Tonight #96

    My Little Town Translator reminisces about Arthur Holloway  

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