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Great article on politics in New Orleans: http://www.inthepinktexas.com/2006/06/27/cold-cash/ First of all, this is an excellent snapshot of the politics of the great city of New Orleans, and while the stories are crazy, I have no reason to disbelieve them. The author does end on a downer note about the state of the city, and that I'm not so sure about. I'm waiting for the real pronouncement from my friends who live and work on the ground.
So, I am nearly through my first two week's of readings, compressed in to one week (!). So far, the quality of the readings has been excellent. They include: “An Introduction to Creating Repeatable Arbitrage" This is the program's philosophy for teaching the quantitative skills of business through practical application. “Because Wisdom Can’t Be Told” This is the Harvard Business School introduction to the case method, which Acton uses heavily. “Stars and Steppingstones” My favorite quote in this essay on finding your destiny: "The ultimate horror is not death. The ultimate horror is to wake up at age fifty-five or sixty and realize that you have wasted your life; either that time has slipped past while your dreams waited, or that you never had any dreams at all." Mastery: The Keys to Success and Long-Term Fulfillment I have read this book twice now. Once when I was trying out some of the books on the Personal MBA recommended readings and again now at Acton. ...
So, this was my first week in the Acton MBA program. Actually, class starts in late August, but the deluge of "pre-matriculation" readings and assignments has already begun. I had considered applying to the MBA program at the University of Texas and even spent a semester in the MBA program at St. Edward's, but the Acton program was really the one that had captured my imagination and the one that I set my sights on. I was interested in Acton for a few reasons: *A real world focus on the work. Class is taught by practitioners who are actually in business. *The curriculum is built on business, but there is also an emphasis on "a life of meaning." *Timeline. The program is designed to compress the standard two year MBA into less than one year of full-time study, although the pace is a grueling 80 hour per week program. I will elaborate more on the program, how I got to it and my experiences in it over the next year. But first I need to get caught up on my assi...
Stephen Colbert Addresses White House Correspondent's Association Brilliant, hilarious and chilling: http://www.milkandcookies.com/keywords/stephencolbert/
As a person who works primarily in the non-profit world, I think it gets easy to be swallowed up by the politics and the bureaucracy of it all. Sometimes, I need something to help remind me why I’m working so hard and why it still matters. Tonight, Cassie and I got a reminder. We saw a screening of the film “ Nobelity ” at the stunning Paramount Theatre in downtown Austin. “Nobelity” is the story of filmmaker Turk Pipkin’s journey to draw something coherent out of the bewildering jumble of our planet: to grasp the “big picture” of things and understand what each of us can do to address the most pressing problems of the world. His interest in these issues is hardly theoretical. His responsibility to his own daughters is the impetus, but his thinking draws us to wonder just what world we are leaving to our children and grandchildren. His travels take him to interview nine Nobel Prize winners in peace, economics and the sciences. His conversations with each subject are powerful an...
So, we have purchased a new home. Specifically, it's a condominium not far from where we are living now. It's on the unfortunately named Robert E. Lee street, but it's close to the springs and Zilker Park. Here's a satellite map.
So, today I received an unsolicited email from a photographer by the name of Frank Relle who has taken a number of truly incredible images from New Orleans, both pre and post-Katrina. One in particular, "Felicity," comes from one of my favorite neighborhoods in the city, the Lower Garden District. Cassie and I had lived in that neighborhood until fairly recently, but many of my favorite memories of the city are from that neighborhood, long before we had lived there. I was thinking about some of the places I used to haunt when I was much younger and far more irresponsible: RC Bridge Lounge (long before its recent "rehabilitation," it was the bane of the gentrifiers as a music club), the Half Moon (which seems to have undergone a reverse rehabilitation over the years) and Pie In The Sky (the Sky Pie was the greatest pizza ever, before the restaurant's many misfortunes). I miss visiting Gus the blind senior citizen who would have me and Steve over to drink room tem...
Since I spend about 75% of my work time either in or thinking about New Orleans but live in Austin, I am often asked to compare the two places. I spent the last five years of my life as a highly visible, highly vocal booster of New Orleans, so many people I meet are surprised when they hear that we have settled, at least for the near term, in Austin. For Cassie and me, the decision to stay in Austin was pretty easy. We didn't have any assets to protect in New Orleans. Our house was pretty thoroughly destroyed so there was no hurry to come back. We also wanted to find some degree of stability for our son; New Orleans is a dynamic place right now and since he had already spent about a fourth of his life in evacuation/gypsy mode, we decided we would try to give him a rest. So we arbitrarily chose Austin off the map. It was a reasonably short drive away from New Orleans. It was the only really progressive city in Texas. Much like New Orleans, it's a blue island in a sea of...
New Year's has always been my least favorite holiday. I have always felt like there was too much pressure to have fun at New Years. It starts with fighting to get a reservation at some tony restaurant, then the whole New Year's Eve Party dilemma: either too many or not enough invitations to parties. So this year, we decided to stay in and just let it be a quiet holiday night. Besides, this year supplied us with enough excitement to last a while. Here I am reading Corduroy's Birthday Party to Santiago.
Just did a tour of Farmer's Market's in the area. Pretty cool stuff: Vietnamese Market, New Orleans East, June 2004 German Market, Destrehan, Louisiana, June 2004
Good news. I am (sort of) back online. We changed homes and have been mostly offline for the past couple of months. The good news is that we are slowly putting evrything back in order. A few items of note: 1) We moved from the Faubourg Marigny to the Lower Garden District. 2) We are expecting our first and hopefully only child. 3) We are leaving for Buenos Aires, Argentina on Monday. I understand that Argentina has a good telecommunications infrastructure. I hope that I will be able to update this blog from there with my adventures from beef country.
Forwarded to me from a friend: 15 things to do at Wal-Mart while your spouse/partner/parent is taking their own sweet time: 1. Get 24 boxes of condoms and randomly place them in peoples carts while they are not looking. 2. Set all the alarm clocks in Housewares to go off at 5-minute intervals. 3. Make a trail of tomato juice on the floor leading to the restrooms. 4. Walk up to an employee and tell him/her in an offical tone, "Code3" and watch what happens. 5. Go to the Service Desk and ask to put a bag of M&M's on lay away. 6. Move a "CAUTION - WET FLOOR" sign to a carpeted area. 7. Set up a tent in the camping department and tell other shoppers you'll invite them in if they bring pillows from the bedding department. 8. When a clerk asks if they can help you, begin to cry and ask "Why cant you people just leave me alone?" 9. Look right into the security camera, using it as a mirror and pick your nose. ...
André Breton (1896-1966) lives, France. Poet, essayist, critic, editor, communist, surrealist, promoter. Artaud: Does Surrealism still hold the same importance in the organization & disorganization of our lives? Breton: It is all mud, almost entirely composed of flowers. http://www.creative.net/~alang/lit/surreal/writers.sht#Breton
If you give me six lines written by the most honest man, I will find something in them to hang him. -Cardinal Richelieu, or some neighborhood associations