Oral Fixation

Ken AshfordWeb RecommendationsLeave a Comment

ToothpasteryflickrOn Flickr, the photo-sharing website, some user named "toothpastery" is publishing photos of her toothpaste.

Twice a day.

Every day.

Along with a description of the toothpaste.

Apparently, it’s art.  The profile of "toothpastery" (which identifies her real name as "Joanna") explains:

For the most part, I’m probably just objectifying toothpaste in an unhealthy way.

These images are methodically captured, lovingly hand-tagged and uploaded daily.

This is more boring for me than it is for you.

Yes, I imagine so.

[Via Boing Boing]

Okay, I Can Roll With This

Ken AshfordPopular CultureLeave a Comment

12adco_600x330

Changes made to Monopoly:

  • tokens miniature versions of a Toyota Prius hybrid car, an order of McDonald’s French fries, a New Balance running shoe, a cup of Starbucks coffee or a Motorola Razr cellphone
  • Properties no longer based on Atlantic City streets; they now include real estate from Boston and Washington to Las Vegas and Hollywood
  • The four railroads supplanted by the country’s four busiest airports: Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson, Kennedy in New York, Los Angeles and O’Hare in Chicago.
  • Inflation: For example, rather than collecting $200 each time Go is passed, in the new edition the player collects $2 million.

The problem is, the rules are basically the same.  So it’s still a tediously dull game.

New Rules

Ken AshfordPopular CultureLeave a Comment

Ga_dish_suri150x215Rule #1:  Babies born unto celebrities are not themselves celebrities.

Rule #2:  It is not "news" when a celebrity gives birth to a new baby.  This is a normal occurance that happens everyday to hundreds of thousands of ordinary couples.  The fact that it happened to someone who (arguably) sings does not make it "newsworthy".

Rule #3:  Britney Spears and Kevin Federline are no longer celebrities.

Bush Vows To Google Bin Laden

Ken AshfordWar on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

Satire at MSNBC:

Find444Sept. 12, 2006 – In a nationally televised speech today, President George W. Bush issued his most direct threat ever to Osama bin Laden, vowing to use the search engine Google to find the Al Qaeda terror leader.

"Osama bin Laden, you can run, but you can’t hide," Bush said, with his trademark steely resolve.  "Google will find you."

The president concluded his speech by warning the world’s most wanted man, "I’m Googling you right now. And I’m feeling lucky."

News reports that the CIA had recently disbanded a special unit dedicated to finding bin Laden suggested that the White House no longer saw his capture as a top priority. But Bush’s decision to use what he called "the most powerful search engine on the Internets" has sent a different message.

But even as the president announced plans to enlist Google in the search for bin Laden, he attempted to manage the expectations of the American people, warning, "The Googling of Osama bin Laden will be a long and arduous Googling."

Bush also acknowledged that he tried to use the auction site eBay last month to ensnare bin Laden, when news surfaced that the terror mastermind was a fan of the singer Whitney Houston.

The White House auctioned an autographed photo of Houston on the site, but the plan failed when the winning bid was made by North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il.

Elsewhere, Vice President Dick Cheney said that major progress had been made in the war on terror, particularly in the area of television photo ops.

Nathan Tabor on “Plan B”: Wrong Again

Ken AshfordSex/Morality/Family Values, Women's IssuesLeave a Comment

Nathan says:

Planned Parenthood and other members of the abortion industry want to change the definition of pregnancy, claiming that pregnancy begins with implantation of a fertilized egg, rather than at fertilization — the point when the egg and the sperm unite. By altering the definition of pregnancy, Planned Parenthood officials can claim with a straight face that the morning-after pill can prevent abortion rather than cause one.

Wrong again, Nathan.  Here’s what Planned Parenthood actually says:

EC (emergency contraception) contains hormones found in birth control pills and prevents pregnancy by stopping ovulation or fertilization. Theoretically, EC could also prevent implantation, but that has not been proven scientifically.  Plan B® is a brand of hormone pills approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) specifically for emergency contraception.

So is Plan B a contraceptive pill (i.e., "birth control") or an abortion pill?  Let’s get one thing clear about what Plan B does and doesn’t do:

Many people think EC can’t be birth control, since it’s taken after intercourse. This is–forgive me–a misconception. Sex education classes often give the impression that the egg waits for sperm to show up. It’s usually the other way around. An egg loses its fertility within 12 to 24 hours. It takes sperm about 10 hours to reach the egg, and sperm can survive in the female reproductive tract for up to five days. If you want to get pregnant, you’d better send in the sperm before the egg shows up. But if you don’t want to get pregnant, and the sperm are on their way or already there, you still have time to stop the egg.

That’s the idea behind Plan B. "It prevents pregnancy mainly by stopping the release of an egg," says the manufacturer, Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Therefore, Plan B really is a contraceptive, not an "abortion bill".  It prevents fertililzation by preventing the release of the egg.  And implantaion (despite what Nathan thinks) doesn’t enter into the equation.

Now, it is possible that it could abort a fertilized egg, assuming the timing is just right.  How?  Well, it depends on the point of the woman’s cycle.  If the egg has already been released when Plan B is taken, then it is possible for it to have been fertilized when Plan B is taken. 

In that situation, Plan B could destroy an already-fertilized fertilized egg.  However, even assuming that the timing is right, the odds of Plan B "aborting" a fertilized egg is "very low".

But when used as intended, Plan B prevents fertilization, and is therefore "birth control".

And Nathan Tabor is ignorant.  You really need to read his article.  The best part is when defends himself for arguing that Plan B is an "abortion pill".  What medical experts does he cite to support that contention?  The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Pontifical Academy For Life.  Seriously.

UPDATE:  Amanda Marcotte takes Nathan to town, too.

This Guy Went To Law School?

Ken AshfordConstitutionLeave a Comment

John Yoo, Bush’s chief legal advisor:

"We are used to a peacetime system in which Congress enacts the laws, the president enforces them, and the courts interpret them. In wartime, the gravity shifts to the executive branch.”

This is simply flat-out entirely 100% untrue.

Our "system" is set out in the Constitution, and it’s the same "system" regardless of whether we are at peace and at war.  It’s not like we have a "peacetime" Constitution, and a "wartime" Constitution.

Glenn Greenwald gets to the heart of the matter:

The Constitution is actually pretty clear on that score. Article I says "All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States" — Article II says the President "shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed" — Article III says "the judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in . . . inferior Courts." That arrangement isn’t really a side detail or something that shifts based on circumstance. It’s pretty fundamental to the whole system. In fact, if you change that formula, it isn’t really the American system of government anymore.

On Bush’s Speech Last Night

Ken AshfordBush & Co., Iraq, War on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

This commentary in the New York Times nails it:

Fending off the chaos that would almost certainly come with civil war would be a reason to stay the course, although it does not inspire the full-throated rhetoric about freedom that Mr. Bush offered last night. But the nation needs to hear a workable plan to stabilize a fractured, disintegrating country and end the violence. If such a strategy exists, it seems unlikely that Mr. Bush could see it through the filter of his fantasies.

It’s hard to figure out how to build consensus when the men in charge embrace a series of myths. Vice President Dick Cheney suggested last weekend that the White House is even more delusional than Mr. Bush’s rhetoric suggests. The vice president volunteered to NBC’s Tim Russert that not only was the Iraq invasion the right thing to do, “if we had it to do over again, we’d do exactly the same thing.”

It is a breathtaking thought. If we could return to Sept. 12, 2001, knowing all we have seen since, Mr. Cheney and the president would march right out and “do exactly the same thing” all over again. It will be hard to hear the phrase “lessons of Sept. 11” again without contemplating that statement.

I like what Richard Cohen says, too:

On "Meet the Press" on Sunday, Dick Cheney said that if he had it to do all over again, he would still go to war in Iraq — "we’d do exactly the same thing," he said. Why? Is the man incapable of learning from experience? We now know from umpteen reports that there was no link between bin Laden and Hussein. We now know, the Weekly Standard notwithstanding, that Mohamed Atta did not meet in Prague with someone from Iraqi intelligence. We now know that Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction and that the Iraq war — which has cost America more than 2,500 lives, 20,000 casualties, the respect of the world and billions of dollars — is for naught. Talleyrand said of the Bourbons that they forgot nothing and learned nothing. It will be said of Cheney that he forgot everything and learned nothing.

How did bin Laden get so lucky? How did he get so fortunate in his choice of enemies? The Bush administration not only validated his wildest dreams — dreams that even some of his aides thought were unrealistic — but went even further. By using torture, by the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, by employing "extraordinary renditions" of suspects to countries where they could be tortured, by insisting on going it almost alone in Iraq, by telling the international community to shove it, by declaring a war for an idée fixe — this fierce obsession with Hussein goes back a long way — the United States has made itself reviled in much of the world.

But Keith Olbermann said it best.  The best part:

How dare you, Mr. President, after taking cynical advantage of the unanimity and love, and transmuting it into fraudulent war and needless death,  after monstrously transforming it into fear and suspicion and turning that fear into the campaign slogan of three elections?  How dare you — or those around you — ever "spin" 9/11?

Just as the terrorists have succeeded — are still succeeding — as long as there is no memorial and no construction here at Ground Zero.

So, too, have they succeeded, and are still succeeding as long as this government uses 9/11 as a wedge to pit Americans against Americans.

Saddam: “We Will Crush Your Heads”

Ken AshfordIraqLeave a Comment

CNN:

A Kurdish villager testified Tuesday that he fled an attack by Saddam Hussein’s forces 18 years ago, leaving behind his mother and two sisters. Years later, their identity cards were discovered in a mass grave, he said.

"Congratulations! you are in a cage, Saddam," witness Ghafour Hassan Abdullah said as he stared at the ousted president. Hussein later lashed out at "agents of Iran and Zionism" in the courtroom and vowed to "crush your heads."

Where have I head that before?

Oh.  Yeah.

Crush_2

My WTC Stories

Ken AshfordHistoryLeave a Comment

[NOTE: John Dennis Levi Tribute here]

Every New Yorker has a WTC connection.  During my ten years in New York, I had many.

My first encounter with the towers was actually in 1976.  I was a teenager living in New Hampshire, but our family was visiting my uncle (who lived an hour upstate from NYC) so we could watch the tall ships for the country’s bicentennial celebration.  We watched them sail majestically in the harbor from our vantage point in Battery Park at the lower tip of Manhattan. 

At one point, I broke free from the "fam", and ran to the WTC towers, then just newly built.  Because they were so huge, I thought they were only minutes away, but even for a running teenager, it took about ten minutes to get to them.

Wtc600x450I remember standing (breathless) at the very foot of one of the towers — what I assume now to be the South Tower — and looking up.  It was amazing.  Because there are no recesses in the building (like, say, the Empire State Building), you could stand toe-to-toe with the base of the building, crane your neck up, and look at the top — half a mile into the sky.  It was pretty impressive for a kid who grew up in rural New Hampshire. 

Ten years later, I was living in New York (well, living in Brooklyn, working in Manhattan).  I had moved there in 1986 after college with my then-girlfriend Fiona, who secured a job as a waitress at Windows On The World, the classy restaurant atop the North Tower. On several occasions, I dined there and enjoyed the magnificent views.

Over the years, I had numerous meetings in various offices of those towers, for various reasons.  Even halfway up the towers, looking out those windows was amazing.  And feeling the slight sway of the buildings under your feet during a windy day was kind of fun.

February 26, 1993

I was a third-year law student at NYU in 1993.  As any third-year law student will tell you, a 3L’s focus in the second semester is not so much on completing law school and passing law school exams, but preparing for the impending bar exam. 

Throughout law school, I clerked part-time at the law firm of Slotnick & Baker, a small "boutique" law firm specializing in high-profile criminal defense cases.  The firm consisted of 4 lawyers, me, a paralegal, and a secretary.  I had worked there since 1987 (I started as a paralegal).

A few weeks earlier, I had informed the senior partner Barry Slotnick that it was my intention to cut back on my time with the firm during my second semester, so I could focus on BarBri bar exam preparation courses.  So I was there only once or twice a week.

I was not supposed to work on February 26, 1993.  But I made an unscheduled visit to the law office, mostly to tie up some loose ends.

Wtc18_1Slotnick & Baker at that time was located at 225 Broadway, just diagonal from the World Trade Center towers.  Pictured here is 225 Broadway on 9/11/01 (it’s the tall building on the right side of the photo — one of the Twin Towers behind it is collapsing).

Every day when I was employed there, I took the subway to work.  I typically would get off at the WTC stop, and come up to the street through the underground concourse mall two stories below the entire WTC complex.

I only planned to be at the firm for only a few hours on February 26.  I had just finished a class that morning, and I had another one sometime in the early afternoon.  I was just going in to get a few things, grab some lunch, and go back to school.

Nadia was glad to see me.  She was the paralegal there, having replaced me a few years earlier when I moved up to "law clerk".  A few days earlier, she had been given an actual office with an actual window.  She no longer had to work in the law library, sitting at a long desk.  "Come see my office," she said.  "I’ve decorated it."

I was happy to oblige.  Her office, in fact, was my old office (or one of them, I should say).  It was full of girly Nadia-things, as I expected.  We did our usual amount of chit-chat and flirting.  I looked out her window from the 22nd floor, which faces south. 

"Nice view," I said sarcastically. 

"At least I have a view now", Nadia smiled.

We chatted a few minutes more about various things.  Office gossip.  Nadia’s second job as a tour guide for Big Apple NYC Bus Tours.  More flirting.

Suddenly, the building shook.  The window, which I was leaning against, rattled.  And a large bang.

"Bangs" are not uncommon in New York.  Usually, it’s a sanitation vehicle slamming down one of those large green industrial trash bins.  But this is something different.

"Whoa", I said. 

Nadia giggled (because that’s what she does).

We speculated as to what it might be, but seeing nothing from her window, we quickly forgot about it.  And ten minutes later, I was saying "so long" and venturing out of the office to get lunch somewhere in the WTC concourse, and eventually return to NYU up in the Village.

As soon as I stepped outside 225 Broadway, I heard the sirens.  I turned the corner and headed toward the WTC and that’s when I saw the flashing lights.  I connected it to the blast I heard ten to fifteen minutes ago.  My initial reaction was one of annoyance: will this prevent me from getting lunch in the WTC concourse?

Then I wondered if there might have been a subway accident — a collision of trains perhaps — which might explain the bang we heard.

I hovered for several minutes, inching my way closer to what appeared to be the center of attention at the foot of the towers.  Others on the street were craning their necks upward, and so — like a lemming — I did, too.

I was almost at the base of the towers, on the plaza (which was surprisingly devoid of people), when I saw them: two women coming out one of the doors on the east side of the North Tower.  They were holding each other and looking very fatigued.  One of them was covered in soot and coughing.

The explosion, as we know now, was a bomb set off in one of the underground parking garages by an al Qaeda terrorist bent on causing one of the towers to collapse.  He grossly underestimated the strength of the building.  However, smoke from the explosion had poured up through the tower’s interior, and cut off power inside.  Just as they would eight years later, workers were evacuating the building — sometimes through smoke — by stairwell.

I went to the women and asked if they were okay.  One of them — the sooty one — asked for water.  I said I didn’t have any, but I said I would take them to where I had seen emergency vehicles minutes before.  And the three of us walked.  They asked me what had happened.  I said I didn’t know, even though I suspected it had something to do with that "bang" I heard half an hour ago.

As we walked around the base of the building toward the west side.  A fireman saw us approaching and helped the stricken woman to a paramedic vehicle, her friend in tow.  Out of the corner of my eye, I saw another fireman looking up, and I looked up as well.  There was a plume of smoke coming from one of the high floors in the tower.

Just then, I head a scuffle and looked over to see a man in a gray business suit collapse to the ground.  I assumed he was another worker in the office, although (from the glimpse of him I caught) he didn’t appear to be covered in soot.  Several firemen and policemen quickly went to his aid.

Apart from me, there were a few other civilians in the immediate area.  I heard a policeman instructing them to move back several blocks.  He was concerned about falling glass from the upper floors plummeting down to the streets below.  Not needing a hint, I left the scene and made my way to the subway, looking back over my shoulder to watch the events.  On my way, I ran into a few other people looking for medical attention, and I directed them to the emergency workers.

I arrived at the subway entrance, where a policeman said that they were closing the subway.  This meant that I would have to walk several city blocks uptown to get to the next station. 

I doubted that the subways were running, so walking to another station didn’t make much sense.  With nothing else to do, I stayed around for a while (behind police barricades) watching what I could.

About 20 minutes later, I happened to see an empty cab, which I hailed. I took it to NYU, just in time for class.  The cabbie said he heard it was a bomb on the upper floor (he was wrong, it was in the underground garage).

Six people died that day, and over one thousand were injured, in the first largely forgotten al Qaeda attack on American soil.

September 11, 2001

Eight and a half years later, I’m no longer a "New Yorker" (not that I ever really was).  I had moved to North Carolina in 1997, getting a job with a large southern law firm doing tobacco litigation.

On that Tuesday, I was to meet with a partner, Bob Pierce, that morning to go over some responses to discovery.  Bob, like me, is a transplanted New Englander who practiced law in New York for several years before heading down south.

I was running late that morning, but my meeting with Bob wasn’t until 11:00.  I was almost out the door at 8:55 a.m. when Cheryl called.

Cheryl and I have almost nothing in common, except that we’re both news junkies.  A dyed-in-the-wool southern conservative and a dyed-in-the-wool northern liberal, we took great pleasure in ribbing each other about the failures of Clinton/Bush (as the case may be).  In fact, our frequent political debates are still legendary. 

But the two of us had a huge falling out about a couple of years earlier, and had barely spoken since then, even though we worked side-by-side (literally and figuratively).  Only recently had we recommenced our communications with each other outside of work, so this call from Cheryl on 9/11 was extremely out of the ordinary.

"Are you watching this?" she said.

"What are you talking about?"

She told me to turn on the TV, which was in the bedroom of my rented house.  I did.  It was on all the channels.  The North Tower in flames.  A plane had flown into it.

We stayed on the phone, both watching our respective TVs, speculating as to what was happening.  We were both about to hang up and make our way into work when the second plane hit.  We saw it at the same time.

Like the rest of the country, we were riveted.  As it became clear that America was under attack, Cheryl started to cry.  Her tears turned to panic.  She was concerned about her daughter in school, and whether or not she should take her out for the day. 

I calmed Cheryl down and told her that junior high schools in Winston-Salem were probably not high-ranking terrorist targets.  But Cheryl — ever the alarmist — was concerned about planes flying into nuclear plants, and the spread of radiation.  But over time — interrupted by phone calls from her mother — I stayed on the phone with Cheryl and calmed her.

At 10:30 a.m., I was abandoning hopes of tearing myself away from the television and making my 11:00 meeting with Bob.  So, I called him from home.  He had heard that a plane — one plane — had flown into one of the towers.  No, I said, it was two planes, and the Pentagon had been hit.  He thought I was kidding at first, but then he could tell I meant it.

I also told him that the towers had collapsed.  There was a long silence on the other end of the phone.  No doubt Bob, like me, was going through the Rolodex in his mind, trying to think of any friends or colleagues from his New York days who lived or worked in the WTC area. 

"How much of them have collapsed?", he asked.

"Both of them.  All of them.  There’s nothing there."

I’m not sure he believed me.  "Okay", he said quietly.  We talked a little about people he knew who worked in the area, but our conversation ended abruptly when his wife called.

I tried to call Mary, a friend in New York.  I couldn’t get through.

The sense as events unfolded that morning — as I’m sure you all remember — was "What’s next?"   As soon as you thought it was over, the news would report some more horror.  A crashed plane in Pennsylvania.  And so on.

But shortly after noon, when it was clear that the "attacks" had subsided.  I made my way to work, although little work was being done that day.  Mike, the senior partner at the off-site facility where I worked, gathered all 100 or so employees in the tiny conference room and encouraged people to see past the day’s events and recognize this as a national tragedy which, like all tragedies, is something to overcome — not something to feel defeated or threatened by.  As I recall, he quoted Chruchill.

Weeks later, shortly after regular flight service resumed, Melinda and I flew to New York.  It was, I believe, in mid-October.  Naturally, we visited Ground Zero which was — incredibly — still smoldering.  New York was still in a state of shock. 

Makeshift memorials dotted every corner, firehouse, and park.  At night, two shafts of light penetrated the sky where the Twin Towers once stood.

And the posters.  My God, the posters.  The walls of Grand Central Station were lined with "Have You Seen…?" leaflets, printed and distributed by families and friends hoping that their lost loved ones had still survived.  At that point in time, all hope of finding lost loved ones had perished, but nobody was prepared to take the posters down.  So there they were, a museum piece of current history — a sad reminder of what had taken place mere weeks earler.

It was a very sobering trip.

It’s been a rather sobering five years.

Tribute: John Dennis Levi

Ken AshfordBlogging1 Comment

299611

2,996 is a tribute to the victims of 9/11.

On September 11, 2006, over 2,996 volunteer bloggers
join together for a tribute to the victims of 9/11.
Each person will pay tribute to a single victim.

We will honor them by remembering their lives.

THE SEVENTH SENSE is proud to pay tribute to JOHN DENNIS LEVI

******************************************************

LevijohnJohn Dennis "JD" Levi, age 50 of Lexington, NY, died on September 11th, 2001 while heroically performing his duties as a Police Officer for the NY & NJ Port Authority.

He was the beloved son of Johanna; devoted father of Dennis and Jennifer; cherished Pop-Pop to Katerina.

Funeral services Saturday, December 15, 2001 9:45AM from the D.J. Schaefer Funeral Home, 4123 4th Avenue, Bklyn. Mass of the Resurrection 10:15AM St. Michael’s RC Church. Visitation Friday 2-5 and 7-9PM. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Port Authority WTC Disaster Survivors Fund, c/o Port Authority Police Benevolent Assoc., 611 Palisade Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632.

******************************************************

Levi_1A Cop Who Rode a Harley

Debralee Scott walked into the Greenwich Village bar Hogs & Heifers on Dec. 15, 1995, and there he was — a cop who rode a Harley. The rugged, tattooed man who wore a cowboy hat asked her to dinner. "It was love at first sight," said Ms. Scott, an actress.

Five years later, on a cross-country trip, John Dennis Levi, a police officer with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, proposed to her in a hotel room in Winslow, Ariz., the town mentioned in an Eagles song. It was to be a March wedding.

But he took the call for overtime at 6 a.m. on Sept. 11, because he liked to be with her on the weekends. He called her when the first plane hit. He called again from the basement of the World Trade Center, as he searched for evidence.

He was thoughtful like that. He even made a beauty parlor for his mother, Joanne Priavity, below her Brooklyn home. He loved his children, Dennis, 23, and Jennifer, 26. "He’d like a lot of bikes at his funeral," said Michelle Dell, the Hogs & Heifers owner. "He’d really like that."

– Profile published in THE NEW YORK TIMES on October 26, 2001.

******************************************************

Building to Make Things Better Was His Passion

John Levi, a Port Authority police officer by trade but a carpenter at heart, was about to finish the final step in remodeling his childhood home: applying wallpaper to the bathroom.

But after Sept. 11, Levi’s fiancee, Debralee Scott, and his mother, Johanna, will do the work with their own hands.

Levi’s hands built his mother’s beauty parlor, Jean’s Nails, on the first floor of the house in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. It took two years.

"He made the cabinets, the floor, the whole thing," his mother said. He was a nice kid who never got into trouble, she said.

"I lost a good son," she said. Her favorite picture of him is during his first Communion. "He was very good in everything," she said.

Levi always took good care of his mother, his fiancee said, and he enjoyed spending time with his grown children, Jennifer, 27, and Dennis, 23, and with Jennifer’s daughter, Katarina, 5.

Levi was a mechanic at the Holland Tunnel before he became a Port Authority police officer 16 years ago. His family said he was recently lauded for helping to capture a shooting suspect arriving in New York City on a bus from Boston.

Outside of work, family members said, Levi was a Harley-Davidson buff who ran a small motorcycle repair place and enjoyed hanging out at Hogs and Heifers, a downtown bar where he met Scott, a television actress.

They first ran into each other five years ago, before Scott moved to Los Angeles. They ran into each other again "by fate" last year, Scott said.

In March, the two drove east across the country together, traveling along Route 66 and "staying in bad motels."

Back in New York, the pair worked on fixing up their place, a floor of Levi’s childhood home.

"It was sort of a man apartment" when she moved in, Scott said. But with her decorating taste and his skill and love for repairing things, the couple was able to turn the apartment into a home, leaving only one little thing to finish.

In their last conversation, Levi told Scott he was in the basement of the World Trade Center, collecting evidence and clearing some debris before the second plane hit.

No one’s heard from him since.

The wallpaper – impressionistic strokes of pastel colors – will be put up by Levi’s mother, Johanna Levi, 83, and Scott, 48.

Doing the project will be "a statement of doing it together, of solidarity," Scott said. "She and I are pretty capable so I think we can pull it together."

Devi Athiappan (Newsday)

Debraleescott3_1FOOTNOTE: Some of you might remember John Levi’s fiancee — Debralee Scott — as the younger sister of Louise Lasser in the 1970’s cult hit TV show "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" or as "Hotsy" Totzi in the first season of "Welcome Back Kotter".  (Pictured at the right is Ms. Scott on one of her many appearances on "Match Game").

In March 2005, Ms. Scott collapsed into a coma for several days.  After her recovery, she was released from the hospital.  Then, on April 5, 2005, she went to take a nap, and never woke up.  Her autopsy was inconclusive.   

Is she with him now, on the back of a Harley?  I don’t doubt it one bit.

******************************************************

TRIBUTES FROM FRIENDS OF JOHN DENNIS LEVI:

Annette

Commenter Email and IP address is in file

12/02/2001 9:47:02 PM

I will miss my friend’s pat on the back and big hug I received from him every single time we saw each other. I met J.D. 4 years ago, it was my very first visit to NYC. I was beside myself when I found out he was missing, and still miss him very much everytime I enter the place where he loved to hang out and relax. He died a hero and will always be a hero to me. I will miss you.

Danny

Commenter Email and IP address is in file

06/06/2003 1:02:26 AM

John, it’s still to this day hard and unfair our family found you just as you were taken from us. Im blessed we were able to spend some time together. I will never forget the day I met the uncle I never know I had. You are a wonderful person and you will remain a part of me as you always did. May God hold you in the palm of his hands until we meet again.

Brenda Lee

Commenter Email and IP address is in file

09/12/2003 6:34:36 AM

J.D. – remember, I always called you "Cowboy"? We were counting the days to retirement. If I wanted to know how many were left, you had that magic number. Remember the academy? Shouldn’t admit this to anyone, but we had fun in the learning process. My classmate/friend. You will always have a special place in my heart. Never to be forgotten. To your family, know that he impacted many a persons life with his smile/specialness.

Dave Podesta

Commenter Email and IP address is in file

09/13/2003 2:13:57 AM

Oh, God, J.D., where do I start? We worked together at the Bus Terminal for
umpteen or so years and you were always there to watch my back. I did the same for you. I remember your Harley plate # BT BUM. We were all BT Bums weren’t we? "The un-promotables" they called our crowd. Why? Because we did our jobs in a no-nonsense way. Remember when we "took back the terminal"? What did we get for the effort. A paperweight. Remember that? I cried like a baby at your service. It’s been 2 years already and it still hurts like it was yesterday. I will always remember your wit, your humor and your laid-back attitude. Do me a favor, OK? Put in a good word for this BT Bum with the MAN. I know you’re up there. You died doing your job-but way-way beyond the call of duty. You couldn’t be anywhere else. I’ll be seeing you, Cowboy.

Vincent Epifanio

Commenter Email and IP address is in file

01/24/2004 2:37:46 AM

J.D.

I never knew you as a person on earth. GOD BLESS YOU AND YOUR SOUL. Thank You for your sacrifice. I will always pray for you.

sydney willis

Commenter Email and IP address is in file

07/12/2005 9:04:00 AM

i work with john at the bus terminal he was a great person i think about him every time i go to the terminal still miss his smile

299614

Friday iPod Random Ten

Ken AshfordRandom Musings1 Comment

  1. Vrg45_1Theme from "The Coca-Cola Kid" – Tim Finn
  2. Night Of The Swallow – Kate Bush
  3. Man Of La Mancha – Linda Eder
  4. Ants Marching – Tufts Beelzebubs
  5. Sweet Talkin’ Woman – ELO
  6. Band On The Run (Live) – Paul McCartney
  7. Pure Imagination – from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" (the original one)
  8. You Belong To Me – Carly Simon
  9. Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger – Daft Punk
  10. Hughie Travers’/Connellys’ Reel – Popcorn Behavior

Senate Passes Porkbusting Bill

Ken AshfordEconomy & Jobs & DeficitLeave a Comment

What happened to that bill that was on "secret hold"?  Congressional Quarterly reports, via TPM Muckraker:

The Senate passed legislation Thursday night that would create a massive, Google-like searchable database to track federal spending.

The legislation (S 2590), which aims to create more transparency in exactly who gets how much federal money, passed by a voice vote after both Republican and Democratic senators dropped their objections to it.

The bill had widespread support in the Senate and became something of a cause célèbre in the “blogosphere,” where liberal and conservative bloggers united in trying to figure out which senator had placed an anonymous “hold” blocking the legislation for the past month.

Democrats To The Rescue

Ken AshfordWar on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

During the President’s speech yesterday, he made this startling boast.

I learned a lot of lessons on 9/11, and one lesson is this: In order to protect this country, we will keep steady pressure, unrelenting pressure on al Qaeda and its associates. We will deny them safe haven; we will find them and we will bring them to justice.

Steady, unrelenting pressure? If that’s the case, why did two Democratic Senators have to rush in and fix another bureaucratic screwup that happened on your watch?

By a 96-0 vote, senators approved $200 million to revive a CIA unit dedicated to hunting down bin Laden and other al-Qaida leaders. News accounts in July said a CIA unit dedicated to capturing bin Laden had been disbanded.

"What does it say to violent jihadists that a terrorist mastermind remains alive and well five years after killing 3,000 Americans?" said Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D. "Our bill tells the terrorists that protecting our nation is the first priority _ and that we are going to deliver to bin Laden the justice that a mass murderer deserves," said Conrad, who sponsored the legislation with Sen. Bryon Dorgan, D-N.D.

Intelligence officials have said the realignment of CIA efforts on al-Qaida reflects a view that the terrorist group is not as hierarchical as it used to be, as well as a concern about al-Qaida-inspired groups that have begun carrying out attacks independent of bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri.

[Via The Talent Show]