NY stabbing victim comes home

Christopher McCarthy.jpgIn the good news department, Houstonian Christopher McCarthy, who was repeatedly stabbed in a shockingly random assault on a New York City subway a week ago, was released yesterday from a New York City hospital and is on his way back home to Houston. The man who assaulted McCarthy and several other subway travelers over a 12-hour period was later apprehended by NYC police.
Upon leaving the hospital, the classy 21 year-old McCarthy thanked New Yorkers for their kindness to his family and him, and expressed forgiveness for the man who attacked him. Welcome home, Chris.

The city that time forgot

New Orleans Landmark.jpgOn the heels of articles noted in earlier posts here and here, the New York Times continues its excellent series on the enormous difficulties involved in the rebuilding of New Orleans with this article that reports on the city’s strained public health system, which is attempting to cope with such things as a suicide rate that is three times higher than the pre-Hurricane Katrina rate. The article sums up the dreadful situation:

This is a city where thousands of people are living amid ruins that stretch for miles on end, where the vibrancy of life can be found only along the slivers of land next to the Mississippi. Garbage is piled up, the crime rate has soared, and as of Tuesday the National Guard and the state police were back in the city, patrolling streets that the Police Department has admitted it cannot handle on its own. The reminders of death are everywhere, and the emotional toll is now becoming clear.

Speaking of Hurricane Katrina, the Sun-Herald.com has compiled this extraordinary webpage that contains hundreds of “before and after” photographs of structures and landmarks affected by the storm. It’s well worth taking a few minutes to peruse the pictures and contemplate the enormity of the destruction facing the Mississippi-Louisiana Gulf Coast region.

Rather leaves CBS; Chung leaves asylum

dan rather.jpegconnie_chung.jpgFormer Houstonian Dan Rather‘s mercurial 44-year career at CBS News came to an end yesterday. The departure had been long anticipated after he stepped down as “CBS Evening News” anchor last year in the wake of a scandal over a report about President Bush’s Vietnam-era military service. Rather pulled no punches in publicly stating the reason for his resignation from CBS News: “[A]fter a protracted struggle, [CBS News] had not lived up to their obligation to allow me to do substantive work there.” The 74 year-old Rather is currently negotiating a deal to handle a weekly news program for Mark Cuban’s HDNet cable channel.
Meanwhile, on a less significant note, Rather’s former co-anchor at CBS News, Connie Chung, just had her dreadful show — “Weekend with Connie and Maury,” the MSNBC show with Chung and her husband, Maury Povich — mercifully terminated, but not before Chung gave this “Thanks for the Memories” musical number in farewell. Suffice it to say that I hope never to be caught in a karaoke bar with Chung.