Close Encounter of the Human Kind

patients.jpgAbraham Verghese, M.D., is the Joaquin Cigarroa Jr. Chair and Marvin Forland Distinguished Professor at the University of Texas Health Sciences Center in San Antonio. After volunteering at the Houston shelters during the relief effort for the Hurricane Katrina evacuees, Dr. Verghese’s story of meeting the first hurricane evacuees that were sent to San Antonio resonated with me because it is similar to many conversations that I have had over the past couple of weeks with various evacuees:

Hesitantly, I asked each patient, “Where did you spend the last five days?” I wanted to reconcile the person in front of me with the terrible locales on television. But as the night wore on, I understood that they needed me to ask; to not ask was to not honor their ordeal. Hard men wiped at their eyes and became animated in the telling. The first woman, the one who seemed mute from stress, began a recitation in a courtroom voice, as if preparing for future testimony.

Read the entire unvarnished account. Also, check out this Bob Herbert NY Times piece that relates how the corporate owners of the hard-hit Methodist Hospital in east New Orleans responded to the flood after the hurricane by sending emergency relief supplies to the hospital. Unfortunately, the owners sent the supplies to the airport where FEMA officials confiscated them and sent the supplies elsewhere. Along those same lines, here is the story of a volunteer doctor during the relief effort who a FEMA official ordered to stop treating a patient because he was not registered with FEMA.
Finally, here is a helpful FactCheck.org compilation of stories relating to who knew what when in regard to Hurricane Katrina.

Do you ever feel this way?

frustration.jpgTheodore Dalrymple is probably best known for his weekly columns in The Spectator and his essays in the American quarterly City Journal. He is a psychiatrist working in an inner city area in Britain where he is affiliated with a large hospital and a prison. His columns report on the lifestyles and ways of thinking of Britain’s growing underclass, and in his book, Life at the Bottom, he warns that this underclass culture is spreading through society.
In his latest City Journal piece, Mr. Dalrymple expresses the frustration that he feels in responding to the various pooh-bah theories that seem to abound these days:

In Australia recently, I shared a public platform with an educationist, who had won awards for social innovation in the field of education for disadvantaged minorities. I was looking forward to what she had to say.
I was soon in a towering rage, however. She uttered some of the most foolish cliches of radical education theory, now about 40 years old—theories that I had fondly thought were now behind us, . . .
Halfway through my own reply, however, I suddenly became bored. Why do I spend so much time arguing against such obvious rubbish, which should be both self-refuting and auto-satirizing the moment someone utters it? Why not just go and read a good book?
The problem is that nonsense can and does go by default. It wins the argument by sheer persistence, by inexhaustible re-iteration, by staying at the meeting when everyone else has gone home, by monomania, by boring people into submission and indifference. And the reward of monomania? Power.

Read the entire piece. Hat tip to Craig Newmark for the link to Mr. Dalrymple’s latest.

2005 Weekly local football review

david carr2.jpgPittsburgh 27 Texans 7

“Houston, we have a problem.”
After an absolutely awful performance in Week One of the NFL schedule, the Texans outdid themselves in their home opener by rolling over and playing dead to the Pittsburgh Steelers, 27-7. This is a Texans team that is clearly in turmoil, as most of the players are lifeless and merely going through the motions. In fact, the Texans are beginning to resemble those vintage Oiler disaster-teams of the early 1970’s.

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Stros 2005 Review: Stros enter the stretch run

RogerClemens13.jpgJeffBagwell4.jpgAfter almost writing off the Stros’ playoff chances a couple of weeks ago, a couple of future Hall of Famers turned in the type of remarkable performances that might just make the difference in pushing the Stros into the National League Wild Card Playoff berth.
On this past Wednesday, after the Stros had lost two straight games to the Marlins and fallen 1.5 games behind the Fish in the race for the Wild Card playoff spot, Roger Clemens took the mound 15 hours after his mother’s death and pitched the Stros to a desperately needed 10-2 victory over the Marlins. Then, on Friday, Jeff Bagwell came off the bench in only his third at bat since coming back after four months on the disabled list to hit a two out, pinch hit single in the bottom of the ninth to drive in the winning run in a 2-1 victory over the Brewers that pushed the Stros back into the lead in the Wild Card race. With their series sweep of the Brewers, the Stros have now won five straight games as they prepare for their final 13 regular season games over the last two weeks of the regular season.

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John McMullen, R.I.P.

John McMullen2.gifJohn McMullen — who went from savior of the Houston Astros franchise to one of the more reviled owners in Houston professional sports history — died yesterday at his home in Montclair, New Jersey. McMullen was 87 years old.
McMullen was a successful businessman from the New York area who became interested in investing in professional sports in the mid-1970’s when New York Yankee owner George Steinbrenner persuaded him to buy a limited partnership interest in the Yankee franchise. That experience prompted McMullen — who was known to be a quite witty man — to observe “[t]here is nothing quite so limited as being a limited partner of George Steinbrenner’s.”

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David Toms hospitalized

david_toms.jpgPopular Shreveport, Louisiana-based PGA Tour golfer David Toms was hospitalized yesterday on an emergency basis after he was seen clutching his chest and taking a knee due to an escalated heart rate while playing the first round of the 84 Lumber Classic in Pennsylvania. Toms was rushed to a hospital via Life Flight helicopter where he is now reported to be in stable condition.
Update: Toms has been released from the hospital after being diagnosed with Supraventricular Tachycardia, which is a general term for any rapid heart rate originating above the ventricles. It is generally a non-life-threatening condition that can be either treated with medication or cured with minor surgery.

Doesn’t the Fifth Circuit know about Gallery Furniture?

5th Cir logo9.gifThe Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals plan to re-open for business this week in Houston ran into a logistics problem — furniture for the Court’s personnel could not be delivered until this weekend. Accordingly, the Court has pushed back its re-opening date to September 21 and the new deadline for filing non-emergency pleadings is October 10. Here is the Court’s announcement and related Order.
Meanwhile, this Chronicle article on the Fifth Circuit’s operations notes that none of the Court’s files in its New Orleans offices appear to have been damaged by the flood.

In the wake of KPMG

deutscheb3.gifFollowing on this post from last month, this New York Times article reports that, on the heels of KPMG’s deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department and the subsequent indictment of eight former KPMG partners, federal prosecutors are apparently focusing on other firms involved in the creation and promotion of allegedly illegal tax shelters, including Deutsche Bank and possibly Ernst & Young, the law firm of Sidley, Austin, Brown & Wood, and Texas-based law firms Jenkens & Gilchrist and Scheef & Stone. Here are the previous posts on the KPMG tax shelter saga.

The myopia of the Times

Jamie Olis.jpgIt should be considered progress whenever the New York Times runs an article questioning the draconian prison sentences that are being handed down to business executives in connection with the government’s criminalization of business during the post-Enron era. However, one question is prompted by the Times article:
How on earth does one write such an article without noting the sad case of Jamie Olis?
For much more complete analysis of white collar criminal sentences, check out this post over at Doug Berman’s blawg, Sentencing Law and Policy.

Spitzer goes after former Marsh execs

spitzernew2.jpgEven news relating to natural disasters cannot push the Lord of Regulation out of the public eye for long.
In a widely-anticipated move, Mr. Spitzer’s office indicted eight former Marsh Inc. insurance brokers and executives yesterday on criminal-fraud charges in connection with Mr. Spitzer’s long-running investigation of alleged bid-rigging in the insurance industry. Earlier posts on Mr. Spitzer’s forays against the Marsh employess are here and here.

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