Claremont Insider: Grab Bag
Showing posts with label Grab Bag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grab Bag. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

About Town


Glimpsed from afar:

A few weeks ago we were on a hike up by Palmer Canyon and caught a glimpse of a Great Egret perched atop a tall pine tree. It sat still there for a long while then suddenly spread its wings wide and sailed off along the foothills towards the San Antonio Dam.

Quite a majestic sight. Egrets. Who knew? You never know what you'll find out and about our town.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Six Degrees of Separation: Claremont, CMC, Kerri Dunn, Gary Lincenberg, Khristine Eroshevich, Anna Nicole



Claremont is home to Claremont McKenna College.




In March 2004, somebody vandalized Kerri Dunn's car in a parking lot at Claremont McKenna College with racial epithets.






In August 2004, CMC visiting professor Kerri Dunn was convicted on eyewitness testimony of vandalizing her own car.






Gary Lincenberg, of Bird, Marella, etc., etc., etc., & Lincenberg, was Dunn's attorney during her trial in Pomona Superior Court.



Dr. Khristine Elaine Eroshevich, who is under investigation by the California Medical Board is represented by Gary Lincenberg.




Anna Nicole, supermodel, died in February, and drugs were implicated. Dr. Khristine Eroshevich was her shrink and prescribed for her more than 1,800 pills, including the chloral hydrate implicated by the medical examiner.


Remember, the Insider connects the dots for you.

(Dr. Eroshevich should hope Lincenberg does a better job for her than he did for Dunn; Dunn was sentenced to one year in Stony Lonesome.)

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Watching The War

Some of us here at the Insider have been watching the Ken Burns World War II documentary "The War" on KCET this past week. Burns' latest work is filled with first-hand accounts of the war through the eyes of veterans and their loved ones on the home front.

One of the veterans interviewed is Pomona College alum Paul Fussell, who is a Pasadena native. Fussell went on to a long career as a literary critic, but has also drawn on his experiences as a second lieutenant on the battlefields of France in 1944 to write about war, our glorification of it, the reality of the thing, and the jarring disconnect between the two. His book about the First World War, The Great War and Modern Memory, won a National Book Award in 1975.

* * *


It's odd to watch "The War" and to see a nation fully mobilized with people at home very much a part of the war effort through rationing, recycling rubber and metal, war industry jobs, war bond drives, and the sacrifice of loved ones who came home scarred or maimed or who just never came home.

Odd because to look at the nation at war now for longer than its three years, eight months in World War II, one sees no such effort, no such willingness to sacrifice on the home front while the bill for our current war continues to pile up - over $450 billion to date committed to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Yet, life goes on here as if nothing has changed, and the burden of the fighting is borne by mainly military families now and by our children tomorrow when the bills for our current wars, for Social Security, for Medicare, come due.

We're still waiting for leadership from either major party and their partisans. We won't hold our breaths.


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We've been fans of some of Burns' past works - "The Civil War", "The Brooklyn Bridge", to name a couple - but we've noticed that Burns' films have become longer and in some cases less focused than his earlier works.

Some of the reviews of "The War" have not been kind. New Yorker television critic Nancy Franklin wrote in the magazine's September 24th edition:


You have to work very hard, and take yourself very seriously as the keeper of the keys to America, to make a tedious documentary about the Second World War. But that is what Ken Burns and Lynn Novick have done.... They've taken a subject that is inexhaustible and made it merely exhausting.

The so-called "Ken Burns effect," the use of pans and scans over a still photo with the camera lingering over a face and pulling in tightly with contemplative musical bridges has certainly made Burns an easy target for parody.

"The Old Negro Space Program," a short film by Andy Bobrow, is one such Burnsian mockumentary (this is about ten minutes a contains a bit of profanity, if you're offended by that sort of thing):



Saturday, July 28, 2007

Wildlife

Bobcats below Palmer Canyon
(Click on photo to enlarge)

We decided to go on a hike last week and ended up driving to the Claremont Wilderness Park early in the morning before it got too hot. We ended up heading east towards Potato Mountain on the fire road at the water tank.

The vegetation seems to have recovered nicely from the fire in 2003, but was looking pretty dry. Coming down at Palmer Canyon, we were walking back to the Wilderness Park parking lot at Mills and Mt. Baldy Rd. and caught these two fellows cooling themselves in an olive tree near the Padua Hills Theater.

Nice to see there's still some wildlife around, even with all the new home construction in the area the past 20 years or so.

You can find some good San Gabriel Mountains hikes here if you're in the mood for a little local adventure.