Google is removing the cookies. Here’s a direct link to the actual work by Jonathan Mayer. And here’s the WSJ report, which does not appear to be behind a paywall.
Edited to add: LAT:
Google is removing the cookies. Here’s a direct link to the actual work by Jonathan Mayer. And here’s the WSJ report, which does not appear to be behind a paywall.
Edited to add: LAT:
All that airline stuff reminded me of a story I’d read a long time ago in Reader’s Digest.
I ended spending far more time than I needed to trying to track down that story (in part because I had both the title and the author’s name mangled). So just in case I want to refer to it in the future, and for the benefit of my readers (full-service blogging experience here, people; also, I think Frankie Housley should not be forgotten):
Wikipedia entry for Frankie Housley.
Knoxville “Metro Pulse” article on Frankie Housley (by way of the Wayback Machine).
I missed this last night: the Texas Rangers are asking for a special prosecutor to assist in their investigation of the Harris County District Attorney’s office.
I learned of the HouChron article by way of The Hon. Murray Newman, who points out this is the fourth special prosecutor appointed to investigate the HCDA’s office since October.
Also, just to make things a little easier, I added a “HCDA” sub-category to the law category, and edited posts appropriately. Now everything I’ve posted (AFAIK) related to the Harris County District Attorney’s office is in one place, for easy review. Just part of the full-service blogging experience here at WCD, no need to thank me.
Another topic of conversation at dinner last night: planes. Specifically, airlines.
I was having dinner with a friend tonight, and for various reasons the conversation turned to Las Vegas. We were discussing things like: could you make a go of it with a completely retro-Rat Pack themed casino? Vintage slot machines (or modern electronic reproductions of vintage slot machines), a 50s-style menu (lobster thermidor and baked Alaska?), Rat Pack impersonators giving nightly performances (that already happens to varying degrees at a lot of Vegas casinos these days)?
(I don’t know, but if I had a lot of money to burn, I’d buy the Sahara property and rights to the name and give it a shot.)
Anyway, the question came up: is there a list of Vegas casinos? The answer is obvious: this is the Internet, of course there’s a list of Vegas casinos. That’s no great shock.
More interesting is the list of defunct Vegas casinos. That has a few surprises. (I thought the Hooters Casino was defunct; actually, they filed for Chapter 11 and are up for sale. The Debbie Reynolds Hollywood Hotel also didn’t go defunct: it was sold multiple times (more on this later), spent much of the early 21st century as a dedicated hotel for United and Delta air crews, and is now owned by the Clarion people.)
But my own personal favorite is the list of Las Vegas casinos that never opened. There’s some fun ones here, such as:
Those are just a few of the high points. Just think, if things were slightly different, you could be booking a room in the Harley Davidson Hotel and Casino. Or the Montreux Resort (keep an eye out for stupids with flare guns).
LAT headline (as of 10:30 AM 2/16): “Whitney Houston’s private funeral will be streamed live on Internet”.
That’s interesting. To me, he was making it more of a “why did it take 9 APD officers to sort this out, especially given my previous interaction with a deputy constable?” thing. But that’s just me.
Michelle Gish was fired for punching a woman (who was restrained on a gurney) for spitting on her. Jose Robledo was suspended for giving “false and inaccurate statements during the investigation” of the same incident. Sgt. Mark Breckenridge was suspended for 20 days for failing to “adequately investigate the use of force” in the same incident, and Cpl. Steve Jones was suspended for 10 days “because he witnessed the incident but did not submit his report about it until told to do so by a superior, and he approved reports related to the incident that were inaccurate or incomplete”.
Gish and Robledo can appeal. I have seen reports elsewhere indicating that Breckenridge can’t, because suspensions over 15 days require the agreement of both the officer and the city. I’m not sure about Jones and his ability to appeal.
Gerhard Albert Becker has been charged with involuntary manslaughter.
The charge against him is the result of a fire in January of last year that killed Glenn Allen, a firefighter with the Los Angeles Fire Department. Allen was killed, and several other firefighters injured, in a ceiling collapse while they were fighting a fire in what the LAT describes as a “Hollywood Hills mansion”.
Okay. So why is this odd? Well, Becker isn’t the homeowner. Becker isn’t an arsonist. He didn’t start the fire. But it had not always been burning since the world’s been turning: the home had recently been rebuilt.
No, Becker is the architect who designed the home. I’ve never heard of a case where an architect has been charged as a result of a fire death. But when you read the article…
Wow. That’s…interesting. In the “tragedy waiting to happen” sort of way. More:
I’m not familiar with LA building codes. Is plastic pipe considered acceptable for sprinkler systems?
(The comments on this story are interesting as well. Apparently, the home was given a certificate of occupancy. Doesn’t that imply an inspection by the building department? I can see that they may not have gone into the attic to look at the sprinkler system: you’d expect that, but maybe the inspector was pressed for time? Or lazy? Or that’s not a standard part of inspections? But wouldn’t an 18-foot indoor “fire trough” have made them say something?)
Edited to add: Longer article from the LAT. If the accusations in this article are true (and please keep in mind that this is just the prosecution’s case), they’re damming.
Building inspectors said Becker had told them there were no plans to build fireplaces in the home, and none were spotted during a final inspection. After the fire, investigators discovered that he had installed four outdoor fireplaces inside the home, a violation of city building codes.
…
One of the fireplaces, prosecutors allege, actually vented into the room where it was located. The fireplaces also included combustible materials, like drywall, and lacked required firebreaks to keep flames from spreading out.
I rely on Lawrence for my NBA news; it would be possible for me to care less than I currently do about the NBA, but that would also be difficult.
Anyway, when Lawrence isn’t feeding me NBA news, I have to depend on FARK.
And it was from FARK that I learned that the Charlotte Bobcats are heading towards the worst season in NBA history (currently 3-25, for a .107 winning percentage).
Question, though: should we really count this? In general, I don’t give a lot of credit to records set during seasons affected by labor stoppages.
ETA: Anybody remember the 2009-2010 New Jersey Nets? (12-70, .146)
DA Lykos says she asked the Rangers to investigate, and promised full cooperation.
More on this when we know more. Don’t hold your breath; you’ll just turn an unattractive shade of blue.
I just do not understand this. I get that prisons in other countries are overcrowded and not up to US standards. But I just can’t wrap my mind around that many people dying in a fire in the modern era.
Some stuff from the NYT:
They caught Edward Maher in Missouri last week. Who?
His wife and 3-year-old son had already left for the United States. The money was never found.
Coach Susan Polgar is leaving her championship program at Texas Tech and going to Webster University in St. Louis. Worse for Tech, she’s taking the top ten players on her team with her to Webster’s program.
By the way, Coach Polgar is the chess coach.
Reading more of In the Land of Invented Languages got me to wondering. Here’s what Wikipedia turns up:
I don’t know why; this just tickles my fancy somehow.
Edited to add: In case you were wondering (and I got to wondering after posting that): there was a Klingon Wikipedia, but it was locked by Jimmy Wales in August of 2005. (A non-locked version exists here.)
New post by my sister over at the Park City Snowmamas site: a review of The Ski House Cookbook.
Two Coffee Travelers for my office: $28.04 with tax.
Receipt: free with purchase.
Sending a clear message to the gun banners: priceless.
There are some things money can’t buy. Like schadenfreude. People have to earn that. And in this case, the gun grabbers have.
…aka “My one reader who is a Frank Lloyd Wright fan and doesn’t read Balko’s blog“:
Frank Lloyd Wright’s doghouse design.
I wonder how many architects have done doghouses; I know that a few years back, Frank Gehry offered a doghouse design in a benefit auction, but I can’t find out it if was built, or if his design is online anywhere.