2/7/2010:
Four years after Hurricane Katrina, the New Orleans Saints
celebrate a Super Bowl win over the Indianapolis Colts, 3-17, in Miami.
The underdog Saints fall behind 10-0 in the first quarter before two
second period field goals make the score 10-6. New Orleans coach Sean
Payton has a surprise in store on the second half kickoff; a successful
onside kick. The Saints drive for a touchdown, add another field goal
for a 13-10 lead, and then fall behind 17-16. But a two-yard pass from
Drew Brees to tight end Jeremy Shockey and a to-point conversion put the
Saints back on top, 24-17. The Colts march for a game-tying TD when
cornerback Tracy Porter returns an interception 74 yards for a score.
Brees has 32 completions in 39 attempts for 288 yards, two TDs, and no
interceptions.
Birthdays:
Dan Quisenberry b. 1953
Carney Lansford b. 1957
Rick Neuheisel b. 1961
Juwan Howard b. 1973
Steve Nash b. 1974
2/81/942:
A
baseball game between major leaguers and convicts at California's
Folsom Prison is stopped when it's discovered that two prisoners,
serving life sentences, have escaped. The pros lead 24-5 at the end of
the seventh inning when the guards go after the pair of escapees, who
are found two hours later. The major leaguers in attendance include
Ernie Bonham, Gus Suhr, Joe Marty, Johnny Babich, and future Hall of
Famer Ernie Lombardi.
Birthdays:
Joe Black b. 1924
Clete Boyer b. 1937
Marques Johnson b. 1956
Dino Ciccarelli b. 1960
Alonzo Mourning b. 1970
2/9/1992:
Magic
Johnson comes out of retirement to shine in the NBA All-Star Game at
the Orlando Arena. Johnson announced his retirement on November 7, 1991,
after testing positive for HIV. Johnson is elected as a starter for the
Western Conference in a vote of the fans. Many players argue that
Johnson should not play because they would be at risk if he suffers an
open cut during the game. Johnson shakes off the criticism and leads the
West to a 153-113 victory with 29 points, nine assists, and five
rebounds. He ends the game with a three-pointer, and players from both
teams rush the court to congratulate the MVP. Magic won't play in an NBA
game again for four years. He will appear in 32 contests for the Lakers
near the end of the 1995-96 season before retiring for good.
Birthdays:
Dit Clapper b. 1907
Phil Ford b. 1956
Mookie Wilson b. 1956
Vladimir Guerrero b. 1976
Jameer Nelson b. 1982
A LIFE
Julia
Child used to tell young chefs, when they tried to impress her with
over-the-top food, to simplify and focus on the basics. That approach
works for biography, too, as this slender volume illustrates. You
can
find a Julia biography with more facts and dates, but you won’t find
another that captures the true essence of the French Chef—and her
marriage and her remarkable late-blooming food career—with as much
panache.
|
JULIA CHILD, by Laura Shapiro (Penguin, 2009) |
WHODUNIT
Secretive
and brilliant architect Nicholas Dyer is commissioned to build seven
new churches in the aftermath of London’s Great Fire. Nearly 300 years
later, Detective Nicholas Hawksmoor (another Nicholas!) realizes that a
series of murders is linked by those church sites. Part ghost story,
part metaphysical meditation, entirely enthralling.
|
HAWKSMOOR, by Peter Ackroyd (Penguin, 1993) |
A LA MODE
This provocative book takes Brillat-Savarin’s famous maxim in another direction: “Tell me what you
wear
and I’ll tell you who you are.” Journalist and award-winning novelist
Linda Grant has crafted a meditation on the pleasure of clothing,
weaving intimate links between what we put on our bodies and what our
deepest psyches hold. Whether you’re a dedicated follower of fashion or
one who spurns such shallow pursuits, there’s no avoiding the fact that
clothes do, indeed, make the (wo)man.
|
THE THOUGHTFUL DRESSER: THE ART OF ADORNMENT, THE PLEASURES OF SHOPPING, AND WHY CLOTHES MATTER, by Linda Grant (Scribner, 2010) |
Labels: book of the day, sports fact of the day