Say what you will about his coaching, but Wade Phillips is a man full of class

ARLINGTON — Despite getting fired on Monday afternoon, former Dallas Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips kept his promise to attend a charity event Monday evening.

He didn’t say much, but he didn’t have to; just attending the One Heart Project kickoff event at Cowboys Stadium said something.

Phillips received a warm round of applause as he was announced at the fund-raiser that aims to give a second chance to at-risk and incarcerated youth.

Attendees said it took a lot of character for the former coach to show up at a public event on the same day he lost his Cowboys job.

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Never-Seen Photos of JFK

LIFE has a collection of never before seen photos of JFK that you can see here, but two pictures stood out.

This picture of a cashier checking out JFK cracked me up.

But this picture also caught my attention.  Not so much of JFK, but of the boy on the lower right who has a toy gun pointed in his mouth.

In other JFK news, you can have you JFK cake and eat it too.

JFK Birthday Cake Side Decoration from May 19th, 1962

One event has truly taken on legendary proportions, namely the birthday party given at Madison Square Garden to celebrate JFK’s 45th birthday. No one can forget sultry Marilyn Monroe in her skin-tight sequined dress singing, or heavily-breathing, a rendition of “Happy Birthday, Mr. President”. JFK’s reaction was a mixture of pleasure and embarrassment.

At the conclusion of her performance, a large birthday cake was carried into the hall. After the party, a police officer, part of a security detail, retrieved the cake side decoration as a souvenir. It has been preserved by his widow for the last forty-eight years.


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Current View of America from the Germans

Well, Spiegel in particular.  They make some very interesting observations, here are a few excerpts:

America has long been a country of limitless possibility. But the dream has now become a nightmare for many. The US is now realizing just how fragile its success has become — and how bitter its reality. Should the superpower not find a way out of crisis, it could spell trouble ahead for the global economy.

The United States is a confused and fearful country in 2010. American companies are still world-class, but today Apple and Coca-Cola, Google and Microsoft are investing in Asia, where labor is cheap and markets are growing, and hardly at all in the United States. Some 47 percent of Americans don’t believe that the America Dream is still realistic.

The Desperate States of America are loud and distressed. The country has always been a little paranoid, but now it’s also despondent, hopeless and pessimistic. Americans have always believed in the country’s capacity for regeneration, that a new awakening is possible at any time. Now, 63 percent of Americans don’t believe that they will be able to maintain their current standard of living.

The fall of America doesn’t have to be a complete collapse — it is, after all, a country that has managed to reinvent itself many times before. But today it’s no longer certain — or even likely — that everything will turn out fine in the end. The United States of 2010 is dysfunctional, but in new ways.

The country is reacting strangely irrationally to the loss of its importance — it is a reaction characterized primarily by rage. Significant portions of America simply want to return to a supposedly idyllic past. They devote almost no effort to reflection, and they condemn cleverness and intellect as elitist and un-American, as if people who hunt bears could seriously be expected to lead a world power. Demagogues stir up hatred and rage on television stations like Fox News. These parts of America, majorities in many states, ignorant of globalization and the international labor market, can do nothing but shout. They hate everything that is new and foreign to them.

The entire interplay of taxes and investments is out of joint because a 16,000-page tax code allows for far too many loopholes and because solidarity is no longer part of the way Americans think. The political system, plagued by lobbyism and stark hatred, is incapable of reaching consistent or even quick decisions.

The United States of 2010 is a country that has become paralyzed and inhibited by allowing itself to be distracted by things that are, in reality, not a threat: homosexuality, Mexicans, Democratic Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi, health care reform and Obama. Large segments of the country are not even talking about the issues that are serious and complex, like debt, unemployment and serious educational deficits.

Gridlock has become the modern America status quo, and the condition Henningsen calls “institutional idiocy” is especially obvious in the country’s most important legislative body, the Senate, which has come to resemble a royal court where nothing has happened in centuries.

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