Minnesota
After C.E.O. Compensation Flap, Johnson Was a 'Strange' Choice For Obama
According to one prominent experty on corporate governance, Barack Obama's campaign was wise to accept the resignation of James Johnson, but the selection of Johnson to lead Obama's vice presidential selection committee in the first place remains a baffling one.
"It's a judgment issue," said Charles Elson, head of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware. "Why would you pick him to begin with? I knew about him. I knew his history. And if it suddenly came to my mind, why wouldn't it come to [Obama's]?"
Johnson headed the compensation committee at the Minnesota-based UnitedHealth Group, which awarded more than $1.4 billion in stock options to its chief executive before he was forced to return nearly $620 million of that money as a result of a settlement with federal regulators and shareholders. That case, among others, led Obama to introduce legislation in the Senate to give shareholders a greater say on the compensation packages of departing C.E.O.s. Obama's leading role on that legislation was what made Johnson's selection so jarring. read more »
The Afternoon Wrap: Friday

TEST: Beatty! No! The Other One!
TEST: Beatty! No! The Other One!

Beatty! No! The Other One!

Beatty! No! The Other One!
Why the Baseball Standings Suck
No one's interested in reading the classic divisional standings; we know who won now, only two out of six races are in play, Detroit vs Minnesota in the AL Central, and LA vs San Diego in the NL West. Baseball fans are interested in the Wild Card standings, but when you click on these, you see Minnesota way ahead of Chicago in the AL and Philly edging ahead of LA in the NL. These are false standings; they leave out San Diego and Detroit, which are actually in contention for the Wild Card.
Someone should come up with a better way of presenting the standings, as an Expanded Wild Card, where a division leader is included with an asterisk, or it says: Top Two Finishers Go Through to Playoffs. As it is, the papers are just wasting space.
Altman’s Prairie: Woe Be Gone!
Chittenango Choo-Choo!
There are a lot of things I've never done and seen in the area. There's an art park, a historical society, a lake and a yacht club in fancy-pants Cazenovia. I've passed the Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, literally hundreds of times and never been inside. Sylvan Beach, on Oneida Lake, is the small-time, freshwater version of the Jersey Shore, complete with deathtrap carnival rides, scary bikers and fried everything.
Chittenango, the actual town in which I grew up and went to high school, is the birthplace of L. Frank Baum, the author of The Wizard of Oz. Downtown Chittenango, such as it is, has yellow brick sidewalks, several Oz-themed businesses, and a small Oz museum; every June there is an Oz Parade, at which a handful of surviving Munchkins make trembly appearances.
Oohs and Oz.
There are dozens of golf courses in the area, three separate Erie Canal museums, a salt museum, the museum of freaking distance running, places where you can pick your own berries, state parks for hiking and swimming, ice cream stands and family-run dairy farms. read more »
Something for everyone, if I can just keep myself from apologizing for the lameness of it all.
Much Ado About One Gal’s Tattoo: City Leaves Its Mark
Much Ado About One Gal's Tattoo: City Leaves Its Mark
New York World
“So, our champagne shower?” read more »
New York World











