A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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Frank 's voluminous records would form one of the key sources for the Nuremberg prosecutors . At the trials , Frank veered between acknowledging and repudiatin g guilt for his crimes . Hermann Goering , by contrast , mustered up his old bra vado . Goering , whose outsized personality made him a favorite with the America n GIs , managed to bully most of his fellow defendants into refusing to plead gu ilty . Indeed , Persico shows that under cross-examination the cunning Goering e ven got the upper hand over his famous American prosecutor , Robert Jackson . Go ering managed to cheat the hangman as well . Persico , who seeks to clear up the mystery surrounding Goering 's suicide , argues that upon enter ing prison Goer ing secreted a cyanide capsule in his luggage and persuaded a member of the pris on staff to take pieces of luggage from the baggage room for him . Perhaps the m ost sinister figure at the trial was the cultivated technocrat Albert Speer , on e of the few in the dock who received a jail term rather than a death sentence . Though Speer used millions of foreign workers as slave labor , he managed to sh ift responsibility onto his boorish subordinate Fritz Sauckel . By taking the bl ame for Nazism in the broadest sense but avoiding any particulars , Speer manage d to tell the judges what they wanted to be told . Speer portrayed the Nazis as embodying the dange rs of a military technology that would pose even greater dan gers to humanity in the future . As Persico puts it , Speer presented himself to the court `` not as a man pleading for his life , but as one who had something valuable to tell them , someone with a vision born of redemption after immersion in evil . '' Indeed , as Speer had correctly calculated , his contrition contra sted starkly with the stonewalling of his colleagues . In the teeth of the evide nce , Generals Jodl and Keitel denied culpability for the atrocities on the East ern front . The foppish foreign minister Joachim Ribbentrop claimed that Germany had merely emulated America 's occupation of the New World . Persico , who illu minates the pitiful character of most of the Nazi leadership , does not draw the obvious conclusion that there was nothing particularly exceptional about the ch aracter of most of Hitler 's henchmen . Ordinary men committed extraordinary cri mes . In that sense , the spirit of Nuremberg lives on in Bosnia . Helyar ( Villard , $ 24 ; 576 pages ) . Hyman is a sports reporter for the Balt imore Sun Reviewed by Mark Hyman ( c ) 1994 , The Baltimore Sun If John Helyar w inds up on the best seller list with `` Lords of the Realm : The Real History of Baseball , '' it will be for the anecdotes . Exhibit A : As an infant players u nion is taking shape in 1967 , its new leader , Marvin Miller , calls a meeting and instructs players to write down their most serious grievances with the owner s . Pitcher Milt Pappas , a former Baltimore Oriole , spoke for his colleagues f irmly in the grip of the mod generation . `` There aren't enough outlets for hai r dryers in the clubhouses , '' he thundered . Exhibit B : William D. Eckert , r etired one-star general , briefly baseball commissioner in the late 1960s and ea rly '70s , had a remarkable penchant for confusing people and events . A notorio usly passionless public speaker , Eckert once began delivering remarks to an aud ience of baseball officials before realizing the speech was intended for the Ret ired Airline Pilots Association . Exhibit C : Charles O . Finley ran a cut-rate front office in his final years of owning the Oakland A's . By 1978 , the entire operation was down to six people , including a 16-year-old office assistant nam ed Stanley Burrell . Burrell has since changed his name to MC Hammer , the rap s tar , now called just plain Hammer . Helyar 's book is rich with such stories . But it 's clearly more than a collection of quotable quotes and front-office tri via . Instead , what Helyar offers is surely one of the most complete and provoc ative histories ever written of major-league baseball as it has played out in ow ners ' suites and across the collective bargaining table . It 's a tad intimidat ing at 576 pages , but considering he begins with Elysian Fields in the 1840s , and carries the story through the sale of the Orioles last fall to Peter G. Ange los , the book is anything but long-winded . A word about Helyar : He may not be as familiar to readers of sports books as Pete Golenbock or John Feinstein , wh o between them have covered every topic but the secret world of stadium ushers . But Helyar 's credentials are substantial . His `` Barbarians at the Gate '' wa s a big best seller . He has built a reputation as a solid reporter covering spo rts business issues for The Wall Street Journal . In this book , Helyar tells hi s story , in part , as he profiles some of baseball 's most influential and , wh en the author is through , least likable characters . In the process , more than a few myths are exploded . ( Begin optional trim ) For instance , he sheds a di fferent sort of light on Kenesaw Mountain Landis , the iron-willed judge credite d with bringing baseball back from the brink after the 1919 Black Sox scandal . Helyar has discovered more : `` Under Landis , the morals of baseball were purif ied and the business of baseball was ossified . '' Landis , he writes , was amon g the least progressive men of his day . He said no to lights at Crosley Field i n Cincinnati , vowing there would be no night baseball in the big leagues in his lifetime . He said no to a beer company that wanted to buy advertising on World Series radio broadcasts . If it was new , Landis said no . Other notables appea r equally as unsympathetic in Helyar 's narrative . The list is lengthy , and in cludes former baseball commissioners Peter Ueberroth and Bowie Kuhn and former o wners led by the pre-eminent owner of his generation , Walter O' Malley of the B rooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers . The miracle of Ueberroth is that he lasted as long in the job as he did , given he barely could hide his contempt for the owners . `` He treated them like retarded children , '' says a lawyer , unnamed , quoted by Helyar . ( End optional trim ) If there is a hero in the story , it is Mille r , the man who brought the players union into the 20th century , who stared dow n the owners , broke the reserve clause and paved the way for today 's million-d ollar salaries . Predictably , the owners despised him and , in Helyar 's tellin g , spent years calling him a collection of names , not all fit for this newspap er . This book is not always satisfying . For all its thoroughness , it uncovers few important news stories . There 's also the issue of sourcing . Helyar write s in a seamless , tightly organized style more like a technothriller than a nonf iction baseball book . In the preface Helyar provides a list of baseball folk wh o cooperated with his reporting . What 's missing is something more substantial that connects facts to the sources from which the author pulled them . As a news paper guy , he should see the value in that . The travel agent is as close as most tourists ever get to a free lunch . At no cost to you , an agent can recommend and book your vacation , often drawing on s pecial expertise and firsthand travel experience in making recommendations . Fin d a good one and your life is simplified . But no lunch is truly free . The prob lem with many of the roughly 32,000 travel agencies in the United States is that agents ' attentions are claimed by computerized reservation systems , airline f are wars , and fluctuations in the commissions they are paid by lodgings and air lines . That often leaves agents without time to learn geography in detail or se e many destinations themselves . Sensing an opening there , a new breed of trave l consultants has developed . They specialize in a certain area and reject the t itle `` travel agent '' as an understatement of their expertise . Some make book ings , some don't . Some accept commissions , some don't . Most interview custom ers about their preferences and interests , then come back with itinerary propos als that touch on lodgings , dining , cultural attractions and entertainment . U nlike travel agents , these consultants charge consumers upfront for their servi ce . Their prices can be daunting as much as $ 70 an hour but they can deliver a service highly prized by travelers with less time than money . Regional experti se is one advantage . Also , for those consultants who reject commissions taking their fees only from the client their advice may be less influenced by monetary considerations , and more likely to be `` pure . '' Here are a handful of such companies , listed by their territories : ( Begin optional trim ) California . P erfect Weekends ( 2059 Camden Ave. , Suite 186 , San Jose , Calif. 95124 ; tel. 800-493-3536 or 408-559-3652 ) . Susan Barton opened San Jose-based Perfect Week ends in June , 1993 , aiming to match busy travelers with B&Bs around the state . In the 11 months since , she says , she has booked more than 400 trips . Barto n charges $ 99 to plan a one-destination trip , and presumes that most of her cu stomers will be driving . She books lodgings , makes meal reservations , schedul es lessons or rentals and often builds weekends around special events . ( End op tional trim ) American West . Off the Beaten Path ( 109 E . Main St. , Bozeman , Mont. 59715 ; tel. 406-586-1311 , fax 406-587-4147 ) . Pam and Bill Bryan , bot h trained environmentalists and tour guides , started the firm in 1987 , special izing in outdoorsy trips to Arizona , New Mexico , Utah , Colorado , Wyoming , I daho , Montana and the Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Alberta . In 1 993 , Bill Bryan estimates , the company arranged trips for about 570 individual s , couples and groups , with activities such as fishing , skiing , riding , hik ing and canoeing . Fees for planning generally run $ 70 an hour , with a minimum of four or eight hours , depending on the complexity of the trip . Customers ge t detailed itineraries , plane tickets and maps . England . Oh to Be in England .. . ( 2 Charlton St. , New York , N.Y. 10014 ; tel. 212- 255-8739 , fax 212-986 -8365 ) . Jennifer Dorn , an administrator at New York University 's law school and frequent traveler to England , set up her business four years ago . She does n't make bookings ( she advises travelers to make reservations themselves or use a travel agent ) , but fills spiral-bound notebooks with itinerary recommendati ons . A typical trip takes her about 10 hours to plan . In the last year , she e stimates that she haa done about 150 itineraries for $ 150- $ 225 , depending on the number of cities in the itinerary . France . Point of View . ( 5922 Melvin Ave. , Tarzana , Calif. 91356 ; tel. 818-705-4418 , fax 818-708-7131 ) . Kajsa A gostini was born in France and spent 15 years with the French Government Tourist Office in California before striking off on her own last year . Agostini does n ot make bookings , but interviews travelers and devises an itinerary . Once the itinerary is booked , Agostini often writes to hotels to confirm reservations an d ensure personalized service . She charges about $ 200 . Italy . Marjorie Shaw 's Insider 's Italy ( P.O. Box 021816A , Brooklyn , N.Y. 11202-1816 ; tel. 718-8 55-3878 , fax 718-855-3687 . ) Shaw , who was born in Rome and lived in Italy fo r more than a decade , started her consulting business in 1988 after spending fo ur years leading walking tours through the country . Shaw maintains an office in Rome . Her databank of Italian intelligence includes roughly 400 small hotels t hroughout the country . She makes hotel and transportation bookings and gives cl ients a portfolio that runs as long as 85 pages . Her typical fee for a couple o n a two-week trip with four stops : $ 495 . ( If Shaw doesn't answer her phone , she 's on a fact-finding trip ; fax or call back later . ) When I first got off the Pennsylvania Turnpike at Morgantown , I barely glanced at the horse and buggy two-stepping along ahead of me in morning traffic . How nice , I thought carriage rides for tourists . But then I started spotting buggi es hitched outside pharmacies , hardware stores and other everyday businesses on two-lane Route 23 . They really were a normal means of transportation in these parts . There are tourist rides , too , all right . And loads of pseudo-Pennsylv ania Dutch attractions throughout rural Lancaster County . But beyond the `` Ami shland '' commercialism , a sizable community of Plain People remarkably still f lourishes much as it has for 300 years largely without benefit of automobiles , electricity and other trappings of modern life . By avoiding the main routes esp ecially kitschy U.S. 30 visitors can glimpse the old-fashioned lifestyle of the Amish without feeling like intruders . Meander along the byways and you 'll cris scross fields that inspire the designs of exquisite patchwork quilts and see far mers walking behind plows pulled by mules . Women in bonnets tend their kitchen gardens and children with Dutch cuts skip-ride home from school on old-fashioned wooden scooters . Small home-based shops display first-rate yet inexpensive loc al crafts , and roadside stands sell garden-fresh produce and mouth-watering bak ed goods . Lancaster might well be the Comfort Food Capital of the universe , em bodying the familiar aura one restaurant localizes as `` Mom and shoo-fly pie . '' Countless places feature inexpensive food that invigorates the term home cook ing . Virtually everything is made from scratch : crispy potato chips , crusty r olls , tangy condiments and flaky , gooey desserts . Some of these family-orient ed restaurants ( which seldom serve alcohol ) also specialize in all-you-can eat smorgasbords , although allowances are made for tiny appetites . One place , fo r example , prices meals for kids by their weight : five cents per pound . The a nnual Pennsylvania Dutch Food Festival , set to take place at many sites around the county June 13 to 18 , will provide a ready-made vacation focus . My first s top on my recent tour was the Pennsylvania Dutch Visitors Center , which offers a great map , piles of brochures and a 15-minute introductory film on the area . I learned that the Amish ( pronounced AH-mish , after founder Jakob Ammann ) ar e descendants of German-speaking Anabaptists , who believe the decision to be ba ptized should be made as an adult . The Amish broke off from the more liberal Me nnonites three centuries ago , fled persecution in Europe and found peace in Wil liam Penn 's new colony and various other communities in North America . Both se cts and a third Anabaptist group called the Brethren today live amicably in Lanc aster County despite wide variations in customs . The dark clothing and simple l ifestyle that distinguish the Old Order Amish symbolizes their commitment to the ir faith . They also take to heart the biblical edict against graven images , wh ich tourists are asked to respect by not photographing them . Old Order Amish mi ngle with outsiders ( whom they generically refer to as `` English '' ) , and a few even invite visitors to join family dinners in their homes . They rarely cat er to overnight guests . Tourists can , however , sample rural life firsthand on numerous Mennonite farms within a 10- or 15-mile radius of downtown Lancaster . Some of these bed and breakfast accommodations are rather spartan , but others , like Barbara and Harold Frey 's Morning Meadows Farm in Marietta , offer all t he comforts of a country guest house along with a chance to experience the daily farm routine ( which , be warned , can start at dawn ) . My second-floor room a t Morning Meadows Farm was prettily decorated in Victorian-country style and had a modern private bath and a small TV . Adjoining it was a cozy sitting room wit h magazines and another TV and outside was a wide porch offering panoramic views of fields and barns . I asked for a restaurant suggestion and Frey recommended the Country Table Restaurant in nearby Mount Joy . It was a family place , overl ooking nothing but a packed parking lot , but it served one of the best restaura nt meals I 've ever eaten : juicy pork chops , crisp salad , fresh vegetables , oven-baked potato and rolls , herb tea and a wedge of that molassesy Pennsylvani a Dutch favorite , shoo-fly pie . Cost : $ 9.49 . This is an early-to-bed , earl y-to-rise culture and most restaurants close by 8 or 9 p.m. . Breakfast at Morni ng Meadows was at 8 a.m. , and consisted of an apple dumpling hot from the oven and French toast with bacon all delicious . While I lingered over my juice and c offee , the Freys chatted about the area and suggested sightseeing possibilities . Various auto-tape tours of the area are available at Lancaster 's Mennonite I nformation Center , but I preferred to take advantage of the center 's personal guide service ( $ 6 paid to the center , then a fee of $ 8.50 an hour to the gui de who rides in your car ) . For the next two hours ( the minimum tour time ) , a Mennonite woman named Alverna Hess directed me along 20 or 30 miles of back ro ads , pointing out covered bridges , cemeteries and Amish traditions . Windmills whirred in many farmyards , and black dresses and shirts fluttered from clothes lines a sure sign , she said , of an Amish household , which has diesel-powered milking machines and propane-fired hot-water heaters to meet government health r equirements but few other modern appliances . The occasional roadside phone boot hs we saw aren't public ones , Hess explained ; they belong to the nearest house another concession to the realities of doing business in the 20th century but k ept at a discreet distance . After I dropped off my guide , I continued a few mi les south of Lancaster to Strasburg , a pretty village with several attractions for train buffs including the nation 's oldest short-line railroad . Next I head ed northwest to equally charming Lititz , which offers some of the best shopping in Lancaster County . The aromas alone led me to two must-stops : the Sturgis P retzel Bakery and the Wilbur Chocolate Factory . At both you can watch the cooks in action and stock up on their products . ( Begin optional trim ) My second ni ght was at one of the Inns at Doneckers , a collection of four restored houses , one the site of the first Donecker family business back in 1910 . I stayed in T he Guesthouse , which has 20 distinctive rooms and suites . My room , one of the least expensive , was nevertheless the epitome of country style . Some walls we re hand-stencilled , others exposed brick . Two handsome hooked rugs served as w all art . After breakfast , I strolled down the road to Doneckers Artworks , a f our-story marketplace of artists ' studios and galleries with an adjoining farme rs ' market . The market was stuffed with fresh produce and smelled of spring fl owers , apple pie and Auntie Anne 's scrumptious , hand-rolled soft pretzels , s o I was surprised at how few customers were there . The answer was clear as soon as I turned my car onto North State Street to head for the nearby competition . Traffic crawled most of the way to the Green Dragon market , one of the biggest in the county ( along with Lancaster 's Central Market and Root 's Market near Manheim ) . The Dragon was the quintessential country flea market an indoor/outd oor bazaar featuring everything from produce to clothing with , of course , the requisite supply of goodies down to homemade root beer . ( End optional trim ) B etween markets , wineries , breweries , potteries , antiques markets and various fairs and festivals , there 's no end of country diversions around Lancaster ( note that some attractions are closed on Sundays ) . There 's also interesting w alking in downtown Lancaster , which was Pennsylvania 's capital for 11 years an d which served as the nation 's capital for one day Sept. 27 , 1777 when Congres s stopped there after fleeing from Philadelphia . My most indelible memory of th e area , however , remains the home-cooked meals turned out by seemingly every k itchen . I wonder if any of them delivers . The word `` Caribbean '' may conjure up all kinds of vivid colors , but to V.S. Naipaul it suggests gray : a land and seascape bleached out by unmediated sun a nd a counterfeit history . It is the gray in the face of a professional entertai ner the morning after a late night . The displacing and alienating effects of a colonial past on today 's post-colonial peoples has been Naipaul 's leading them e ever since , once past his early Trinidad novels , he broke through the colors to the gray underneath . He has pursued it in his fiction and non-fiction , set in Britain , Africa , South America and India , the home of his forebears . He is one of literature 's great travelers and also one of its oddest . He seeks no t roots but rootlessness . He travels not for acquaintance but for alienation . Paul Theroux does that , to an extent , but the difference is very large . For o ne thing , Naipaul , who can be petty , vain and cruel , both uses and transcend s his defects . His theme is the terrible inauthenticity that history has impose d on the heirs of colonialism 's subjects . But by refusing to conceal or temper his own crabby vision a walleyed sensibility that tends to swivel inward he ach ieves at his best moments a unique authenticity . His nightmare Argentina , for example , can be unrecognizable but there is no question about the nightmares th at it produces in Naipaul . When he is not displaying a certain haste and roughn ess ( on purpose , perhaps , like a musician asserting his freedom to play sour ) , he is a great writer . In a magical and redeeming phrase he will suddenly li nk up the particular estrangements he acquires , wherever he goes , to the estra nged wanderer in all of us . `` A Way in the World '' ( Alfred A . Knopf , $ 23 Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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