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Hear Paradise Bangkok’s 2nd From the Band Itself at ‘Planet Lam’

BANGKOK How Mor Lam can you be? Be among the first to hear and dance to new tracks from a talented Thai folk rock ensemble one night next month at a Thonglor area bar and music venue.

Fresh from performing at the Glastonbury Festival, The Paradise Bangkok Molam International Band are ready to deliver their second feature take on mor lam music with “Planet Lam” and will be back in the city that made them famous to celebrate.

The band’s six core members will play old and new tracks, rocking their psychedelic instruments from the bamboo mouth organ Khaen to pear-shaped stringed Phin.

The party will continue until late when DJ Maft Sai and Dangdut Banget perform live, spinning a retro vinyl set.

The event starts at 9pm on Dec. 9 at Studio Lam. Limited to only 100 tickets, they are 400 baht and can be reserved online.

Studio Lam, an extension of Maft Sai’s Zudrangma Records, is an underground music venue just in Soi Sukhumvit 51. It’s a short walk from BTS Thong Lo.

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Where to Stuff Yourself on Thanksgiving in Bangkok

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

BANGKOK — Don’t have the properly equipped kitchen to braise that Butterball turkey, glaze the ham, stir the cranberry sauce and bake the cornbread – don’t bother.

Our American residents and others inspired by this holiday dedicated to gluttony have a long menu of options to celebrate Thanksgiving on Thursday next week. From traditional to vegan to fancy, there’s something for everyone.

The Traditionalist – Roadhouse BBQ, Silom

Photo: Roadhouse BBQ Bangkok / Facebook
Photo: Roadhouse BBQ Bangkok / Facebook

American bar and restaurant Roadhouse Barbecue promises what may be the closest to a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. Be welcomed by San Francisco shrimp cocktails and a selection of salads, appetizers and hot dishes. The savory mains include, of course, roast turkey with sage-and-apple stuffing, giblet gravy, grilled salmon and more.

Thanksgiving is not complete without freshly baked pumpkin pie. The buffet starts at 995 baht and goes from noon to 11pm. Get in before 5pm for a 20 percent discount.

Roadhouse Barbecue sits on the corner of Rama IV and Surawong roads and is walkable from MRT Silom or BTS Sala Daeng.

The Fancy Foodie – Little Beast, Thonglor

Photo: Little Beast / Facebook
Photo: Little Beast / Facebook

Expect all the fancy dishes: baked reblochon, bacon-wrapped chicken roulade, foie gras and chestnut stuffing at a French-American gastro bar Little Beast in Thonglor.

See a full list of menu items here. Prices start at 1,800 baht per person. Enjoy the dinner from 7pm until 11pm.

Little Beast is located in Soi Thong Lor 13. The nearest rail station is BTS Thong Lo.

The Clear Conscience – Chomp, Phra Nakhon

Photo: Chomp / Facebook
Photo: Chomp / Facebook

Good news for vegans and vegetarians: This all-day dining place near Khaosan Road will serve a plentiful home-cooked buffet including many non-meat dishes.

Chomp never disappoints when it comes to casual dining for hearty vegans and vegetarians. The place will serve a four-course Thanksgiving including vegan bacon with garlic bamboo charcoal croutons, a spiced bean pate and barbecue Cajun vegan duck.

Meat lovers can find smoked salmon with cream cheese and stuffed, slow-roasted crispy turkey. Check out the menu online.

Eat all you want for 450 baht per person. Prepare to pay 650 baht if you want your dinner served with special hot mulled wine and a pumpkin-pie martini.

Reservations by Tuesday are required. Chomp is located on Soi Samsen 1.

The Dinner & Movie – Cinema Winehouse, Phra Nakhon

Photo: Cinema Winehouse / Facebook
Photo: Cinema Winehouse / Facebook

Across from Chomp, this laid-back diner-shophouse-theater which will serve homestyle Thanksgiving dishes with one carnivorous innovation: the turbaconducken (a chicken inside a duck inside a turkey, all wrapped in bacon).

From 7pm to 10pm, Cinema Winehouse will host a Thanksgiving buffet, serving dinner and fixings for 650 baht. Seats are limited to 30, so reserve a table with a 300-baht deposit. As of today they had yet to decide on a movie to show but insisted it will fit the theme.

Cinema Winehouse is located on Soi Samsen 1.

The Sports Fan – The Sportsman Bar

Photo: The Sportsman Sportsbar Bangkok / Facebook
Photo: The Sportsman Sportsbar Bangkok / Facebook

If you like watching sports on Thanksgiving Day, this could be the spot for you.

Munch on a meal while enjoy watching NFL, NBA and NHL games shown live on screens at the The Sportsman Sportsbar, where 99-baht drinks and 199-baht dinner specials will be served.

The sports-theme bar is located on Soi Sukhumvit 13 and is walkable from BTS Nana.

The Ragin’ Cajun – Bourbon Street Bangkok, Ekkamai

Photo: Bourbon Street Bangkok / Facebook
Photo: Bourbon Street Bangkok / Facebook

Enjoy a two-hour Thanksgiving buffet at this classic, one-of-a-kind Cajun and Creole restaurant in the Ekkamai area.

From noon to 10:30pm, Bourbon Street Bangkok will offer a special Thanksgiving selection with highlighted jambalaya, oyster soup, crab cake, Cajun deep-fried turkey and a lot more.

Dinner is 900 baht for adults and 500 baht for children. Bourbon Street Bangkok left its longtime mid-Sukhumvit home a few years ago and is now located in Soi Sukhumvit 63.

The Hi-So Traditionalist – City Skyline, Asoke

Photo: City Skyline - American Dinner / Facebook
Photo: City Skyline – American Dinner / Facebook

Head up to the new Asoke’s new American dining venue City Skyline to enjoy a proper home-cooked of turkey, mashed potatoes, glazed carrots, green beans, pecan pie, pumpkin pie and more.

Price for adults is 795 baht and 395 baht for children 12 and under.

Reservations are required. City Skyline is located on the first floor of PS Tower in Soi Sukhumvit 21, reachable from BTS Asoke and MRT Sukhumvit.

The Fine Diner – Seasonal Tastes at the Westin Grande Sukhumvit, Asoke

Photo: The Westin Grande Sukhumvit Bangkok / Facebook
Photo: The Westin Grande Sukhumvit Bangkok / Facebook

Savor on a multi-dimensional fancy feast at a five-star hotel in the Asoke area from 6pm until 10:30pm.

The Westin Grande Sukhumvit’s signature dining venue Seasonal Tastes will prepare fresh, quality ingredients for lavish and festive a la minute dishes including juicy Fine de Claire oysters, rock lobster, traditional roasted turkey, snow fish, braised lamb leg and a lot more.

Prices are 1,890 baht per person and 700 baht for children 3 to 12. Free-flow soft drinks are included.

Seasonal Tastes sits on the seventh floor of the Westin Grande Sukhumvit which is located across from the Terminal 21 shopping mall. The luxury hotel is a five-minute walk from MRT Sukhumvit and BTS Asoke.

The Rebel – Que Pasa Mexican Restaurant, Pak Kret

Photo: Que Pasa Mexican Restaurant / Facebook
Photo: Que Pasa Mexican Restaurant / Facebook

Mexican Thanksgiving? Why not?

Due north of downtown in Nonthaburi’s Pak Kret district, Que Pasa Mexican Restaurant will host an all-you-can-eat dinner of nearly 15 dishes including roast turkey, honey-baked ham, fresh-baked rolls, green salad with berries and more.

The fiesta starts at 4pm and runs until 8:30pm. Dinner for adults is 895 baht, children 7 to 12 are 395 baht. Niños under 7 can eat for free. Reservations are required.

Another Appetite – Hooters Thanksgiving feat. Playboy – Friday

Photo: Hooters Bangkok Soi 15 / Facebook
Photo: Hooters Bangkok Soi 15 / Facebook

Leave it to the Americans to conflate fattening foods with their sexual appetites. One day after Thanksgiving, see 10 Playboy Thailand Bunnies and 10 Hooters Girls at AmBar in Four Points Sheraton in Soi Sukhumvit 15. Actually forget the food, this event is just about drinking and looking at girls from 7pm to 2am. Door is 300 baht and includes one drink.

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Siamese Fighting Fish That Looks Like Thai Flag Fetches Record Price

A Siamese fighting fish with colors resembling the Thai national flag swims in a fish tank in 2016 in Nakhon Pathom. Photo: Chuchat Lekdeangyu / Shutter Prince / Associated Press
A Siamese fighting fish with colors resembling the Thai national flag swims in a fish tank in 2016 in Nakhon Pathom. Photo: Chuchat Lekdeangyu / Shutter Prince / Associated Press

BANGKOK — A Siamese fighting fish with the colors of the Thai national flag has been bought for a record breaking 53,500 baht in an online auction, making it the most expensive Betta fish ever sold.

Pictures of the fish, with its blue, red and white horizontal stripes mimicking the Thai flag, went viral after its breeder Kachen Worachai posted them on a private Betta fish auction group on Facebook.

Kachen said Thursday he expected someone to buy the fish for a few thousand baht but was shocked when the bid hit 10,000 baht on the second day.

“I never expected my fish to go for this price,” said Kachen, a 40-year-old convenience store owner who breeds Betta fish as a hobby. He posted the pictures on Nov. 6 with a starting bid of 99 baht and closed the auction on Nov. 8.

Betta fish have been bred previously to reproduce the colors of the Thai flag but none have come close.

The highest previous price was for a half-moon Betta fish that sold for 23,500 baht.

“The chance of getting a fish with the flag’s exact color is like one in 100,000,” said Kachen. “So many people have tried to breed the Thai flag colors. Luck was really on my side.”

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Gross: Students Report Vendor Who Reuses Ice Cubes, Straws (Video)

Still image from the video filmed by Chandrakasem Post shows the drink vendor throws ice left in used plastic cups back into the same icebox she uses to fill new drinks.

BANGKOK — Authorities Thursday said they were looking into reports of a drink vendor reusing ice and straws after university students published an expose in their campus newspaper.

An undercover video report posted Monday by the Chandrakasem Post was watched hundreds of thousands of times and prompted debate about food safety and hygiene at unregulated food sellers.

“We called all of the vendors located in the block behind the university to question,” Chaowarit Songnawarat, a local official, said Thursday. “We haven’t made any conclusions yet. We have to be fair to both sides.”

In the video, a vendor appears to throw ice left in used plastic cups back into the same icebox she uses to fill new drinks. It also showed images of standing water filled with drinking straws the student report said were then reused.

“Why do you have need to save costs that much? Didn’t even think about the consumer,” Facebook user Nongkran Teekawong wrote Tuesday in reply to the report. “What will you do if someone has a contagious disease?”

The vendor shown was on the campus of Chandrakasem Rajabhat University in the capital’s Chatuchak district, where Chaowarit said they were looking into the matter.

The Chatuchak District Office summoned vendors from all food sellers located in the same area behind the university.

Not everyone was appalled, with one user writing that it’s unrealistic to get upset.

“Don’t tell me I’m too naive. But normally ice comes in a sack that’s already dirty. Nothing is clean!” Argon Man wrote.

Although the video shows the woman opening the lid of the ice box as she deposits the ice, she told Chaowarit that she was actually throwing it into another container. The unidentified vendor said she will sue the student reporters for damaging her business.

User Natdanai Maisorn wrote Wednesday that she was willing to give the woman the benefit of the doubt.

“I think the aunty did throw ice back into the cooler, but not in the ice bag. In the other scene, she takes ice from the bag. So I don’t think she reused the ice as claimed in the clip.”

In their Monday report, the Chandrakasem Post said the vendor told them that she reused the straws to save 180 baht per week.

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Prince William: We’re Still Step Behind Wildlife Traffickers

Vietnam's Minister of Agriculture Nguyen Xuan Cuong, left, and Britain's Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, right, listen to a speech at an international conference on illegal wildlife trade Thursday in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Tran Van Minh / Associated Press

HANOI — Britain’s Prince William praised Vietnam, China and other Asian countries for taking unprecedented steps to battle wildlife trafficking but said Thursday the truth is that rhinos, elephants, pangolins and lions are still being killed in horrifying numbers.

William, who is president of United for Wildlife, lauded progress in stemming trade in endangered wildlife since the London conference two years ago, particularly partnership between African governments to fight poaching. China has signaled a total ban on ivory trading, the U.S. already has banned it and other nations, including Britain, are considering it, he said.

Vietnam, one of major transit points and consumers of trafficked ivory and rhino horns, for the first time destroyed seized ivory and rhino horns last weekend, he said.

“But here is the problem: We know that we aren’t moving fast enough to keep up with the crisis,” William told the Third International Conference on the Illegal Wildlife Trade in Hanoi. He said that the Great Elephant Census published this summer confirmed our worst fears about the shocking 30 percent decline in the African elephant population in just seven years.

“So while we’ve made progress, the truth is we are still falling behind. A betting man would still bet on extinction,” he said.

Organized crime syndicates are much more agile, he said, adding that although authorities have stepped up controls at ports and borders, most illegally poached products are still slipping through the net.

“Attitudes on the use and purchase of illegal wildlife trade products are proving harder to shift than we might have liked,” William said, alluding to mistakenly held beliefs that rhino horns provide a cure for cancer. “In this part of the world we have to acknowledge the truth that newly aspirational consumers are still demanding more, not less ivory and rhino horn.”

He said the poachers are learning to be quiet and are much harder to track. “Their brutality continues to escalate with many more rangers killed since we gathered in London two years ago,” he said.

Vietnam Vice President Dang Thi Ngoc Thinh said that her country is facing many challenges in protecting wildlife and ensuring economic growth, such as raising awareness in local communities and improving their livelihoods as well as limitations in prosecuting and convicting criminals.

Ishaam Abader, deputy director at South Africa’s Environmental Affairs Department, said that that the number of rhinos being poached has slightly dropped last year compared to 2014. However, the number of poachers entering wildlife parks has increased.

“So in essence we are winning the fight so to speak. But obviously if you use one strategy, the poachers use another strategy, we have to try to remain one step ahead of them all the time,” he told The Associated Press on the sidelines of the conference.

He said that South Africa is developing multiple strategies to ensure the success of the fight to protect rhinos.

“We don’t only focus on anti-poaching, we also focus on demand reduction and increasing rhino populations by diversity management,” he said.

Story: Tran Van Minh

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K-Drama Addicts Panic as Top Pirate Site Stops Streaming

Two recent popular Korean soap operas. At left, SBS’ ‘Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo,’ and at right, ‘W’ which aired on MBC.

BANGKOK — Thailand’s de facto source for feeding its addiction to Korean soap operas was forced to stop subbing and streaming new episodes to the dismay of panicked fans.

Kodhit.com announced via Facebook on Wednesday night it had ceased operations after being threatened with legal action by Korean broadcasting networks Seoul Broadcasting System and Munhwa Broadcasting Corp. if it did not stop fansubbing and streaming their dramas.

“I started watching Korean series with ‘Autumn in My Heart’ and kept watching series until I made this page and started making Thai subtitles,” the administrator of Kodhit’s page wrote, referring to a series from 2000. “At that time, the Korean wave wasn’t this big. Still, fans all over came and watched all these series together, having fun together.”

The page will continue hosting discussions between Korean drama fans, it said.

Netizens responded with similar nostalgia and chagrin.

“SBS and MBC, please reconsider. So many people love #Kodhit, do you still want to shut it down? Even celebrities and singers use this website,” tweeted @Bluenanicha.

https://twitter.com/bluenanicha/status/798857663576612864

Other tweets posted K-drama scenes to illustrate their sentiments.

“I’ll never forget this period in time,” an image tweeted by @N_zhaaa was subtitled.

The site is one in a vast ecosystem of illegal sites which pirate series from around the world along with user-generated subtitles. Soap operas, or lakorn, are a Thai national obsession, and the explosion of interest in Korean pop culture during the past decade has seen that passion hop borders.

“I’ve been watching dramas with you guys for so long,” Facebook user BT Engineer wrote in reply to the news. “It’s even replaced Thai lakorn for me. If Kodhit stops translating subtitles, I’ll be truly sad.”

Fans will have to rely on on-demand streaming services or wait on the domestic broadcasters who license the series from the Korean channels.

That’s likely to be frustrating to those used to instant gratification online. The rest of the world may be finishing up “Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo” just as Thai channels have started broadcasting it.

Additionally streaming services such as Netflix and Iflix offer a limited amount of K-dramas, but they are often older, completed series.

Known as the Korean wave, South Korean popular culture such as music and soap operas, surged in popularity at the turn of the millennium into mainstream interest. Since then Bangkok has become a regular stop for K-pop bands to host fan meetings and concerts, which can choke traffic and block streets with massive crowds.

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Malaysian Group to Hold Anti-Najib Rally Despite Ban

In this Oct. 23, 2015 file photo, then Malaysian Prime Minister and Finance Minister Najib Razak speaks as he unveils the Malaysia's 2016 budget at Parliament House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Joshua Paul / Associated Press
In this Oct. 23, 2015 file photo, then Malaysian Prime Minister and Finance Minister Najib Razak speaks as he unveils the Malaysia's 2016 budget at Parliament House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Joshua Paul / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian pro-democracy activists have vowed to go ahead with a massive rally this weekend to demand Prime Minister Najib Razak’s resignation over a financial scandal despite a police ban and fears of clashes with a pro-government group.

Najib has kept an iron grip since graft allegations emerged two years ago in the indebted 1MDB state investment fund that he founded. The fund is at the center of investigations in the U.S. and several other countries.

Chairwoman Maria Chin of Bersih says Saturday’s rally in downtown Kuala Lumpur will protest poor governance and a lack of accountability that have led to “grand corruption” in the 1MDB fund.

A ruling party politician is planning to lead a counter rally. Police have outlawed both rallies and the government has warned of action.

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‘Motel’ Missed: TrueVisions Refuses to Release Film It Helped Make

Katareeya Theapchatri, at left, and Prapamonton Eiamchan in a scene from ‘Motel Mist.’ Photo: Motel Mist / Courtesy

BANGKOK A new art film was banned for sexually suggestive scenes one day before its Thursday release, this time not by government censors but the production studio that funded it.

Sci-fi noir “Motel Mist” had already been approved by the Ministry of Culture’s censorship board as suitable for audiences 18+, but the studio that made it, TrueVisions Original Pictures, which refused to release its own film at the last minute.

Read: Misfit Movie Director Prabda Yoon Enters ‘Motel Mist’

The decision was officially announced Wednesday night on the film’s Facebook page by its first-time director and award-winning author, Prabda Yoon.

“The team apologizes that screenings of ‘Motel Mist’ starting Nov. 17 at all theatres have to be postponed on account of the film production company and the film crew have different opinions in the content,” Prabda wrote.

TrueVisions Original Pictures has supported many independent films such as Kongdej Jaturanrasamee’s 2015 “Snap” and “So Be It,” and Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s 2014 doc “The Master.”

No specific reasons were cited for blocking the film, however those who attended its premiere Tuesday night suspected scenes of actresses waving around sex toys and other sexual references were its undoing. It’s release also comes at a sensitive time following the death of His Majesty King Bhumibol, when many forms of entertainment have been dialed down.

Attempts to reach Auttapon Na-Bangchang, vice president of programming for TrueVisions, were unsuccessful.

“Motel Mist” is an otherworldly tale of four lives which intertwine at a love motel on the outskirts. One of the characters believes he can communicate with aliens while the others engage in sexual power games that spare no subtlety to crudely parallel Thai politics.

Although it’s narrative is lacking, the film has a daring visual style and unique electronic music soundtrack.

Scenes of dildos, sexual violence and porn references went over the top and did little to move the story forward in the two-hour screening of “Motel Mist” Tuesday at Scala Theatre, where most of the 500 seats were filled by the press, critics, guests and fans. Feedback ranged from positive to loathing.

Prior to Tuesday, it had shown at various festivals including the renowned Rotterdam Film Festival in the Netherlands earlier this year.

It’s not the first time self-censorship sank a Thai films. “Fatherland” a 2012 love story set in the Deep South’s conflict by Yuthlert Sippapak was also blocked by its studio. A year later, Pen Ek Ratanaruang’s controversial sociopolitical doc “Paradoxocracy (Prachathipa’Thai)” was effectively kept out of theaters when Major Cineplex didn’t support it, with some theaters refusing to list it.

Correction: An earlier version of this story said that Major Cineplex refused to show 2013’s Paradoxocracy. In fact the theater chain did show the film, but it did not promote it and in some cases theaters refused to list it among their showtimes.

Related stories:

Misfit Movie Director Prabda Yoon Enters ‘Motel Mist’

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Thai Worker Reported Missing in Tokyo

Image: Find Sumeth / Facebook

Update: A Facebook page set up by Sumeth Lerthirunwong’s friends said on Friday afternoon that he’s been located alive and well. 

BANGKOK — Friends and family of a missing Thai expat in Tokyo were pleading for information Thursday about his whereabouts, three days after he went missing.

Sumeth Lerthirunwong was last seen leaving the bank where he worked Monday evening in Tokyo’s Roppongi district, according to a Facebook page created to call attention to his disappearance. Sumeth had not shown any signs of distress before he went missing, the post said.

“He’s a cheerful and sociable man. His health is normal. There were no sign of any problem that would prompt him to run away on his own,” said the post, which was updated Wednesday night.

The page said police and the Thai embassy in Tokyo have been alerted, and so far no hospital in the area has admitted Sumeth, who works at Barclays Capital. His credit cards had not been used since his disappearance, according to the page. His passport was reportedly left at his residence.

Sumeth’s brother said he had no previous history of mental illness, drug use or conflict with anyone. Nipon Lerthirunwong said he’s attending a meeting with Thai consulate in Japan on Thursday, and his family remains hopeful.

“Of course we still have hope,” Nipon said in an online chat, adding that it was Barclays who informed him of his brother’s disappearance.

Anyone who has information of Sumeth’s whereabouts is urged to contact his friends and family in Japan at 080-4679-2685 or 080-5501-8120.

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Melvin Laird, Vietnam War Secretary, 94

Former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photo: John Duricka / Associated Press

MADISON, Wisconsin — Melvin Laird, a former Wisconsin congressman and U.S. defense secretary during years when President Nixon struggled to find a way to withdraw troops from an unpopular war in Vietnam, died on Wednesday, his family said. He was 94.

His grandson, Raymond Dennis Large III, said that Laird died in Florida.

Laird left a legacy that included a telephone call that eventually played a role in one of the biggest political stories of the century  the Watergate scandal that drove Nixon from office.

Laird was Nixon’s counselor on domestic affairs in October 1973 when Nixon had to replace Vice President Spiro Agnew, who had resigned in scandal. Laird called his good friend, Michigan Rep. Gerald Ford, to ask if he would be interested in replacing Agnew.

“Frankly, the question came like a bolt out of the blue,” Ford said in 1997, recalling his conversation with the “can-do conservative” from Wisconsin.

Ford accepted. About a year later, Nixon resigned because of Watergate and Ford became president. Ford pardoned Nixon, and two years later, Ford lost the presidential election to Jimmy Carter.

“I thought Ford was the right person to bring the country together after the Watergate fiasco,” Laird once said, taking credit with Bryce Harlow for persuading Nixon to pick Ford.

Ford once praised Laird as a patriot before a partisan.

His grandson Large, who is the son of Alison Laird Large, called his grandfather “one of the lions of our republic.”

“He truly was someone that worked across party lines,” Large said. “He was a very dedicated Republican but he was able to see the human in everyone. His work speaks for itself.”

Former Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat, is married to Laird’s niece Jessica. He said that Laird remained engaged with public issues until the end of his life.

“Even at the end Jessica would get two, sometimes more, letters a week from him, handwritten letters. I think last week she had one discussing the election, public issues, his views of things.”

Laird, the son of a Presbyterian minister, was 30 when he was elected to the U.S. House in 1952. He represented Wisconsin’s 7th District  mostly dairy-farming or lumber-producing counties in central Wisconsin  for nine terms, and was credited with helping spearhead the vast expansion of medical research and health facilities in the U.S.

Nixon appointed Laird as the nation’s 10th defense secretary in 1969 and the first to come from Congress. The Vietnam War raged, with no end in sight for the 550,000 troops stationed in the Southeast Asian country as America lost its resolve for the fighting.

Laird coined the term “Vietnamization” to describe Nixon’s policy of assigning an ever-increasing combat role to South Vietnamese troops, allowing the pullout of U.S. forces.

When Laird stepped down as defense secretary in January 1973, there were about 69,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam.

“As a consequence of the success of the military aspects of Vietnamization, the South Vietnamese people today, in my view, are fully capable of providing for their own in-country security against the North Vietnamese,” he said at the time.

However, Saigon fell under communist control in 1975. But the problem, Laird wrote later, was not Vietnamization but the United States’ failure to provide continued financial support while the Soviet Union was sending Hanoi far more than the limit it had agreed to.

“We grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory … when Congress cut off the funding for South Vietnam that had allowed it to continue to fight on its own,” he wrote in 2005 in the publication Foreign Affairs.

While at the Pentagon, Laird ended the military draft and established the all-volunteer force. “It’s been a very successful program,” he said in 1997. “I am very proud that I was there as secretary of defense to start it.”

Doyle said Laird will be viewed “through the crucible of Vietnam” but it shouldn’t be lost on people that he ended the draft. He was also proud to be a politician and viewed it as an honorable profession, Doyle said.

“He was a Republican that really believed government was a worthy cause, that politics was a worthy effort,” he said.

In 1973, Nixon brought Laird to the White House as counselor on domestic affairs. Several months later, the Watergate crisis deepening, Laird resigned.

The Laird Center, a complex for medical research at Marshfield Clinic in Marshfield, Wisconsin, is named after Laird, who grew up in Marshfield.

Laird often said Marshfield Clinic doctors encouraged him to get involved in health issues after he was elected to Congress, including his involvement in legislation that made health maintenance organizations possible.

Laird was born in Omaha, Nebraska, on Sept. 1, 1922, and the family moved to Marshfield when he was a young child. He graduated from Carleton College in Minnesota in 1942 and served aboard the Navy destroyer U.S.S. Maddox in the Pacific during World War II.

Laird was elected to his first political office in 1946, when he succeeded his late father, Melvin Sr., as a state senator in the Wisconsin Legislature. At the time, Laird, only 23, was the youngest state senator in the United States.

When the Laird Center was dedicated, Henry Kissinger recalled the many power struggles he had, as Nixon’s national security adviser, with Secretary of Defense Laird, needling him on a day when political nostalgia and good humor filled the air.

“I always sent deputies to deal with him, and I would give them several pieces of advice,” Kissinger said in his deadpan voice. “First, you must remember Mel Laird is extremely smart. Second, he knows he is extremely smart. Third, he will let you know he is extremely smart. Fourth, it is much less painful to let him do what he wants. Fifth, when he says, ‘You know what I mean,’ there is no conceivable way you could know what he means. And sixth, when he calls to complain about a newspaper story, you know he has put it out himself.”

Story: Scott Bauer

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