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Thursday, September 22, 2005

The Homeowner Gene

I rented my dwelling place for all but the last six years of my life. My parents rented (from my maternal grandmother) until I went to college. Yet, I thought I would automatically develop a homeowner gene. I developed a parent gene, after all, and I've been a parent for even less time than I've been a homeowner.

Allow me to elaborate on this devasting affliction:

The homeowner knows how to fix stuff. i don't know how to fix hardly anything. Can I change a light bulb? Well, sometimes. But there are two fixtures in the hallway, and on one, I turn the bulb. The whole fixture turns with the bulb, but the bulb never comes out.

The homeowner keeps the lawn neat and trim. I mow the lawn infrequently, and only because I don't want to hear from the neighbors. If it were up to me, I'd let it go wild. Or maybe rent a goat.

There is a point where if I am to cut the grass, I MUST cut the grass, based on the height of the lawn. This is because I have a push mower. I don't mean gas-powered push mower, I mean Roger-powered push mower. Last year, we actually bought a gas-operated machine, but returned it three days later when it kept stalling out.

Wthe grass in the front of the house grows mostly slowly, because it was dug up in to fix a broken sewage pipe that was backing into our basement. The attempts to regrow grass has been slow, despite mighty, enthusiastic efforts on the part of my wife and my mother-in-law, and less than enthusiastic schlepping on the part of their husbands. My vertict: Yeah! Less to mow.

I've noticed, and this is also true at work, that maschines just don't like me much. There is a schedule to replace all the computers in my office every few years, and I always screw up the rotation, because my computer has died first with some mysterious disease that even our fine techies cannot explain. I think my body emits some sort of field that slowly devastes electronic equipment.

The homeowner is clever. The first month we lived in this house (May 2000), I was clearing out the timber that was in the back yard. I stepped into the pile when I discovered a nail. Or rather, the nail discovered my foot, right through my Chuck Taylor sneaker. I pulled the nail out, then hobbled to the front of the house (because I didn't want to bleed all through the house). I hopped up to the front door and yelled, "Carol! Come here!" She said, "I'm upstairs!" I KNEW she was upstairs; surpringly, I didn't really care at that moment. She took me to an urgent care placewhere the doctor removed pieces of sneaker from my foot and gave me a tetanus shot.

There are other examples, but one does want to embarass oneself only so much publicly at one time.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Last day of summer short takes


"Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment." "Libraries are the cornerstones of our democracy. Libraries are for everyone, everywhere. Because libraries provide free access to a world of information, they bring opportunity to all people." - American Library Association, Library Bill of Rights. All of this to note that this Saturday marks the beginning of Banned Book Week. Participate, and find out about current attempts in our society to restrict the flow of information to legitimate users.
***
And speaking of books: I had ordered a couple CDs from Amazon recently, and was shocked to get a package from Amazon today, given the fact that i received the confirmation of the CD order only yesterday. But it was the book Tales from Fish Camp: A City Girl's Experience Working in an Alaskan Fishing Village by Danielle Henderson. I won this in a contest run by Greg Burgas. Thanks, Greg! I read the (short) first chapter, and think I'll be liking this.
***
So, I go to Greg's page to thank him. I can't remember when this contest was exactly, so I figure I'll go to his page, search the word "contest" on the Search This Blog feature. But no, I get a bunch of references to contests from all of the blogs. (As Greg might say, "Stupid Blogger!") So I look anyway. Here you can draw a lion and win a cash prize, reportedly.
***
My friend Don wrote a a review of a new book about the Beatles.
***
My bud David Brickman will be doing his next art criticism spot on WAMC (90.3 fm) tomorrow (Thursday) at 9:48 a.m. The topic will be two shows of paintings, one at Skidmore, one at Sage. By the way, for the out-of-towners it is possible to listen online at wamc.org (live only - not archived).
***
If you're going to the DC rally this weekend, you might check out this page.
***
Hurricane Rita picked up strength Wednesday as it churned toward the Texas Gulf Coast and was upgraded to a Category 4 storm with winds topping 135 mph.
***
And on the issue of hurricanes, it appears that Former FEMA Chief Brown Bought Votes in Florida. "Michael Brown, the embattled former head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, approved payments in excess of $31 million in taxpayer money to thousands of Florida residents who were unaffected by Hurricane Frances and three other hurricanes last year in an effort to help President Bush win a majority of votes in that state during his reelection campaign, according to published reports."
***
I was reading the Wall Street Journal from last Tuesday (it's an occupational hazard), when I came across this headline: "Wage Winners and Losers". The average worker LOST 0.4% from July 2003 to July 2004, adjusted for inflation. Somewhere on the linked page is the National Compensation Survey.

In last Thursday's WSJ, this piece: "After Katrina, Republicans Back a Sea of Conservative Ideas". It suggested that on the "list of Katrina initiatives backed by Republicans" will be:
  • Temporary exemptions from environmental laws
  • Suspension of Davis-Bacon prevailing wage laws
  • Streamlined approval process for oil refineries
  • School vouchers for displaced students, even those who had been going to public school
    Sure enough, I get a couple e-mails this week:
    Bush Suspends Affirmative Action for Gulf Contractors. The announcement by the Labor Department came the day after President Bush announced the suspension of a law that requires employers to pay the locally prevailing wage to construction workers on federally financed projects.
    Bush Proposes Private School Vouchers for All Displaced Students. Under President Bush's plan to cover most of the cost of educating students displaced by Hurricane Katrina, parents could enroll their children in a private or religious school this year at federal expense, even if they had gone to public schools back home, administration officials said yesterday.
    Outpouring of Relief Cash Raises Fear of Corruption and Cronyism.
    It should be no surprise that the people who brought you the USA PATRIOT Act and the Iraq war in response to 9/11 should bring in some "add-ons" in light of Katrina.
    ***
    Fortunately, Robert B. Reich has written Bush Administration Paradox Explained. "The White House's strategy to make John Roberts the next chief justice has been the very model of meticulous planning, by contrast to its utter clueless-ness in dealing with Katrina. Robert Reich states that no White House in modern history has been as adept at politics and as ham-fisted at governing. Why?"
  • Mixed Bag CD Blog-Roger


    Do you think I’m actually going to review my own CD? Nah, it’s here for completeness sake.
    NAME: Roger Green
    BLOG NAME: Ramblin' with Roger
    NAME OF CD: Travelogue USA #1: New York-Texas
    NUMBER OF CUTS: 16
    RUNNING TIME: 61:38
    COVER ART: Standardized computer fare
    SONG LIST: Here
    ALREADY REVIEWED BY: Nat on July 8; Gordon on July 21; Eddie on August 6
    GENERAL THOUGHTS: TREMENDOUS! STUPENDOUS! MAGNIFICANT! (I kid.) Actually, I like it. I actually play it from time to time. It’s grown on me.
    THINGS I PARTICULARLY LOVED: That Petty is almost unrecognizable.
    ON THE OTHER HAND: I agonized over changing the last track from Garth to the Harshed Mallows’ version of U.S. Blues. BTW, both songs make reference to flag-waving, but they have very different sentiments.
    OFFICE FRIENDLY: Yes
    ONLY VAGUELY RELATED: I’ve been in every state represented in this collection except Mississippi; my Alabama visit was VERY short.

    Tuesday, September 20, 2005

    Marketing

    I'm SO tired.

    Sunday night, Lydia woke at midnight and we were up until 3 a.m.; I don't know if it's stomach distress, teething, the mysterious "something else" or a combination. It's a good thing she's so wonderful.

    Monday, I get up at 6:15, get dressed. Lydia and I take the 7:02 bus to her day care. I take the 7:25 bus (running late) to the Y, play two games of racquetball (poorly), go to work and have a bowl of cereal.

    Do some work, mostly in preparation of a market research class. Ate lunch, did some research. Take the 4:25 bus to Schenectady, which takes over an hour - the value of reading material cannot be overstated.

    Teach the class from 6-9 (with 15 minute break). Take the 9:20 bus back to Albany (which is 10 minutes or more late), but is less traveled, so I get home about 10:20.

    And I'm so wired that, instead of going to bed, I'm e-mailing Fred Hembeck after reading his column, commending him on his unique angle on Talk Like a Pirate Day.

    Lydia wakes up around 11:20. I don't want her to get up, so after I give her something to hold, I stand perfectly still for 10 minutes until she goes to sleep, trying to avoid the previous night's event. You know how the contestants can stand for hours on a small platform on "Survivor"? I'd be the first one to give up.

    Then I go downstairs and see all of Washington's scoring, as they beat Dallas 14-13. Watch the news, and get to bed sometime after 1.

    Today, I'm up at 6:25, and still catch the 7:02, play lousy rball, and get to work exhausted.

    So, three things:

    SOME RULES FOR RIDING THE BUS

    1. Let people get off the bus before getting on the bus. More room for you.
    2. Consider allowing the elderly, the infirm and those overloaded with packages a chance to sit down.
    3. Notice that the bus is filling up and stop sitting on the inside seat when the outside seat is empty. This is not a private vehicle, it's public transportation.
    4. Realize that not everyone on the bus wants to hear your face-to-face or cell phone conversation.
    5. Recognize that on a very full bus with a dozen people standing, the chance of you finding a seat is fairly slim, so don't bother try ing to bulldoze your way to the back on this vain effort.
    6. Conversely, when the bus has standees and there are a half dozen people sardined near the front line, back up and make room.
    7. When you need to get off the bus, consider starting to move towards an exit before reaching the stop.

    Another thing: if you have some obscure reason for wanting to see my PowerPoint presentation on marketing (which isn't nearly as good without my sparkling personality, but what can you do?), please e-mail me. It is geared for this area in particular and New York State in general, but you might find it of some broad use.

    Finally, here's an article I received yesterday about why people blog. These may change for me from day to day, but the primary purpose of THIS blog posting is catharsis. Thank you for your therapeutic indulgence.

    Monday, September 19, 2005

    Am I an Insect or Am I a Human?


    Here's a meme I stole from Tosy and Cosh:

    First, list writer Robert Heinlein's examples of the accomplishments that distinguish a [generalist] human from a [specialist] insect. Then identify the ones he has actually done.

    A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
    I have taken the list and written explanatory notes.

    Change a diaper (Actually a few times B.L. - before Lydia - but a lot more now.)
    Plan an invasion (Actually it was a counterinvasion of a house I rented against the mice that tried to take over. I took over a dozen casualties and the rodents retreated.)
    Butcher a hog (Well, no.)
    Conn a ship (I've rowed a canoe, badly.)
    Design a building (Only with LEGOs.)
    Write a sonnet (Yes. It was terrible.)
    Balance accounts (Yes, for student government in college, and for the Schenectady Arts Council.)
    Build a wall (LEGOs don't count, do they?)
    Set a bone (I was directed to do a splint, once.)
    Comfort the dying (I hope so - my friends Steber and Nancy, and my father.)
    Take orders (In the corporate hierarchy.)
    Give orders (Committee chair.)
    Cooperate (I do play well with others, don't I?)
    Act alone (Does blogging count?)
    Solve equations (I was GREAT in algebra and trig, but got lost when I got to calculus.).
    Analyze a new problem (Being a reference librarian, happens almost daily. Every time I moved, finding where everything will go.)
    Pitch manure (I've cleaned cat litter boxes.)
    Program a computer (Well, I've installed software.)
    Cook a tasty meal (Actually, yes - I've cooked lasagna, and chicken a number of times, with vegetables or salad. Some other stuff, too.)
    Fight efficiently (Yes, once. But generally, I flail around.)
    Die gallantly (Sounds like Man of La Mancha- I'll get back to you on that.)

    Oh, yeah, I said I wouldn't pick on others to do these exercises. I lied. Eddie (who hasn't posted in two and a half weeks), Nat (who hasn't posted in one and a half months), and Logan (who has already posted TODAY, but who I wish to confound), come on down!

    Sunday, September 18, 2005

    Culcha


    Some things I've seen in the popular culture world that caught my attention recently:

    Paul McCartney has a new album, which got 3 stars out of 4 at USA Today, and an A from the guy at Knight Ridder. A good sign is that Sir Paul had creative tension from Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich; I think he does better working with people like Steve Miller, Elvis Costello, Denny Laine or that Lennon fellow. The review I'm most looking forward to is the one from Beatleologist with a Maccasian flair Fred Hembeck. And he promises it by the end of the week. (Pressure is on, buddy!)
    ***
    And speaking of my old friend, Fred did a piece on Joey Dee and the Starliters (of "Peppermint Twist" fame) and David Brigati (brother of Young Rascals singer Eddie) back on September 8. It reminded me, and I verified this with my trusty Joel Whitburn Billboard book, that Eddie and his fellow Rascals Felix Cavaliere and Gene Cornish were once part of the Starliters. David Brigati, who was in an earlier incrnation of thr Starliters, actually got to sing at least one lead on a Rascals album, the title track to the album "Once Upon a Dream", the album after "Groovin'".
    ***
    I'm going to watch a lot of PBS next week, September 26-29. (Broadcast times may differ where you live.) Monday and Tuesday, 9-11 p.m., American Masters is presenting "No Direction Home: Bob Dylan", directed by Martin Scorsese. Wednesday 8-9 p.m., "Best of the Beatles", tales from Pete Best about Liverpool and Hamburg. Wednesday 9-11 p.m., "Get Up, Stand Up" The Story of Pop and Protest", "from Joe Hill to Bob Geldof." Finally, Thursday, 9-11 p.m., "The Sixties: The Years That Shaped a Generation," if only for the music of Dylan, Arlo Guthrie, CSN, Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, the Beatles, the Chambers Brothers, the Doors, the Rolling Stones...and Elvis Costello?
    ***
    You may have heard that some Marvel characters will be made into movies. But some of the articles have been, to borrow a word, snarky. For instance, "Avengers-a super-sized version of the Fantastic Four"; I wonder if the writer had even HEARD of the FF before the movie?
    ***
    I took the Batman test on Gordon's site, and this is my results, the same as 148 of the other 338 people taking the test. Classic
    You're Classic Batman. You're the old school,
    iconic Batman that everyone knows. Your
    sidekick is Dick Grayson, the original Robin,
    and you also team up with Batgirl alot. You're
    the World's Greatest Detective, and also one of
    the best fighters on the planet. You're against
    guns and lethal force. Right now, you're pretty
    much in the prime of your career, before you
    become haunted by Dead Sidekicks and loved
    ones.


    What kind of Batman are you?
    brought to you by Quizilla
    ***
    And speaking of Batman, there was a category on JEOPARDY last week called "Also a Batman villian":
    $400 An extra playing card in as deck often used as a wild card
    $800 Neurotoxic crawler who's hard on her mates
    $1200 Antarctic krill-eater
    $1600 Itchy cashew relative
    $2000 His mask is in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo
    Answers at the end.
    ***
    The Napoleon Dynamite talking doll is now available. I've never seen the film (should I?), but I'm aware of its "cult classic" status. You can get the doll in lots of places, but I picked this place because it also has other N.D. stuff, PLUS the George Bush farting doll.
    ***
    Advertising geeks should check out Ad Rag. There are lots of free articles; it'll cost 2 Euros per month to view the ads.
    ***
    Johnny Bacardi wrote on Thursday:
    There's a quiz/meme going around over in the LJ community that goes something like this:
    1. Pick 16 of your favorite movies and choose one still from each movie
    2. Post those stills in your journal
    3. Have your friends guess which movie goes along with each screen still.
    Well, I actually contemplated this exercise, but got stuck 1) narrowing the choice of picking 16 films and 2) finding stills obscure enough to make it interesting. But check out the links, and you may be entertained, as I was.
    ***
    "Apprentice: Martha" will open with the tune of Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) by the Eurythmics. Ad Age notes that Annie Lennox stalking around portraying a dominatrix (as she does on the album cover) may seem somehow highly appropriate or inappropriate, depending on your view of Ms. Stewart. Talk about snarky! (A word I actually never used before today.)
    ***
    I thought the Where Is Andy's Mojo American Express Campaign was dopey in concept, but it became more so when he lost the first round of the U.S. Open tennis tournament to the 68th seeded player. Does anyone know how much Ogilvy & Mather got for that dud? Don't know, but AmEx spent $7 million to $10 million on the campaign
    ***
    Ad Age is pondering, and it got me to wonder, which of these sports stars, if any, will become the next Michael Jordan in terms of commercial appeal from among:
    Danica Patrick, 23, car racing
    Michelle Wie, 15, golf
    Tony Stewart, 34, car racing
    Natalie Gulbis, 22, golf
    Sidney Crosby, 18, ice hockey
    Freddy Adu, 16, soccer
    Albert Pujols, 23, baseball
    Eli Manning, 24, football
    Shaun White, 18, skateboarding
    Chris Moneymaker, 28, poker

    Any thoughts, oh opinionated ones?

    BTW, the current leaders in endorsement in the sporting world are, in millions of dollars (approx.):
    Tiger Woods, 80
    Andre Agassi, 44
    LeBron James, 27
    Phil Mickelson, 21
    Dale Earnhardt, Jr., 20
    Serena Williams, 20
    Lance Armstrong, 17.5
    Jeff Gordon, 15
    Shaquille O'Neal, 14
    Peyton Manning, 11
    Only Shaq (23) and Peyton (18) make more in their ACTUAL jobs than they make in their endorsements.
    ***
    J answers: The Joker, Black Widow, the Penguin, Poison Ivy, King Tut. I missed one in the time alloted.

    Saturday, September 17, 2005

    Mixed Bag CD Blog-Greg

    Don't worry, Mary, these are almost over.

    NAME: Greg Burgas
    BLOG NAME: Delenda Est Carthago
    NAME OF CD: At Last! At Last! My Forever Came Today!
    NUMBER OF CUTS: 24
    RUNNING TIME: 79:29
    COVER ART: Color
    SONG LIST:
    1. I Look Funny (talk)
    2. Monday A.M. First Thing-Think Tree
    3. Pass It Along-Chumbawamba
    4. Paper Doll-P.M. Dawn
    5. Closed session (talk)
    6. Therapy-Infectious Grooves
    7. Donde Estas, Yolanda?-Pink Martini
    8. Junkie-James
    9. In the Jailhouse Now-the Soggy Bottom Boys
    10. K Street-Fastbacks
    11. Down to the River to Pray-Alison Krauss
    12. The Last Mile-Cinderella
    13. Excursions-A Tribe Called Qwest
    14. Turn Your Head (talk)
    15. Ugly in the Morning-Faith No More
    16. No Man’s Woman-Sinead O’Connor
    17. Reservation Blues-Jim Boyd
    18. Ocean Size-Jane’s Addiction
    19. Istanbul (Not Constantinople)-They Might Be Giants
    20. Forever Came Today-Supremes
    21. Just Like Fred Astaire-James
    22. Last Call-the Popes
    23. Crown of Thorns-Mother Love Bone
    24. Thanx But No Thanx (talk)
    ALREADY REVIEWED BY: Me on June 27
    GENERAL THOUGHTS: See my review. I suggested that Greg got his CD out so early because he was anticipating the birth of his second child. He corrected me and indicated that he had a bunch of songs lying around from the previous mix. MY version made him look MUCH better.
    THINGS I PARTICULARLY LOVED: See my review. But it does play even better the fourth time through.
    ON THE OTHER HAND: More than the songs I mentioned in my review, the dialogue breaks the flow.
    OFFICE FRIENDLY: As far as I can tell. Some of the lyrics are so garbled – the word "ugly" in the title of #15 sounded like a curse, but it was just his pronunciation.
    ONLY VAGUELY RELATED: The Jackson 5 did a cover of the title track; Diana, Mary and Cindy do it so much better.

    Mixed Bag CD Blog-Nat

    NAME: Nat Pike
    BLOG NAME: Nat Pike's Wired For Sound
    NAME OF CD: We Don’t Need No Stinking Lyrics
    NUMBER OF CUTS: 15
    RUNNING TIME: 50:23 (only the second disc shorter than mine)
    COVER ART: Nicely typed
    SONG LIST: His post of June 10
    ALREADY REVIEWED BY:
    GENERAL THOUGHTS: I think the instrumental compilation is the trickiest. In songs with lyrics, you have another aspect that might grab you. But these are all or nothing. Not that there aren’t vocals on here – you’ll find whistling, vocoder, ahs. This is a very diverse set, and I enjoyed much of it.
    THINGS I PARTICULARLY LOVED: the accordion in Madagascar; whistling and banjo in Air; Dan K guitar and running bass; Wall of Voodoo; and especially, the jazz banjo feel of the Spidey theme. A suitable ending. Too bad ELP song was co-opted by Beef, because it’s a great piece of American music.
    ON THE OTHER HAND: There were periods when it became background music. Pleasant background music; it wasn’t an individual cut, but the flow. Sticking Wadsworth or Van Halen, or indeed anything from cuts 8-14 within cuts 4-7 might have changed it up a little sonically.
    OFFICE FRIENDLY: Well, no dirty words.
    ONLY VAGUELY RELATED: I've been told that the Tomita piece is the theme to the show Jack Horkheimer: Star Gazer, a very brief (5 minute), very quirky show that airs on our PBS station just before sign off.
    Geologically, Madagascar could be defined as a continent.

    Friday, September 16, 2005

    The blog in Mid-September

    I added a couple links: Johnny Bacardi (belatedly) and Tegan's Bloggity-Blog-Blog, both in the Comic Book section of this here electronic communicator.

    And I also, reluctantly, added the word verification feature to the comments part of the page. I started to believe all the nice things those spam bloggers were saying about the blog. What I discovered almost immediately is that my per day "hit" average went down by 5, but I'm OK with that.

    3 TV ?s


    In honor of the Emmys this weekend, I decided some time ago on the topic of television. Then Lefty beat me to it, but I'm going to use it any. Of course, I'll ask some different stuff:

    1. What show that went off the air in the past year will you miss the most? (The fact that it may now be in syndication or on DVD notwithstanding.)

    2. What show did you use to like but keep watching out of habit, or in the vain hope that it'll get better?

    3. What is your favorite show from your childhood (or now) that you would be embarrassed to acknowledge? (No one will see it here, so feel free to unburden yourself to ol' Ramblin'.)

    Thursday, September 15, 2005

    Toxic building

    This is what School 16 in Albany, just across the street from the Ellenbogan house and visible wheen I leave the house each morning, looked like at the end of June:



    But because it's 99 years old, difficult to make accessible, etc., etc., it started looking like:



    and



    and



    Now it's gone, save for the rubble.
    It's good that Lydia will be going to a new school. The district is rebuilding and expect to be done by January 2007.

    The problem I 've been having lately, ever since the first part of the demolition, is that I can TASTE it. I know they did asbestos remediation in mid-June, before the deconstruction. But the dust or mold or whatever that's been released was so bad that we have ceased taking Lydia for a walk.

    I know progress is messy, but does it have to burn my throat? And my nose?

    Neighbors

    Good neighbors are sometimes difficult to find. We had two great neighbors, one right next door, and another that was a half dozen houses down that we lost this calendar year.

    Harry was of Greek heritage. Even though he was in the United States since at least 1958, he never lost his heavy-duty accent. Sometimes he'd speak, and you would just nod if you had an inkling of what you thought he was talking about. Harry was a big time flirt, in that non-threatening, non-creepy way. He flirted with my wife, my mother-in-law, my sister, almost any visiting woman. I'm still not convinced that he knew MY name, but my spouse's, he knew.

    He was very active in his church, which runs a very dynamic Greek festival each year. If we couldn't make it, he'd be sure to pick up some baklava and other taste treats. He also was an avid gardener, and he supplied us with more vegetables in the summer than we could eat; we froze some. And he grew some nice flowers, that he presented to my wife on a regular basis. Truth is, she got more flowers fronm Harry than she did from me in the past four years. Unfortunately, Harry became ill and died in February at the age of 82.

    Mrs. Ellenbogen was an elegent lady of 85. (Her name was Mary, but WE never called her that.) She was a master gardener and the front of her house was meticulous. She was spry, walking all over the neighborhood. Her husband Bernard, a retired lawyer over a decade her senior was understandably lame. They'd both head for the corner, she'd get there then go back and walk the rest of the way with him. She was very vital and very devoted to her spouse. She was very interested in our daughter's well-being, and would talk with her when we met on the street.

    The Ellenbogans wintered in Florida for about half the year. One day in April, Mr. Ellenbogan fell into their pool down in the Sunshine State; she jumped in after him, and they both drowned. Unlike Harry, who had shown signs of decline over the last year, her death was a particular shock to us and to the neighborhood.

    I found out just this month that Harry's daughter Cookie (her name is Maria, but we never call her that) is buying the Ellenbogan house. Harry, she and her brother Dino had all been living on separate floors in Harry's house. Dino will stay in Harry's old house, and rent the upstairs.

    We miss Harry and Mrs. Ellenbogan very much, but I think that they'd be pleased that their houses will remain in good and loving hands.

    Wednesday, September 14, 2005

    It's All About ME

    (I fret too much that this will be taken with the affected vainglorious tone.)

    As Mr. Hembeck so acutely observed today, I find myself in the middle of the blogiverse. It even extends beyond the comic book folks.

    I was looking at Steve Gerber's blog the other day when there was noticed by ME something called Technorati. (Gordon's page has it too, but I did not notice it before.) It shows blogs that are linked to his blog, such as MINE. Naturally, I checked to see who was linked to ME, and I found a bunch of these comic bloggers I've only met electronically, all of whom are in the Comic Blog section of MY blog, plus MY friend Lori.

    But I also came across a Chris Black, a "Liberal Democrat Councillor" from Rayleigh, Essex, United Kingdom, who linked to something I wrote a couple weeks ago. I think he's Lefty's long-lost cousin across the pond (both named Chris, both with last names that are colors, both liberal). I think we should all write to him and say "Hi."

    Last Tuesday, I discovered that it was ME (or I, but let's not get fussy here) who had won Logan's contest. I don't even know what the criteria were, but no matter.
    But then Logan caused ME all sorts of distress by asking ME, who's only recently re-entered the comic book word, and tentatively at that, to pick out what he should read from his enormous pile of unread items; and, lo, he actually took some of MY advice!

    On Friday, Greg announced that one of the three winners of his contest was ME.

    On Saturday, I went to Fred's page and saw that he filled out the Five for Friday poll of the Comic Reporter, so I thought I'd fill out MY choices, which were:
    1. Fred Hembeck (the cartoon, not the guy - the guy is WAY too serious)
    2. Daffy Duck
    3. Smilin' Ed Smiley
    4. Superchicken
    5. the main character in the Groening "Hell" strips
    Poultry, in general, are funny.
    But then then, I realized the responses were attributted to Carol Green, because I was using her e-mail. But the responses were from ME.

    Today, Lefty (finally) noted that the winner of his contest was...Greg. But Greg was congratulated by ME.

    Anyway, I'm glad I got THAT out of my system. More entertainment next time.

    MOVIE REVIEW: Broken Flowers


    Carol and I got to go to a movie again! Even when the movie is not so good, this is an enjoyasble time.

    Let others make you wait to tell you what they thought of the thing they are reviewing; Broken Flowers is a wonderful movie. Poor Jim Jim Jarmusch seems practically traumatized that he has written and directed a "commercial" movie, after working on films such as Ghost Dog, and Coffee and Cigarettes.

    This is a picture of reluctant discovery. Much has been made of Bill Murray's expressive face, and it's true that he conveys much in a haggard sigh. The film doesn't work without his pained perseverence.
    But the biggest surprise for me was Jeffrey Wright - he was ocasionally laugh-out-loud FUNNY. I always associated him with heavier fare such as Angel in America (the play and the HBO production), Lackawanna Blues, and the remake of The Manchurian Candidate.
    The women, Sharon Stone, Frances Conroy, Jessica Lange and an unrecognizable Tilda Swinton, and other supporting characters were all fine as well. And the ending!!

    At some level, I may have enjoyed this film for three reasons that others may not share. Murray has a line about being a "stalker in a Taurus"; we have a Taurus. Murray was supposed to traveling all around the country, but the architecture and the roads suggest a more limited sojourn, much of which I revcognized as from south of Albany and north of New York City. And a young woman had a neighing hoorse on a plane; that was Paco, and I have a Paco myself.

    My friend Mary also saw the film, "liked it, but didn't love it." She said, "I could relate to Bill's (fine) portrayal of depression and paralysis, but who needs it?" well, if he just stayed there, I'd agree, but there did seem to be some development in the character, in spite of himself. There was something else in the movie that she thought was "a bit much." (If you see the film, I THINK you'll figure out what she means.) I thought the point was that the character was in competition with another, and that she was taught to use whatever was at her disposal; it was so surprising that it worked for me.

    Now, I must confess something: I didn't much like Lost in Translation, the award-winning film of 2003, which also starred Murray. Perhaps, it was built up in my mind too much, with all of the very positive reviews, but it just left me cold. So, I was wary of reviews that suggested that Murray was as good in Broken Flowers as he was in Lost in Tanslation. For whatever reasons, the newer film resonated more.

    Tuesday, September 13, 2005

    Gatemouth


    There's this site linked to my page called Dead or Alive, which is a pretty good source of...well, who's dead and who's alive. For instance, there's a mention of the recent passing of Chris Schenkel, the sports announcer I feel I watched all my life.

    But there's no mention of the death of legendary bluesman Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown, who seems to appear on practically every blues compilation I own, and who I've seen at a bluesfest in Albany in recent years. So, if you have a mind, write to Dead or Alive, and follow the instructions to have him included.

    For that matter, ask them to add Vassar Clements, who I wrote about last month. These are core purveyors of American music and ought not be forgotten.
    ***
    And on a TOTALLY unrelated note, new Gilmore Girls tonight! Amazon is trying to entice me to buy the 4th season on DVD, but we haven't even gotten through Season 1, which I bought for Carol last year.

    My Darth Tater contest selection

    OK, I'll admit it: when Lefty first suggested this contest, I figured, "OK, what the heck, I'll look at some CD I'd previously put together and copy that." But then I looked at the rules again (see Lefty's page on August 3 for all of them)... The relevant ones for my purposes are these:

    Create the Greatest 60's, 70's, 80's, or 90's Music Compilation Ever Created. All tracks must be from one decade only. Bonus points for keeping away from tracks that always seem to make it on those decades collection (i.e. do we really need another 80s hits mix that has A-Ha's "Take on Me" on it).

    Ah, that last part made it a little trickier.

    Inspired by Tosy, one of the other contestants in Lefty's contest, I thought I'd share my (il)logic in picking the songs, especially now that Lefty has reviwed my picks (on September 12).

    In the period between discovering Fred Hembeck's webpage and starting my blog, I put together a series of CDs that I sent to him (and he to me). Some were chronological, some were thematic (love, dance). The trick was to NOT send cuts that he had sent me, and for the most part, I was successful.

    For Lefty's disc (which I may refer to as Tater disc), I wanted to concentrate on groups that most everyone had heard of who was familiar with the music of the era, but not necessarily the obvious tracks.

    1. The Who "Tommy's Holiday Camp"
    I had put together a Mix with songs with Hello or Welcome in the title or prominent in the lyric. I decided to start Tater with a song that ends with the word "welcome". Definitely NOT a hit, though off a hit album.

    2. Cream "Doing That Scrapyard Thing"
    In my 1969 Mix, I had a live version of "I'm So Glad" to end the disc. Well, I love that song, but it's too long for the second slot on the Tater disc. So, I went to the same album, "Goodbye Cream", which has only three studio cuts: Badge (a hit), What a Bringdown and my selection. This song has the same circusy feel as the previous cut. Of course, this cut features former Yardbird guitarist Eric Clapton.

    3. Led Zeppelin "Communications Breakdown"
    The first cut on my 1969 disc, featuring former Yardbirds guitarist Jimmy Page.

    4. Donovan "Barabajagel"
    The second cut on my 1969 disc, featuring former Yardbirds guitarist Jeff Beck. Fred & I agree that these last two songs play GREAT together.

    5. Traffic "Medicated Goo"
    This is here to continue the Goo theme from the previous track, and because I love this song. Also from the 1969 disc.

    6. Lovin' Spoonful "Six O'Clock"
    This song is in this slot because it's the sixth cut. From the 1967-68 disc. I like the staccato feel.

    7. QoS "Ain't Nobody"
    Well, we need some soul music. The song from my 67-68 disc was "Since You've Been Gone", not "Respect", but not exactly obscure either. Then I looked at the other possibilities and the NEXT selection capped it.

    8. Three Dog Night "Nobody"
    "Ain't Nobody" followed by this song from the first Three Dog Night album. I LIKED the first 3DN album, just like I liked the first Chicago album, and the first Blood, Sweat and Tears album - no apologies. From the 69 disc, I think.

    9. Stevie Wonder "You Met Your Match"
    Given the fact that I LOVE Stevie, it's surprising that he didn't make any of my compilation discs until his 1970s output. A minor hit, so it fit the criteria.

    10. Steppenwolf "Move Over"
    Hembeck doesn't like Steppenwolf except for the two hits, Lefty not at all. But, in addition to the guitar, check out the lyrics. From the 69 mix.

    11. Monkees "Words"
    I had a Monkees Greatest Hits vinyl LP, given to me by my old FantaCo buddy, Mitch Cohn. Then a few years ago, I got a GH CD from my friend Mark. The former did not have "Words", and I frankly had forgotten about it until I heard it again on the latter. I fell back in love with the tune. From the 67-68 mix.

    12. Chicago "I'm A Man"
    As I said, I liked the Chicago Transit Authority. From the 69 mix.

    13. Neil Young "The Loner"
    I had "Cinnamon Girl" on a mix, but too much of a hit. (It only got to #55, but for Neil, that was pretty good.) 3DN did a cover of this song on their first LP, so I picked the original.

    14. The Band "King Harvest"
    I felt these two songs by Canadians (primarily) felt like they were in the same groove. The second Band LP was my favorite, and one of my all-time favorite albums.

    15. The Rascals "It's Wonderful"
    When my sister Leslie and I played this at home, we used to jog around the living room. I found it infectious. (Lefty did not.) From 67-68 mix.

    16. The Mamas & Papas "Free Advice"
    I guess I liked this song because it's quirky. Had forgotten about it until I started listening to the group in honor of John Phillips' birthday recently.

    17. The Supremes "Some Things You Never Get Used To"
    This was another new addition. Love the early post-Florence Ballard stuff (Reflections, Love Child albums), before they declined into parody.

    18. Frank Zappa "Peaches en Regalia"
    I don't always "get" Zappa, either, but I love this tune. From the 69 mix.

    19. Reggie Milner "Habit-Forming Love"
    I needed one "out there" selection. This is it. I was remined of it when I was playing BOTH of my Stax-Volt box sets of 9 discs each, averaging 70 minutes per disc, last month.

    20. Vanilla Fudge "She's Not There"
    I prefer the Zombies' version, too, but that wouldn't have met the criteria. It was a moody intro to the next cut.

    21. The Beatles "Inner Light"
    I didn't put any Beatles on the chronological discs (except "Cry for a Shadow" I think), since Fred the Beatleologist was going to be the recipient. But this Tater disc needed one, I thought. What song by the world-famous BEATLES is obscure? Well, there was "You Know Ny Name" (b-side to "Let It Be"), but I opted for the b-side to "Lady Madonna". It went well, thematically, with the final song. And pairing former Capitol Records labelmates together at the end added to the concept.

    22. Beach Boys "Transcendental Meditation"
    I really like this song. It sounds uncharacteristically off-key (or maybe it's just the harmonic structure), it rocks, and it's short. From the 67-68 disc.

    OK, so I bring the disc to work, so I can take it to the P.O. to mail to Lefty, and it SKIPPED from track 12 on. The deadline was approaching, and Tater disc had to go cross country, so I stayed up that night and laid it down again. No skips, and he got it in time.

    One of these decades, Chris is going to tell us who won. He SAID he'd announce last Friday. He's really dragging it out. Where'd he get the idea to do THAT? From his friend Ed and from ME! O.K., I'll be (somewhat) patient.

    Primary Day 2005

    Today is Primary Day in New York state. In NYC, the polls are open from 6 a.m. until 9 p.m., but upstate, the polls are only open from noon until 9 p.m. I HATE that. I like to vote before I go to work so that the campaigns can check the list and see that I've already voted so that they DONT call me to get out to vote.

    Of course, the 12-year incumbant mayor, Jerry "Well Tanned" Jennings is a lock for renomination by the Democratic Party (not to be confused with a democratic party). And the Democratic nomination is all one really needs to get elected in the city of Albany. Jennings' opponent is Archie Goodbee, a black man who was all but invisible from the moment he declared until fairly recently, and is outmanaged, outfunded, and generally, out of luck.

    An incumbant candidate always brings negatives, and I suspect Goodbee expected the support of the progressive wing of the Democratic party just because Archie is not Jerry. The progressives got black ADA David Soares to beat the incumbant district attorney, Paul Clyne last year, but Soares and his people did the groundwork that Goodbee did not, and the progressives pretty much opted out of that race altogether, or supported the mayor.

    Monday, September 12, 2005

    Cindy Sheehan's Coming to Town

    I'm very happy that Camp Casey has pricked the conscience of a lot of folks this summer. I'm happy that Cindy Sheehan will be in Albany on Wednesday, and I expect I'll see her at some point.

    And yet - I still get the feeling that it won't matter. Colin Powell was interviewed on 20/20 last Friday, admitted that he was suckered into believing the WMD info, acknowledged that it was a stain on his career that will be with him the rest of his life. Yet, he still believes in "staying the course."

    Someone: please give me some encouraging words that will help me believe that this war will end sooner rather than later.

    Thhe schedule, for those who might care:
    10 a.m.- set up Camp Casey on the Capitol Park West
    12 noon-rally in front of the Capitol
    7 p.m.- forum in Chancellor's Hall, State Education Bldg., Washington Avenue



    This is Constitution week. Friday and Saturday are Constitution Days. I would have totally missed this except that my wife asked me to find material so that she can prepare a lesson plan dealing with the Bill of Rights on Friday.

    I do think the irony is palpable that this President, who signed the so-called USA PATRIOT Act, has put his signature on a law plugging the Constitution.
    Meanwhile, this conversation is taking place in the Letters to the Editor in the local newspapers, and other papers, I gather; the "logic" is this: the soldiers are in Iraq "protecting American freedom and our way of life" ; one of those freedoms is the right to dissent; but that we ought not to use that right because we'll undermine the troops and provide succor to the enemy. I'm sure that the opposition to the American occupation, or the Iraqi liberation, depending on how you view these things, is sitting around waiting for Cindy Sheehan to plot her next vigil so that they can strike.

    My JEOPARDY! desire


    I believe the new season of the aforementioned game show's new season starts today.

    When Merv Griffin, inspired by his wife, came up with the concept of JEOPARDY! four decades ago, it was a stroke of genius. Three players who thought they knew a thing or two get to compete in a game where they give you the answer and you have to come up with the question. If you win five games, you go away, but you come back for the Tournament of Champions.

    After a champion has retired, through the luck of the draw, there would be three new players; one of them would be able to go back to their hometown and say that he or she was a JEOPARDY! Champion.

    What the rule change a couple seasons ago has meant has been the creation of scarcity. Under the old rules, Ken Jennings would have been gone after day five; under the new rules, and Ken’s 74th victory, about 15 people won’t even make it onto the show. The Tournament of Champions of 2004, in order to fill the fifteen slots allotted, needed to go to more four-time and even three-time champions.

    This really isn’t about Ken Jennings, though I admit that I had tired of him in the same way some people root for anybody except the Yankees; it’s about the game. This is the designated hitter in baseball, the shot clock in basketball. And while those changes in other sports have produced MORE offense for SEVERAL, the new JEOPARDY! rule change has been beneficial for only a few, and as detrimental to the game as Astroturf is on the knees of a football running back.

    I wish they would change the rule, if not to five appearances, then certainly 10. I want MORE JEOPARDY! champions, not fewer. But with the spike in ratings during Jennings' run, I don't anticipate any change. Sigh.

    (Oh, yeah, for those joining me recently, I was on the show. I discussed it at length in this blog for 11 Saturdays starting May 28.)
    **
    I was flicking through the channels Saturday afternoon, and I saw Alex Trebek on one of those celebrity poker matches. Usually tight-fisted, according to the announcer, he won about $10K on a bluff (6 and 7 of hearts, I believe, with no pair). Tom the Dog can tell you more about celebrity poker in this column than I choose to know. And if you want to see the episode in question, I believe it's airing again on Bravo this Thursday at 7 p.m., just before a new episode.

    Sunday, September 11, 2005

    11 Sept 01 plus 4


    I am on this listserv of Methodist clergy and laity. (I'm not a Methodist anymore, but what the hey.) They discussed weeks ago the fact that September 11 was going to be on a Sunday this year for the first time since the attacks. "What are you going to preach on?" "How are you going to deal with it during the service?" A potpourri of responses, but I saw no one who wasn't going to acknowledge it in some significant way.

    I've got a lot of thought about what's gone on in the country over the past four years, how I don't feel safer but rather the opposite, that our response to an emergency fills me with dread rather than confidence, how certain parties (think the 23rd letter) will attempt to exploit this day for political gain (again), and justify the Iraqi invasion (again). But I'm not going to get into it right now.

    Maybe it's because I'm a little under the weather. Maybe it's Katrina Fatigue. (Am I even ALLOWED to admit to that?) I haven't even finished the series of Katrina-related stories in this week's Metroland, but I do recommend the "Cracks in the Spin" links.

    I'm not even going to share my own recollections of the day four years ago - maybe next year, on the fifth anniversary. Today, I'm just going to share tales of a couple friends of mine:


    An Albany friend of mine took a train to NYC that morning. She had an appointment in one of the outer boroughs. But when she heard about the attacks, she didn't even bother to try to call the client; she probably wouldn't have gotten through, in any case. Instead, she took the very next train back to Albany at 9:30, just before the authorities decided to stop rail transportation out of the city. That proved to be a very sage decision, since it was likely the LAST train to leave the city for several days.
    ***
    Subject: Where is your office?
    Are you OK?
    ROG

    Hi. It's Thursday morning. I was about to board a Jet Blue plane at JFK when I called my friend. Her father had died Monday night after a long hospiitalization and while we were on the phone at 8:45 she saw the hit on tv and conveyed it to me. I informed the people around me what she was telling me. They had us board the plane and another person informed us of the 2nd hit as we were boarding. After 5 minutes on the plane they cancelled our flight and asked us to disembark. I got out of the airport as quickly as possible at about 9:30 expecting to stand in an impossibly long taxi line. I remarkably was only 5th in line and got a cab right away. We took choked local streets back to my house in Brooklyn, saw the horror of the towers in flames, watched the first one go down and heard on the radio that the Pentagon was also hit and that #2 WTC went down. Once we entered my neighborhood at about 10:45AM, the once clear blue sky turned to a white and grey cloud of falling ash. It looked like a snowy winter day for a couple of hours as the debris descended and again later in the day when #7 WTC fell. The toxic acrid smell in the air is undescribable. I hesitate to think that the ash that fell from the sky could have been cremated human remains and the odor in the air like that of a crematorium. My building is directly south of Governor's Island, one block from Pier 7 and as the crow flies, probably a mile from what was the WTC. I used to be able to see the top of the WTC that had the tv antennas on it from my apartment windows. Needless to say I was relieved and grateful to be home and that I hadn't been enroute to my office in Manhattan when usually at 9:15-9:30AM, I would have been on a subway that goes underneath WTC. It was difficult getting out word of my safety to my family because of the choked phone lines. I haven't slept well (nothing new there) and in my walks through Brooklyn yesterday and on 9/11, I witness skittish people.
    They just closed the subways south of 42nd because of the damage potential of the rumbling vibrations to the crash site. I guess I'll be staying put again today. I've been purposefully trying not to get on-line or on the phone becasue the phone infracture is clogged enough and needs to be free for critical communication. Thanks for checking in.

    Saturday, September 10, 2005

    Grandpa Green



    I remember the first time it happened. It was a woman visiting my church. I was a bit perturbed but tried not to show it.

    The telephone repair guy was the second one. I was defiant. Nope, "Mine," I pointed.

    The third time, my attitude was pretty matter-of-fact, as I caught a supposedly tethered baby unleashed while we were sitting at a concert in Washington Park. The guy said, "Thanks, gramps." He assumed, as the others did, that my child was my grandchild. It is, if I'm being rational about it, understandable. I was 51 when I had Lydia. My father was 52 when my sister Leslie had her daughter Becky.

    Of course, the point of mentioning this is not to protect my fragile ego - I'm all right now, thanks - but to note that one should avoid jumping to conclusions about these things without the facts.
    ***
    This conversation, strangely, reminds me of something the wedding planner asked at Carol's and my wedding in 1999. "Are your parents alive and still married to each other?"
    "Yes."
    "Are any of your grandparents still alive?"
    "No, all deceased."
    "Good."
    I knew she wasn't saying that it was good that our grandparents were all dead, merely that it was one less logistical issue to consider. It was too funny a comment to really offend us. But it was a dopey thing to say, and I hope she never said that to someone more easily offended.

    3 Grand ?s

    National Grandparents Day is coming up tomorrow. (And here I thought it was invented by Hallmark.) Thus, the source of my queries, which, if you would kindly respond to, I'd appeciate it:

    1. Are your grandparents still on this plane of existence? If not, when did the last one pass away?

    2. Who was/is your favorite, and why?

    3. What side of the family did you spend the most time with as a kid (visits, reunions)?

    Friday, September 09, 2005

    The Streets of Albany Were Designed by Sadists


    I was walking my daughter on Manning Boulevard recently, when a couple pulled over and asked for an address on North Manning Boulevard. I had to laugh out loud. "OK, go a couple more blocks north (as they were going), then suddenly the street will head east for a few blocks, then curve back north. When you cross Central Avenue, then you'll be on North Manning, with a whole new numbering scheme."

    Another time I was walking along State Street near Washington Park. This man was walking to an address on State Street, but he was very confused because State Street seemed to end. "Go over to Western Avenue, go two blocks, turn right a block, and you'll find State Street starts again."

    Wha?

    Albany is an old city. Its roots run back to a voyage by Henry Hudson in 1609. It was incorporated in 1686. Thus, a lot of the streets are not exactly parallel.
    For instance, start at the bottom of the hill at State Street and Broadway. Get to the top of the hill, pass to the right of the Capitol (where the traffic pattern suggests) and suddenly, you're on Washington Avenue. Where did State Street go? To the left of the Capitol on a one-way street, going the way opposite the numbering.

    OK. Get to Lark Street. The bulk of the traffic seems to be going at 1 o'clock, and that continues to be Route 5. But that's not Washington Avenue, that's Central Avenue. No, stay straight in one of the worst-designed intersections in any city. Go about three blocks to the firehouse. Go straight and you're suddenly on Western Avenue. Where did Washington Avenue go? You should have veered right.

    In the opposite direction, Western and Madison Avenue do a divergence, with Route 20 suddenly moving from the former to the latter. New Scotland Avenue is an interesting street that is perpendicular to Madison Avenue at one point, and parallel a few blocks later.

    The situation is made worse by development over the years. The creation of the Empire State Plaza, Washington Park, Albany High School at its current location, and the UAlbany uptown campus mean that there are MANY streets that start and stop and start again. An example: Hudson Avenue. It starts at Broadway and ends with the Empire State Plaza, built in the 1960s. It starts again on the other side of the plaza and ends at the park. There's another segment between the high school and Allen Street. Thee are lots of examples of that. One would think this must be a police/fire department nightmare.

    And the highways are no better. A peculiarity of the New York State Thruway, which is a toll road, is that it is on I-87 going north from NYC to Albany, then I-90, heading west to Buffalo. But there are also free segments of each interstate, not part of the Thruway. There's a sign on I-787 that says . What if one wants to go to Saratoga or Schenectady? Go towards Buffalo. If Saratoga's the goal, then you hop up I-87, the FREE portion known as the Northway, towards Montreal. According to a newspaper story, some folks coming from the New York City area to go to the casino on Exit 30 of the Thruway come up I-87, the Thruway, end up staying on I-87, the Northway, way up in the Adirondacks. What they SHOULD have done is stay on the Thruway, which becomes I-90, and take THAT Exit 30. And because of our arcane roads, New York State is not likely to get exits tied to the miles to/from the border, which is how they do things in New Jersey and Pennsylvania and Virginia, for three examples. Maybe that's why the Monday road section of the local paper is one of its most popular features. Even people who live here are still trying to figure out the best way to get from here to there.

    Thursday, September 08, 2005

    Music of '71

    Just back from vacation this week. That always means look for the easy blog post.
    So per Mr. Bacardi a couple weeks ago (August 22), I went to Music Outfitters, entered the year I graduated from high school in the search function.

    Subsequently, I found that practically EVERYONE I read was doing the SAME THING. But I decided to post it anyway because NONE OF THEM GRADUATED IN 1971.

    I decided to * the ones I like, # the ones I hate and italicize my favorite. Do nothing to the ones I don't remember (or don't care about). Just to be contrary, and because the page is bolded already.

    Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep by Mac and Katie Kissoon? How DID I miss that song?

    Top 100 Hits of 1971 / Top 100 Songs of 1971
    1. Joy To The World, Three Dog Night (overplayed)
    2*. Maggie May / (Find A) Reason To Believe, Rod Stewart
    3*. It's Too Late / I Feel The Earth Move, Carole King
    4. One Bad Apple, Osmonds
    5*. How Can You Mend A Broken Heart, Bee Gees
    6. Indian Reservation, Raiders
    7#. Go Away Little Girl, Donny Osmond
    8. Take Me Home, Country Roads, John Denver
    9*. Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me), Temptations
    10. Knock Three Times, Dawn
    11*. Me And Bobby McGee, Janis Joplin
    12*. Tired Of Being Alone, Al Green
    13*. Want Ads, Honey Cone
    14*. Smiling Faces Sometimes, Undisputed Truth
    15. Treat Her Like A Lady, Cornelius Brothers and Sister Rose
    16*. You've Got A Friend, James Taylor
    17*. Mr. Big Stuff, Jean Knight
    18*. Brown Sugar, Rolling Stones
    19*. Do You Know What I Mean, Lee Michaels
    20. The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down, Joan Baez
    21*. What's Going On, Marvin Gaye
    22*. Uncle Albert-Admiral Halsey, Paul McCartney
    23*. Ain't No Sunshine, Bill Withers
    24*. Signs, Five Man Electrical Band
    25. She's A Lady, Tom Jones
    26*. Superstar, Murray Head and The Trinidad Singers
    27. I Found Someone Of My Own, Free Movement
    28. Amos Moses, Jerry Reed
    29*. Temptation Eyes, The Grass Roots
    30. Superstar, Carpenters
    31*. My Sweet Lord / Isn't It A Pity, George Harrison
    32. Sweet And Innocent, Donny Osmond
    33. Put Your Hand In The Hand, Ocean
    34. Chick-a-boom, Daddy Dewdrop
    35*. For All We Know, Carpenters
    36. Help Me Make It Through The Night, Sammi Smith
    37*. Rainy Days And Mondays, Carpenters
    38*. If You Could Read My Mind, Gordon Lightfoot
    39*. Gypsy, Tramps And Thieves, Cher
    40*. Never Can Say Goodbye, Jackson 5
    41. Rose Garden, Lynn Anderson
    42. Don't Pull Your Love, Hamilton, Joe Frank and Reynolds
    43*. It Don't Come Easy, Ringo Starr
    44. Mr. Bojangles, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
    45. I Love You For All Seasons, Fuzz
    46*. Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get, Dramatics
    47*. That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be, Carly Simon
    48*. If You Really Love Me, Stevie Wonder
    49*. Spanish Harlem, Aretha Franklin
    50. I Don't Know How To Love Him, Helen Reddy
    51. Yo-yo, Osmonds
    52*. Bridge Over Troubled Water, Aretha Franklin
    53. Doesn't Somebody Want To Be Wanted, Partridge Family
    54*. Draggin' The Line, Tommy James
    55*. Proud Mary, Ike and Tina Turner
    56*. Beginnings / Colour My World, Chicago (more for Beginnings)
    57. Stay Awhile, Bells
    58*. Sweet City Woman, Stampeders
    59. Me And You And A Dog Named Boo, Lobo
    60. Another Day / Oh Woman, Oh Why, Paul McCartney
    61. If, Bread
    62*. Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology), Marvin Gaye
    63*. One Toke Over The Line, Brewer and Shipley
    64. She's Not Just Another Woman, 8th Day
    65. Bring The Boys Home, Freda Payne
    66*. I Just Want To Celebrate, Rare Earth
    67. Never Ending Song Of Love, Delaney and Bonnie and Friends
    68. Easy Loving, Freddy Hart
    69*. Liar, Three Dog Night
    70. Stick-up, Honey Cone
    71. Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep, Mac and Katie Kissoon
    72. Love Story (Where Do I Begin), Andy Williams
    73*. Wild World, Cat Stevens
    74. When You're Hot, You're Hot, Jerry Reed
    75*. Funky Nassau, Beginning Of The End
    76. If Not For You, Olivia Newton-John
    77*. Groove Me, King Floyd
    78#. Watching Scotty Grow, Bobby Goldsboro
    79*. Woodstock, Matthews' Southern Comfort
    80*. Amazing Grace, Judy Collins
    81*. I Hear You Knocking, Dave Edmunds
    82*. Lonely Days, Bee Gees
    83*. Here Comes That Rainy Day Feeling Again, Fortunes
    84*. Won't Get Fooled Again, Who
    85. Trapped By A Thing Called Love, Denise Lasalle
    86*. Mama's Pearl, Jackson 5
    87. Timothy, Buoys
    88. I Woke Up In Love This Morning, Partridge Family
    89*. Theme From "Shaft", Isaac Hayes
    90*. If I Were Your Woman, Gladys Knight and The Pips
    91*. I Am...I Said, Neil Diamond
    92*. Wedding Song (There Is Love), Paul Stookey
    93. Don't Knock My Love, Pt. 1, Wilson Pickett
    94*. Love Her Madly, The Doors
    95*. Here Comes The Sun, Richie Havens
    96. Sweet Mary, Wadsworth Mansion
    97. Right On The Tip Of My Tongue, Brenda and The Tabulations
    98*. One Less Bell To Answer, Fifth Dimension
    99*. Riders On The Storm, The Doors
    100. It's Impossible, Perry Como

    Which either means that the music of 1971 was REALLY good, or I'm incredibly tolerant.

    Mixed Bag CD Blog-Thom

    I hadn't forgotten these; I've been away.

    NAME: Thom Gladhill
    BLOG NAME: In One Ear
    NAME OF CD: Into the Wabac Machine: In One Ear Vol. 2
    NUMBER OF CUTS: 20
    RUNNING TIME: 75:42
    COVER ART: Peabody & Sherman on the cover, also on the CD itself, with the latter in a Mohawk. One of my two favorite covers.
    SONG LIST:
    1. Intro
    2. The Reflex-Alexia
    3. True Faith-Ghoti Hook
    4. A Letter to Elise-Aaron Sprinkle
    5. 1999 (the Bomb Mix)-Regenerator
    6. Blood and Roses-The 77s
    7. I Love Rock-N-Roll-Joe Christmas
    8. Train in Vain-Hokus Pick
    9. Love Song-Deluxtone Rockets
    10. Kids in America-Morella’s Forest
    11. Every Breath You Take-Fanmail
    12. Where Is My Mind?-House of Wires
    13. Send Me an Angel-Denison Marrs
    14. We Got the Beat-Huntingtons
    15. One Tree Hill-Mortal
    16. Just What I Needed-Insyderz
    17. Fascination street-Stavesacre
    18. Eyes Without A Face-Phantasmic
    19. I Would Die 4 U-Cush
    20. Rock the Casbah-One Bad Pig
    21. Take on Me-MxPx
    ALREADY REVIEWED BY: Gordon on August 24
    GENERAL THOUGHTS: This is another covers CD, but the original songs are from the 1980s. Quite possibly the best realized discs from concept to execution in the bunch..
    THINGS I PARTICULARLY LOVED: 2 & 10 are better than the original. I love the revisit of 19, which reminds me of Steve Earle. 5, 6, 9, 14, and the much faster 11 are comparable.
    ON THE OTHER HAND: Cut 13 isn’t on my copy; maybe a copying error? 16 and 20 are too similar to the original for my taste. I like ‘em, but what’s the point of doing a cover if it’s going to be a slavish imitation? 8 would be in this category too, save for the female vocal.
    OFFICE FRIENDLY: As far as I could tell.
    ONLY VAGUELY RELATED: While I recognize all but 3 or 4 songs, I am totally unfamiliar with all of the bands except for MxPx. I went to a No Doubt show in July 1997 with my friend’s 14-year old daughter and four of her friends. MxPx played with such ferocity that thought I’d be knocked down by the sound waves. The middle group was a ska group, the Selecter (I think), and the kids (not so much the ones with me, but almost all the kids), hated them, HATED them, turned their backs on them, literally. At the end of their section, one young man proclaimed, "That was the worst piece of s*** I’ve ever heard." It was like Buddy Guy or another great blues guitarist opening for Eric Clapton and getting booed.

    Wednesday, September 07, 2005

    What Age Do You Act?

    I feel constitutionally required to post SOMETHING today that has nothing to do with Louisiana.

    So, here's one of those blogaround things:

    Try it.

    You Are(that is to say, I am) 28 Years Old - wow, what a way to lose 24 years! Must be from having a kid.

    Under 12: You are a kid at heart. You still have an optimistic life view - and you look at the world with awe.

    13-19: You are a teenager at heart. You question authority and are still trying to find your place in this world.

    20-29: You are a twentysomething at heart. You feel excited about what's to come... love, work, and new experiences.

    30-39: You are a thirtysomething at heart. You've had a taste of success and true love, but you want more!

    40+: You are a mature adult. You've been through most of the ups and downs of life already. Now you get to sit back and relax.

    Katrina aftermath

    A number of articles analyzing the hurricane and response

    The Last Time America Lost a City. First a little historical perspective.

    Man-Made Mistakes Increase Devastation Of 'Natural' Disasters. This Wall Street Journal piece makes it clear that the hurricane was YOUR fault.

    Bush's Role in the New Orleans Disaster. When W said to the FEMA head, "Brownie, you're doing a fantastic job," I did want to gag. I suspect that Greg wanted to gag, too.

    And speaking of FEMA, Gotta love a site called Crooks and Liars, as it featurers the FEMA Rap for Kids, complete with music:
    Disaster . . . it can happen anywhere,
    But we've got a few tips, so you can be prepared
    For floods, tornadoes, or even a 'quake,
    You've got to be ready - so your heart don't break.

    Disaster prep is your responsibility
    And mitigation is important to our agency.

    People helping people is what we do
    And FEMA is there to help see you through
    When disaster strikes, we are at our best
    But we're ready all the time, 'cause disasters don't rest.


    20 Mind-Numbingly Stupid Quotes About Hurricane Katrina And Its Aftermath, only five of which are by W (and one by his mother)

    How New Orleans Was Lost
    Toxic Shocker. Nuff said.

    W doesn't fare too well in this piece, either.

    Construction and real estate implications in New Orleans

    The NRA wants to you to eat out for a good cause; that's the National RESTAURANT Association, BTW. NRA’s Dine for America event to help hurricane victims.

    But there are sharks, or rather phishing out there, operating in the alleged name of Katrina victims. See also this article.

    Vagabond Saints


    "The NFL announced Monday that [the} second game [for the New Orleans Saints] - which was supposed to be their home opener against the New York Giants - will be on Monday, Sept. 19, at Giants Stadium.

    "The game will begin at 7:30 EDT on ABC, then be switched to ESPN at 9 p.m., when ABC goes to the regularly scheduled game between Washington and Dallas in Irving, Texas. In New York and Louisiana, as well as other parts of the Gulf Coast, ABC will continue to carry the Giants-Saints game, switching to Redskins-Cowboys when the Saints game ends."

    Yeah, I know it's only football, but this is dumb on SO many levels:

    1) The Saints are practicing in San Antonio. Couldn't they play at a college stadium in Texas, northern Alabama, northern Mississippi, Tennessee, or Florida? If there was concern about beating up the field, they could play when the college team was on the road. At least some of the Saints' fans might be able to attend the event if the game were in the region. Not to mention that the team will have to otherwise offer refunds to those unable or unwilling to attend.

    2) The time suits almost no one. I figure they picked 7:30 because it’s the time when World News Tonight is over in New York City. The schedule will mean that those people without cable will see only the first part of the Saints-Giants game, that those people who live in New York and Louisiana who are Washington or Dallas fans will miss the first half of that game, and that I’m going to miss JEOPARDY! (unless the local affiliate pushes back the shows a day and show the Friday show on Saturday).
    ***
    Oh, I just read in TV Guide that former NFL quarterback Gary Hogeboom - love that name - will be one of the participants on the CBS show Survivor: Guatemala starting on September 15. If I were watching the show, I’d be torn. On one hand, at 47, he’s the second-oldest player, and I have an affinity for the aging participants. On the other hand, he played six years for the @#$%&*! Dallas Cowboys, the team I love to hate. Maybe I’ll just root for Lydia, the 42-year old fishmonger, the oldest woman in the competition. My sign is Pisces, so I can relate. Strange thing is that I actually WATCH Survivor only sporadically, but I have managed to develop rooting interests most seasons nevertheless.

    Tuesday, September 06, 2005

    Maynard Gilligan Krebs


    You ever decide a show isn't very good, but find that you watched it anyway? That's how I felt, even as a kid about Gilligan's Island, somewhat embarrassed to be viewing it, but view it I did. (It was probably because of Mary Ann.)

    And before that, I used to watch a show called The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, which I think was probably a better program, though in fact I haven't seen it in decades.

    Both of these shows, of course, featured Bob Denver, who died last week. He revisited Gilligan a number of times, and Maynard at least once, but it appears that he was just happy being Bob Denver. As usual, Marl Evanier has a story that you probably won't find in tomorrow's obits. Also, the Guru has some thoughts.

    The NOLA/Gulf Blame Game

    Being bombarded by analyses of why Katrina happened (global warming, the sins of N’Awlins and the Mississippi riverboats) to the responses of government ("adequate", "crap"), I found that as even as I attempted to sleep, my own thoughts on the topic came rushing forth. Whether any of it's coherent, you can judge.

    Was the response adequate?

    I was watching CBS Sunday Morning this week. I don’t know that it was the producers’ intent, but the collective feeling was. "Boy, did the United States screw up!" They showed the rapid – less than 18 hours- response by the U.S. military to the victims of the December 26, 2004 tsunami in the Indian Ocean, an event that was not at all anticipated. Meanwhile, a Category 5 hurricane is heading towards New Orleans all weekend, yet the response was so slow that government of tsunami-ravaged Sri Lanka is offering US aid, not to mention Russia and our friends the Cubans. Moreover, even among our allies, the poor response suggested that "the only superpower in the world" had "feet of clay" when it came to protecting its own citizens.

    The levee that gave way was supposed to withstand a Category 3 storm. But by the time the storm actually hit the city, the winds were only 100 mph; that's Category 2. Was the levee constructed poorly?

    Meanwhile, Nancy Giles, a black woman of the liberal persuasion who does commentary for the show noted that Jesse Jackson kept away at arm’s length the suggestion that the lack of governmental response to Katrina was racially motivated. Then Giles, surprisingly to me, said: "O.K., if he won’t say it, I’LL say it," and launched into a scathing indictment of the federal response.

    "There will be time to assess blame later."

    OK, that sounds like a benign, though self-serving comment from a government official (I saw the HHS Secretary say this on Wolf Blitzer’s show Sunday at noontime, but others have said almost exactly the same thing.) It is good that in this period of uncertainty, the White House got it together to keep everyone on script.
    But even as HHS says that we avoid the blame game, the guy leaks out that the White House was trying to get the local officials to start the evacuation earlier. Oh, so not so subtlely, it’s the local officials’ fault.

    And I have heard that once the evacuation order was given, it was the fault of the citizens, particularly of New Orleans for not heeding the call. This was a faulty argument both in terms of logistics and economics. Most of the middle class folks DID evacuate; I know one personally. But there were a lot of folks that simply COULDN’T get out. I don’t think people comprehended the situation. Cynthia Tucker, a black woman who writes a column for the Atlanta Constitution was on ABC’s This Week and asked her sister (whose family evacuated from NOLA to Tucker’s house) why didn’t the folks leave. Tucker’s sister said, essentially, "You don’t GET it. As a middle class person, you just don’t understand."

    "It’s the looters’ fault."

    Yes, there was looting, and I choose to put it in two categories; those who stole bread and clothes to survive and those who terrorized others. W was quick to support the "strong words" of Mississippi Governor on dealing with looters. Still, government has called out the National Guard for less provocation. The physical threat is continuing but limited and has finally been addressed.

    "The lack of recovery in the early stages was racially motivated."

    There are people who live in New Orleans’ 9th Ward who believe that the levee broke in their neighborhood, where I predict at least a quarter of the city’s dead will be found, because of an explosive device placed on the levee. Even the mayor, who has been very critical of the federal government response, has not suggested that. Nor do I believe the government consciously and callously responded with racist or classist intent. Or maybe I choose not to believe it, at this time. As for subconscious intent: "Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men?" There is a history of floods affecting particular ethnic neighborhoods and the response. I highly recommend that you read David Brooks’ New York Times column of September 1

    "It’s the governments’ fault."

    Ultimately, my concern in the blame (or how about a nice positive word, such as "responsibility") issue lies with three phases of responsibility, particularly when the less powerful are dealing with the more powerful. And this, I’ve found to be fairly universally true, especially if the power status quo remains:

    Phase 1: We just don’t know enough to determine the responsibility for the problem. We’ll do a study.
    Time passes, but no one accepts responsibility, or it’s the feeling that some low-level flunky is taking the fall.
    Phase 2: It’s time to move on with your lives.
    More time passes, and the anger just festers.
    Phase 3: Get over it already!

    If the people of the Gulf region are not given sufficient answers about the reasons for the breakdown of the response to the disaster, there will be a festering sore in this country that will explode in some other toxic form. I don’t know that it will require what at least one local legislator called for, the firing of every FEMA official.
    Many have been particularly critical of director Michael Brown, who didn’t even know there were refugees at the Convention Center for two days, despite the media broadcasting this information. His real qualifications for his current job include being fired from operating an association for lovers of Arabian horses. The recovery should go on now, but if the issue of responsibility is evaded, nothing good will come of it.
    ***
    Meanwhile, I had 141 hits on this site from Wednesday at noon until yesterday at 10 p.m. That means $141 to the Red Cross. Thanks.

    Monday, September 05, 2005

    No labor Labor Day



    Hey, this is Labor Day. Ironic, then, that I'm taking the day off and letting the Census Bureau do my work!

    Although, if I find time, I do have a couple thoughts to share about the past week. That is, if I can get back into Blogger, which was busy the first half dozen times I tried to post today.

    Sunday, September 04, 2005

    Bookends


    I've been away this week, which I'll tell you about soon. So it's been tricky trying to post, both in terms of time to write and Internet access. Thus, this late night musing:

    Last week, I saw a woman named Jeanette who used to be in church choir with me. I don't know that I've seen her since Lydia was born, or shortly therafter.

    Also, I saw this woman Jennifer, with whom I used to play racquetball, for the first time in at least three years.

    My old boss, Michelle, who has been living in Chicago, New Hampshire and Bermuda since I last saw her in 1994, popped into town a couple weeks ago, as did my high school friend Jon, last seen by me at his wedding in 1990.

    There were a couple others as well.

    And of course, I saw Fred and Lynn, but at least I helped initiate that. These others all unexpectedly showed up. Likewise, Carol went to see her friend Kathy for the first time in seven years.

    It's probably the convergeance of all of these items that prompted me to call my old friend Susan (or not so old, she insists) after losing her phone number, twice; I last spoke to her in 1999.

    I remember reading a truly terrible book called the Celestine Prophecy a number of years ago. It was awful, but it was a page-turner, and I finished it in about a day. It had some mumbo jumbo about nine "insights," the first of which was (and I'm paraphrasing here from a book I haven't seen in at least seven years): "Everything happens for a reason." It's not dissimilar to a line in the play "Boys in the Band": "There are no accidents."

    So, my question to you, or the universe, or whatever: Why have I seen so so many people in August 2005 that I had not seen in years? What is the purpose? If it's a sign, what does it signify?

    Saturday, September 03, 2005

    Ramblin' Labor

    Busy week. Not as productive on the blog as I would have liked. Got only one CD review done this week, e.g.

    Certainly, our hearts go out to those affected by Katrina. So, is it sacrilege to suggest that living below sea level isn't exactly a great idea? See what Greg Burgas thinks. More pointedly, read this National Geographic article posted by Socks in Box on September 2.

    Bush: Vacation Ruined By 'Stupid Dead Soldier'. From "The Onion," natch.

    Since you were planning on filing for bankruptcy anyway, now seems like a good time.

    You haven't heard of the Flying Spaghetti Monster? Clearly, knowledge of Him must be taught in our schools. If you and if you want to see Him for yourself...

    When the child doesn't sleep, I have weird dreams: in a sea of black suits, charcoal gray suits, navy blue suits, and dark brown suits, Fred Hembeck is named as head of the FBI. Not the real Fred, cartoon Fred. And he's wearing a robin's egg blue tux.

    My best to those affected by war, floods, illness (including Steve Gerber and his pneumonia), and all sorts of pain, physical and emotional. Especially that bestest couple who I've never met; I think they know who I mean.

    Mixed Bag CD Blog-Johnny B.

    NAME: David Allen Jones a/k/a Johnny Bacardi
    BLOG NAME: The Johnny Bacardi Show
    NAME OF CD: Different Stuff for Different People, Volume 4
    NUMBER OF CUTS: 17
    RUNNING TIME: 79:35
    COVER ART:

    Stylish yet decadent. Made me want to drink a Psychic Martini, and I don't even LIKE martinis. One of my two favorite covers. It's even better in a size you can read it.
    SONG LIST: His live journal of June 20
    SUBSEQUENTLY REVIEWED BY: Gordon on October 6
    GENERAL THOUGHTS: A wonderfully eclectic mix, elegantly presented. Unfamiliar songs by familiar artists (Beach Boys, Kinks), familiar songs by different artists (Tomorrow, Morning Glory), artists I forgot I had in the collection (Dax, Wood, Cibo Matto). A very satisfying experience.
    THINGS I PARTICULARLY LOVED: Sobule-instrumental backing based on Chicago’s “Saturday in the Park”! Blodwyn Pig, Dax; Wood-"something to make my hair grow long" (too late for THAT); Alex Harvey; Cibo Matto, Price (campy); Buckley (I love the song, which I’ve heard by others, and I love the voice); Zevon (anytime);
    ON THE OTHER HAND: I like Lou Reed, I do, but 11 minutes of that vibe was a little sleep inducing. I also wonder about the 9 ½ minute Grand Funk track; I know the live cut so well (see below) that it wasn’t a problem for ME, but COULD be for other listeners; I prefer the live cut, BTW.
    OFFICE FRIENDLY: As far as I could tell.
    ONLY VAGUELY RELATED: My sister Leslie had a boyfriend named George in high school who thought of himself as a black militant. He thought of ME as one of those hippie types. For Christmas or my birthday, he bought me "Live Funk" from Grand Funk Railroad, a group I was barely aware of at the time. I think he thought it fit my demographic. It featured a LONG version of "Inside Looking Out."

    Friday, September 02, 2005

    Worst Job Ever

    Worst job, hands down:






    A Mr. Burgas was doing a contest (actually three contests.) One involved describing the worst job the reader ever had. There were even prizes involved. Of course, that was really a secondary consideration. The primary thing is that it gave an excuse to write this piece, appropriate for the beginning of the Labor Day weekend.

    You might think it would be a job cleaning huuman feces from a wall (mentioned SOMETIME last month) would be the worst job I've ever had, but you would be wrong.

    I worked in a box factory. You know the cardboard that separates cans or bottles in a case of beer or soda? There was a conveyer belt in which four people, women as it turns out, took these innards and put them together. My job was to tie them into bundles of 20.

    These women were developmentally disabled with IQs of about 70. Perhaps that is why the repetitive nature of the work did not seem bother them, but it certainly annoyed me. So they were much faster putting together the box innards than I was tying them into bundles, using a specific knot that I did not know. (Why that specific knot, I never knew.)

    The work was 2 hours on, 10 minutes off, 1 hour 50 minutes on, 30 minute lunch, 2 hours on, 10 minutes off, 1 hr 50 minutes on, go home. No variation. No one with whom to have a decent conversation.

    And since I couldn't keep up with these women, the boss was screaming at me by day 2. Moreeover, the women on the line were resentful of me, because if they slowed up, it meant that they didn't reach their bonus goals. Not so incidentally, the guy doing the tying was not eligible for any bonuses.

    My back was very sore every night from the bending and lifting.

    By day 3, I decided to quit at the end of my second week, even though I REALLY needed the money for college. It was after that when I learned that the previous person on the job had the position for one week, and his predecessor for one DAY.

    3 Laborious ?s

    Labor Day weekend.



    If you be so kind as to tell me:

    1. Your favorite job, and why?

    2. How much money would you need to never work again?

    3. At what age, if ever, do you expect to retire, and what will you do then with your time?

    BONUS: What was your worst job? (You'll see my answer soon.)

    Thursday, September 01, 2005

    Obviously

    Obviously,
    the thing

    that's most significant

    about this month's blogging

    is my use of visual representations.


    They don't always come out as well as I'd like, but I'll keep at it.

    Another thing is that since I opened up the response mechanism to non-bloggers, I've gotten more comments, for which I thank you. Please keep it up.
    I've also gotten these blog spam things that say something like:
    "Really like your site. For your insurance needs, click here."
    I've started deleting them as I find them, but they don't bother me as much as they probably should. It's like those Viagra e-mails I get (I must REALLY be impotent!)
    that I zap.

    Finally, as of mid-day on August 26, I have put up a counter on the site, but don't plan to look at it for fear that I might become a blog statistics junkie. Well, maaybe I'll look, but only once a week. Or once a day. Perhaps thrice daily...

    Ciao.