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Phoenix

PhoenixIn one of the earlier iterations of waltoworld, there was a page that contained various drawings that I had created over a 15-year period, covering roughly 1976 through 1991. That page has since disappeared, as the waltoworld site has continued to evolve (or some would say devolve) over time, but I have been thinking about adding these drawing images as a photo gallery. Doing so would require me to go back and scan these drawings, as most of the original digital images have been lost; one image that I am unable to scan, however, is one of the mythical phoenix that I had done in mid-1979, which was given as a gift to a friend. The image above was the source upon which my drawing was based.

Hopefully, the drawing gallery will be available soon…

Words of wisdom

I was watching the show Jon & Kate Plus 8 on TLC the other night; being a parent of two kids, it’s kindof amazing to me to watch a few snippets of how this couple deals with their 8 kids, twins and sextuplets. I happened to notice in their kitchen several handwritten Bible verses taped to the side of an overhead cabinet, which I imagine are meant to be directives to the kids:

Children, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord.
– Colossians 3:20

Do everything without complaining or arguing – Philippians 2:14

My son, do not forget my teaching,
but keep my commands in your heart,
for they will prolong your life many years
and bring you prosperity.

– Proverbs 3:1-2

Since W. is attending Catholic school, and REALLY taking his religion VERY seriously, I’m thinking these will serve as excellent direction to him too! He’s really such a sweet kid – I was laying down with him tonight in his bed, talking in the dark of his bedroom as he was preparing to go to sleep… he mentioned to me that he liked his school, but he does NOT want to go there next year for Second grade. Naturally, I needed to find out why – was someone bullying him? Does he not like the Second grade teacher? Nope. The problem? He’s afraid that when he receives the sacrament of Reconciliation next year before he makes his First Holy Communion, he won’t remember ALL of his sins!

Considering I haven’t been to confession myself since I was in high school (count ’em, 28 years) I understand how he feels.

Politics Test, again

OK, so my frend Jay visited WaltoWorld the other day, and took The Politics Test that I had blogged a while back. Turns out, he’s… a Republican! I always had my suspicions about him…

Anyway, it got me thinking, how would I test now, after a few years? Are my Democratic political leaning still the same? Turns out, I’m even MORE socially liberal than I was before! Has more time living in the warped world of George W. turned me toward socialism?

You are a

Social Liberal
(63% permissive)

and an…

Economic Liberal
(23% permissive)

You are best described as a:

Democrat

You exhibit a very well-developed sense of Right and Wrong and believe in economic fairness. loc: (49, -100) modscore: (14, 38) raw: (1835)

Link: The Politics Test on Ok Cupid

Cell Phone Driving Hazards

Now that driving while operating a hand-held phone and/or sending/reading text messages is a primary offense in NJ, I’ve been making a deliberate attempt to ignore my RIM pager, and use by Bluetooth earpece while driving. However, I still realize that even when using the earpiece I am not as attentive to driving as I am when not using the phone at all. This study seems to agree:
clipped from minnesota.publicradio.org

Is Future Tense a driving hazard?

Posted at 9:49 AM on March 6, 2008
by Jon Gordon
(1 Comments)

Today’s Future Tense (RealAudioMP3iTunes) featured an interview with a researcher who found listening to someone talk seriously diminishes driving capacity.

New research at Carnegie Mellon University casts doubt on the effectiveness of of laws that require drivers to use hands-free devices when talking on cell phones.

Using brain imaging technology, researchers found listening to someone speak sharply diminishes activity in the parts of the brain used to control a car. Research subjects had the brains scanned on a driving simulator, and those listening to recorded sentences were much more likely to stray from their paths and hit virtual barriers.

Psychology professor Marcel Just says the driving simulation did not force drivers to react to dangerous situations, so his study probably underestimates the negative effects of talking while driving.

Indian Sunset, Live at the BBC 1971

…for my friend, Jay. The quality of this video is absolutely fantastic, plus it’s great to see the original 3 piece Elton John Band (with the late Dee Murray.) A whole bunch more of the Madman songs from this session are available on YouTube. Check out the link to my favorites over in the Blog Links on the right, for these and other classic videos…
clipped from www.youtube.com

TSOP Heads to Cleveland

Man, the Philly Soul Sound of my youth, getting it’s due in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Right On.

If Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff hadn’t reached out their hands to introduce themselves in a Philadelphia elevator 45 years ago, the music world may have been denied one of its richest partnerships.

The production and songwriting team was the architect of the “sound of Philadelphia” and a rich vein of pop-soul hits in the 1970s. The two men are being inducted Monday into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, part of a class with Madonna, John Mellencamp, Leonard Cohen, the Ventures, the Dave Clark Five and Little Walter.

Click here to read more…

Irving, Seuss and Wolfe

From The Writer’s Almanac

It’s the birthday of the novelist John Irving, born in Exeter, New Hampshire (1942). His first successful novel was The World According to Garp (1978). He’s written many more novels since then, including The Cider House Rules (1985) and A Prayer for Owen Meany (1989). In addition to writing books, he also wrestled professionally until he was 34 years old, and he was voted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in 1992. His latest novel, Until I Find You, came out in 2005.

That’s great, but I still can’t get through the freaking book

It’s the birthday of the children’s book author who wrote under the name Dr. Seuss, born Theodor Geisel, in Springfield, Massachusetts (1904). He was the son of German immigrants. His mother was an accomplished high diver, and his father was a target shooter who held the world record for marksmanship at 200 yards.

He studied literature and planned on becoming an English professor. But a woman in one of his classes noticed the drawings he doodled in the margin of his notebook during a lecture on Milton, and she told him he should become a cartoonist. He took her advice and also decided to marry her.

Seuss made a living selling cartoons to magazines, and he also drew cartoons for advertisements. The Standard Oil Company hired him to create monsters that live in the car, and he created the Moto-raspus, the Moto-munchus, and the Karbo-nockus. He published his first book for children, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, in 1937.

He went on to publish a series of fairly successful books for older children, and then, in 1955, an educational specialist asked him if he would write a book to help children learn how to read. Seuss was given a list of 300 words that most first-graders know, and he had to write the book using only those words. Seuss wasn’t sure he could do it, but as he looked over the list, two words jumped out at him: “cat” and “hat.”

Seuss spent the next nine months writing what would become The Cat in the Hat (1957). That book is 1,702 words long, but it uses only 220 different words. Parents and teachers immediately began using it to teach children to read, and within the first year of its publication it was selling 12,000 copies a month.

A few years later, Seuss’s publisher bet him $50 that he could not write a book using only 50 different words. Seuss won the bet with his book Green Eggs and Ham (1960), which uses exactly 50 different words, and only one of those words has more than one syllable: the word “anywhere.” It became the fourth best-selling children’s hardcover book of all time.

…but I have managed to read quite a few Dr. Seuss books in the past 7 1/2 half years, especially My Many Colored Days every night to K., … and her current favorite is Dr. Seuss’s ABC

It’s the birthday of Tom Wolfe, born in Richmond, Virginia (1931). As a young boy, he would say a prayer every night before he went to bed, thanking God that he was an American. He’s been obsessed with America ever since. He majored in American Studies at Yale, but he thought he might learn more about America by getting a job as a reporter, so that’s what he did.

He went on to write a series of best-selling books of nonfiction about many aspects of American life: stock car racing, the drug culture, architecture, surfing, and the space program. He came to believe that the novel was dead as an art form and that the only way to say the really important things about American life was through nonfiction.

But then, in the 1980s, he decided to try writing a novel. He had been doing research on the criminal justice system in New York City, and he got the idea for a story about a court case that could involve as many different aspects of New York society as possible: the rich, the poor, the lawyers, the media, the activists, the politicians, and all the bystanders.

He spent months going to trials at the Manhattan Criminal Court Building and the Bronx County Courthouse, and he took notes on all the stories he heard, the clothes people wore, the way everyone talked, and whatever else he could absorb, and he put it all in his novel The Bonfire of the Vanities, which became a huge best seller in 1987.

His most recent book, I Am Charlotte Simmons (2004), is about the party rituals and sex lives of contemporary college students. For his research, Wolfe went to 12 different universities and attended dozens of frat parties. He said, “I was so old, and I always wore a necktie — I must have seemed somewhat odd to them.” He made sure to use all the most current slang and pop culture references. He asked his own children, both recent college graduates, to check the book over for mistakes. The book got mixed reviews from most major newspapers and magazines, but it received better reviews from college newspapers, most of which admitted that it’s pretty accurate.

…and I haven’t managed to read anything by Thomas Wolfe since I finished The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test back in high school.

Old Schoolyard

I’ve always liked this song, and remember seeing the video many many years ago (c. 1977) on either The Midnight Special, or Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert, but don’t recall seeing it at all since that time. This song has always stuck in my head, and I had downloaded it a few years back from Napster. Yesterday, while playing the song on my PC, the thought struck me that the video may be out on YouTube somewhere, and sure enough, here it is. I recall at the time that I thought the female vocalist in this video was stunning, and now, after watching the video again, I still think so today.
clipped from www.youtube.com

Select a Candidate™

I had been looking for this type of candidate selector for months.

Take the survey, compare the candidates, and PLEASE make an educated decision before it is too late! The results may actually surprise you…

Select A Candidate™ is built and maintained by Minnesota Public Radio in St. Paul, Minnesota and American Public Media, the producer and distributor of national public radio programming.

Frequently Asked Questions about Select A Candidate™ can be found here.

Found – BEHS and BCHS negatives

Ed Wagner doing the mooseYesterday, I had been trying to get a better handle on the boxes and boxes of old photographs that have been occupying space in the guest bedroom. Not actually sorting through the photos at all, that would take way too much time than I had, but rather organizing the boxes into manageable larger boxes, such as “pictures”, “slides”, “frames” that can eventually be tackled separately. However, inside one box that I’ve had for nearly 30 years is A LOT of rolls of negatives from when I had been editing the BEHS Torvian yearbook. These negatives are nearly all from the 1979-80 school year, but there are some rolls from 1979 at BCHS (which I had previously posted to Flickr and in the Photo Gallery) and another roll from a Ring Day ceremony. I don’t really recognize anyone in these Ring Day pictures, and I really do not know what year they were taken, so they are not too interesting to me. The rolls that have most meaning to me are from the class of 1979 Baccalaureate and Graduation ceremonies at St. Michael the Archangel on June 8, 1979. I had taken these pictures that night using Warren Stewart’s camera; I recall in the Fall of 1979 that Warren and others had stopped by the Torvian office to take copies of the prints, but I had taken possession of the negatives. Now, after nearly 30 years, here are a few of the pictures displayed as digital images from the negatives via my desktop scanner…

You Might Recall

“Maybe when you’re older, and you’re thinking back
You might recall
Now did I act carefully, did I do right?
Or were we meant to be, all of our lives
In love and harmony, all of our lives?

“So now, take my hand
Come, hold me closely
As near as you can
Believing all that we could be
And all that we have been
And all that we are”

Until I Find You

Has anyone else ever read this entire novel?

I had finished up 1776, and a re-reading of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol for the Holidays, when I decided to take up John Irving’s most recent work, Until I Find You. This sucker weighs in at 840+ pages, and let me tell you, I am at page 174 and this monster is starting to draaaaaaaaag. I’ve been a fan of Irving’s ever since I read Setting Free The Bears and The World According To Garp back in the late 70’s, and have bought nearly everything he’s published since that time (save for The Fourth Hand), but had never actually gotten around to reading several of his later works (A Son Of The Circus, A Widow For One Year) until I started Until I Find You. So far it’s much of the usual Irving fare, somewhat enjoyable although hardly new, but this may take a looooooong time to finish.

Three Funerals and a Baby

just as I was feeling depressed over my increasing awareness of my own mortality…

…welcome to the world L. A., born this afternoon to my niece M.! Mom and baby are doing fine, on what is the 7 year anniversary of W.’s due date (although he apparently could not wait and popped out 7 weeks early)

vital statistics and pictures to be posted when they are available

23 Degrees is too warm?

My Backyard Rink

My backyard skating rink simply will not freeze solid. I had built it a few weeks ago, following a design I found online, and have been waiting somewhat impatiently for the weather to turn cold enough for the water in the rink to freeze. W. is so looking forward to lacing up his skates, and to playing hockey in his backyard, but even though the top layer of water has frozen over, the bottom layers will not drop below 34 degrees (during the middle of the night.) Once the sunlight hits the rink, the water warms up to the mid-40s. I realize it’s nearly the end of January, and we’ve gotten hardly any snowfall, and the ground is nowhere near frozen, and I can hope that next Saturday Phil sees his shadow and February brings prolonged freezing temperatures, but if this rink turns out to be a bust I’m going to have a pretty unhappy family.

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