Possumblog

Not in the clamor of the crowded street, not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng, but in ourselves, are triumph and defeat.--Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

REDIRECT ALERT! (Scroll down past this mess if you're trying to read an archived post. Thanks. No, really, thanks.)

Due to my inability to control my temper and complacently accept continued silliness with not-quite-as-reliable-as-it-ought-to-be Blogger/Blogspot, your beloved Possumblog will now waddle across the Information Dirt Road and park its prehensile tail at http://possumblog.mu.nu.

This site will remain in place as a backup in case Munuvia gets hit by a bus or something, but I don't think they have as much trouble with this as some places do. ::cough::blogspot::cough:: So click here and adjust your links. I apologize for the inconvenience, but it's one of those things.


Monday, March 31, 2003

Egypt Finds Oldest Evidence of Mummification
SAKKARA, Egypt (Reuters) - Egyptian archaeologists on Sunday opened a 5,000-year-old wooden coffin in the desert near Cairo to find...
...veteran correspondent Helen Thomas.

(Yes, I know it's a cheap shot.)



Fighting Fire Ants With...

Wasted Electrons! Nate stopped by the other day as I was playing out in the yard, and had the following tip for me (scroll down--permalinks not working) for clearing my yard of annoying little pismires:
[..] Now if you go into any home improvement store in the south you will find a number of potions, powders and elixers guaranteed to remove fire ants from your property forever and leave you with a gaping hole in your wallet. They do work; just not forever, and like anything, some products work better than others. That means you can easily end up with several half-used containers of poison on the shelf and never enough of one type to do any good.

But I found a better way to kill fire ants. There's almost always enough of it in your shed and every time you go fill up the lawnmower gas can at the local 7-11, you refill your fire ant killer supply... Since it was usually during my weekly yard mowing chore that I would come across the offending ant mounds, I decided to fight fire ants with fire... First, you take about a cup of gasoline and pour it directly into the mound, then walk away for 3 or 4 minutes. (Waiting is important as it allows the gasoline fumes, which are heavier than air to penetrate deep into the mound and the surrounding tunnels. So wait.) After making certain that no small children are nearby, though they do actually like this part, toss a match onto the mound. Whoof! and Whuump! The fire will ignite the fumes that are now deep underground and kill lots of fire ants. Its almost like using on of those Bunker Buster bombs the Pentagon's so proud of! You may even be able to hear their little hard bodies crackling... Anyway, some black smoke will come up out of the mound and you want to watch to ensure your lawn doesn't catch fire, but it's a wonderful 5 minute diversion from mowing and it will keep the fire ants under control.

So, that's it; Nate's fire ant punishment method. It's not approved by anybody and your spouse will probably complain. But it works and its so satisfying! [...]
Heh. He's right, you know. This also works for yellow jacket nests. And other stuff.



Via the lovely and talented Janis Gore, a report from CNN senior correspondent Nic Robertson in the Telegraph (UK). Robertson was part of the CNN team asked to leave Baghdad a couple of weeks ago. Instructive and informative on the behind the scenes goings-on at the Ministry of Information.
[...] For Mr Aziz and other minders, watching over journalists is a serious job. Minding is at times a system of soft enforcement. Severe remonstrations are meted out for failing to show up at government press conferences or not calling the Iraqi leader by his full name, President Saddam Hussein, in all broadcasts. A colleague from the BBC never came back to Iraq after failing that test.

Private conversations when I was out without a camera or a minder gave me insights into the true feelings of Iraqis. They were thoughts that could be worked carefully in to our coverage. But with a minder present there was always a latent intimidation of those we chose to interview. Several times, when asking Iraqi civilians about their private lives I have watched a lump rise in their throats as they glanced nervously across at our minder. [...]
Especially interesting in light of what ol' Petey had to say the other day when he still had a job...Arnett takes 'pleasure' in vying with CNN
[...] Arnett, 68, also gave some insight into the way CNN's Baghdad crew may have been expelled from the city Thursday, saying they lacked the political skills in dealing with the Iraqi authorities. "It's nothing they did in particular that the Iraqis were irritated at," he said. "A degree of diplomatic and personal relationships get you through in a place like Baghdad." [...]
Uh-huh. That, and some nice squishy knee pads, and maybe a tube of KY.



Okay, smart folks...

Some of you may recall that the other day while shopping at Wal-Mart, I purchased a new printer for the kids' computer--an HP Deskjet 3320 for around 50 bucks. The installation process has been stymied by the fact that their (the kids') computer runs a mystical, 20th Century operating system known as "Windows95", and the installation disk for the printer does not have a driver for it, nor is there a driver on HP's website.

I figured that I would be a good slave to Beelzebill and upgrade to a new piece of garbage OS, and broke down and bought Windows Me. (I am a sucker for insipid, meaningless product names, and it was cheap). Over the long weekend, I attempted to install the New(ish) Windows, only to be told that since Old Windows was on a compressed drive (don't ask) that I needed to delete a bunch of crap and uncompress the drive.

Okay.

Deleted all the kids' games and went to uncompress, and got a message that errors in the disk made it IMPOSSIBLE to uncompress the drive, and I should scurry over to ScanDisk and fix those pesky errors. Which I did.

About six times.

In the Thorough mode.

ScanDisk always came back saying the disk had no errors. But silly DriveSpace said it did. Which meant that since DriveSpace was holding all the cards, it didn't really care how many times I ran ScanDisk, nor how nicely ScanDisk said there were no errors, because it wasn't ABOUT to let me uncompress the drive. In an added fit of pique, DriveSpace wouldn't tell me what sort of errors it had found--it just sat there with a smug impassiveness--"I'm thinking of an imaginary number between negative-infinity and infinity. Tell me the number, and I will allow you to do your childish business and install your silly printer."

Help me. Am I going to have to run a big horseshoe magnet over the whole computer? Is there a secret hiding place for disk errors that won't show up when ScanDisk comes to the door? Does anyone make a shareware Windows95 driver for the 3320? Should I just sob uncontrollably as my children are forced to lay a piece of paper on the screen and trace what they want to print?

Send me a note, tell me what to do, and you will reap the fame and fortune of having your name on Possumblog.



Saturated Fat Diet Piles on Pounds Around Organs

...Organists Complain of Slippery Foot Pedals, Horrible Smell--Says One: "Need to Get Rid of Love Handels"



Iraq Fights US, British Invasion with Fiery Abuse
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - While Iraqi troops fight U.S. and British forces In the field, the Baghdad government is digging deep in the lexicon of Arabic insults for verbal salvoes to lob at the "evil invaders."

Following the rich literary tradition of their country, Iraqi officials from President Saddam Hussein to Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf have regularly taken to the airwaves to lambaste their U.S. and British foes with fiery rhetoric and vitriolic broadsides.

Since the war on Iraq started 10 days ago, the leaders of the United States and Britain have been branded "an international gang of criminal bastards," "blood-sucking bastards," ignorant imperialists, losers and fools. [...]
Wow--that bumper sticker IS right--"Mean people suck". And by the way, where are all the do-gooders? Aren't these mean guys contributing to a hostile work environment? If they don't stop, they'll have to go to sensitivity training.
Hurling insults at the enemy is common in the Arab world but the practice is vintage Saddam, who portrays himself as a valiant Arab crusader fighting off an evil empire. [...]

The Iraqis' defiant tone is embedded in their literary culture, which has spawned some of the Arab world's most celebrated and eloquent poets.

Al-Mutanabi, one of Iraq's most seasoned poets who lived in the 10th century, was as proficient at showering his patrons with flowery praise as lashing his enemies with caustic verse.

"Your feet are so rough, that even when you're barefoot, it looks like you're wearing shoes," he once told an enemy.
Yeah, yeah--Saddam, you mama so fat her side light up and says "Goodyear".



Via Miss Meryl, my kind of liberal:
[...] Much of the anti-war movement has shown the left at its worst—that is, when it behaves as though naïveté is a virtue in policy debates. Last weekend, I received an e-mail from an anti-war friend. It was a jpeg of a spare line drawing: a dove holding an olive branch in its beak, captioned simply with the word "Imagine." While I admit that countering force with John Lennon songs hasn't yet been tried, I think, in Saddam's case, that force may still be the best way to counter force. If I had any artistic skills, I could have responded to the dove/olive branch message with a re-creation of that famous Vietnam-era poster with the childlike flower illustration, but with an updated caption: Naïveté Is Helpful To Dictators And Other Killing Things.

As has been asked by others before, could today's left ever get it together to assemble an Abraham Lincoln Brigade, as it did in the '30s? What would the response be today to such a call to arms? Maybe it would go like this: "Well, yes, we all agree that Senor Franco is a bad man, and that we certainly would like to see him step down, but he is a Latino -- and as a Latino, is thus a Person of Color. And for us to attack a Person of Color, well, that would leave us wide open to charges of insensitivity, wouldn't it?" [...]
Yep.



::whwwhuhwwwhuh-tap-tap:: Hello? Can you hear me? This thing on?

Oh! Hello there!

Good crowd here this morning--let's see; one, two, three, fou...three. OH! HEY! AH!AHhh. Oh. Just the UPS truck driving by. Well, hello there, folks, glad you could stop by.

Well now, that was some more sort of unplanned-for vacation I had--I truly wish I could remember more of it, but all weekend I have been chasing my tail like a Jack Russell on meth, and if I could remember exactly what I said to the foreman when they left and said the shingle guy was coming back later, and then the painters would come back sometime after that, well, it might just not sound the same as it did then. The moment's gone I suppose. Or if I told you how much fun it is to use a yard sprayer full of all sorts of petrochemical-derived herbicides while the wind is blowing at 20 miles per hour, you might just not get the fullest effect of the operation. Or were I to tell you of the stunning soccer victories scored by Boy's (2-0) and by Middle Girl's (4-0) teams this weekend, you would probably blow it off as mindless jingoism. (Especially the part where I say that Rebecca probably played the best game she ever played.) Then there's the Teacher Banquet on Saturday evening that I have been planning for our Sunday school teachers for a month now that managed to draw a crowd that equalled approximately one-quarter of the amount of teachers we actually have. And then, there was the start-of-the-new-quarter teacher's meeting that was yesterday, which started precisely the moment that the baby shower being held at the building ended. And then there was the trip to take the new Odyssey in for some warranty work this morning, which required lovely Wife to come by and get me and haul my sorry carcass to work. Which is where I found that when I am gone, no one does my work (not to mention their own work). Which means that I have had to neglect my poor, pitiful, forelorn, unloved, pile of pixels to get some paying work done.

BUT!! Now I'm back, I reckon, so it's time for some fun!

Such as mocking Peter Arnett, who seems to be building quite a CV for himself. I hear there are several job openings at the Iraqi Ministry of Information, though, so he should do okay. Don't need a weatherman to know which way the Tailwind's blowing, eh, Pete? Maybe he could hook up with Pierre Salinger and Robert Fisk and they could do a road show. Or maybe a series of short comedic films. "WHhhhhyyyy, I oughta...WOOWOOWOWOWOOWOO!! SPREAD OUT, KNUCKLHEADS!!"

Morons.


Friday, March 28, 2003

I win.

Yep, I'm declaring victory.

The crew showed up around three yesterday and jumped right in and started tearing my chimney apart. Off came the siding, and as I predicted, the underlayment of wafer board was black from top to bottom. Out it came. About this time, my builder's rep showed up and he and the boss and I stood around and watched the guys work. Heh. The guys doing the work asked the rep if they needed to pull out some of the damaged wood on the front face and po' ol' Dennis just shook his head 'yes' and told him if it was damaged they need to get it out and fixed. [Insert image here of me mentally sticking out my tongue and doing the Dance of Ridicule] One corner stud in particular was completely waterlogged, as if it had come out of the river. You can squeeze it and water comes out, and it's been over a week since it last rained. I just wonder how much other stuff like this is hidden behind the paint.

(An interesting sidenote is that the boss man's cousin's crew is the one who originally framed the house six years ago. Big jokes about him owing Dennis some money. Laugh it up, fellers.)

Anyway, these guys hit it hard all afternoon, and didn't knock off till 6:30. The crew foreman, the big guy from yesterday, asked if they could leave their tools and stuff for today, and asked what time I woke up. "Around 5." He and the rest of the crew just laughed and he said they would be back at 7:30 today to finish up.

And right on time today at 8:00 they showed up. I had been up and got out and started cutting my grass giant carpet of weeds. Holy moley at the weeds. And unfortunately, they were all ready to go to seed, so every pass of the lawn mower shook of great clots of fetal weeds alllll over the yard. Time for some Agent Orange, I suppose. Spring is here in a big way--the wisteria is blooming, Jonathan's little pear tree is covered with blossoms, birds and bees are giving their kids the old "bipeds and quadrupeds" talk, we have a bluebird who has taken up residence in the box we put out last year. Which means large amounts of yard work beckon. Eww.

Oh well, time to go do some more standing and scratching and looking and pointing, and some weed killing and ant chasing. If I don't get back to the keyboard today, I will see you all bright and early Monday.

Before I go, I wanted to point you over to The Ghost of a Flea, written by Nicholas Packwood, who sent me an e-mail about a Canadian group called Friends of America who are planning a Rally for America in Toronto on April 4.

Many thanks to our friends in Canada, and thank you for your support!


Thursday, March 27, 2003

Oops

For it to be Spring Break here in Alabama, and for there to be so few cars on the roads in the morning, there sure are a lot of ‘em out at lunchtime! There were a ton of moms and dads at the Civic Center, so I assume there must have been some sort of event going on for the kiddies.

Anyway, got home around 12:20 to find a utility trailer parked beside the house and a decided lack of activity. Went in, Oldest said someone knocked on the door a bit after noon then they left. No messages on the machine. ::sigh:: Contractors.

I ate a bite for lunch, then as it edged up toward 1, I figured it might be time for another pleasant round of phone tag. The receptionist answered and I gave her my name and address and asked ever so politely where the workers were. She tried to raise the rep on the radio whom I’ve been badgering, said she couldn’t find him, but would get him to call as quick as possible. ::sigh:: Contractors.

Waited around, watched the horror of Fox’s Good Day Live, and then it got to be an hour past the time of the first call, which meant it was time for another call. Talked to the receptionist again, who seemed genuinely flustered—“But…but he said, he…he called and said—he told me that they were on their way!” Hey, color me shocked, too, ma’am. She said she would call him once more and see what was going on, and she PROMISED he would call me back this time. ::sigh:: Contractors.

Hung up, and just a few minutes later I heard the muffled thump of doors being slammed out at the curb, and at the very same moment the phone rang—“Mr. Oglesby? Hey, I just wanted to call and…” “Hey there, man, I ‘ppreciate you calling back so quick—they just showed up out here! Thanks a lot!” Schmuck.

Went out and saw a couple of very well fed swarthy sorts looking up at the chimney. The more nicely dressed guy with the cool sunglasses asked, “Dennis?” “No, I’m Terry Oglesby, I’m the owner.” We shook hands and began the delicate squat and hunker, in which we debated the finer points of what was going to occur. “Did they tell you what was going on?” “Yeah, I think I can see—don’t look like there’s no flashing up there.” I explained that I thought there might be a flashing, but it didn’t do any good with a nail through it. He turned and began conversing with his partner in Construction Spanglish, (el flasheeng, el shiitrock) and I nodded along as if I knew what they were saying.

Luckily, I could pretty much follow it, and the other, bigger, guy was basically saying they needed to pull everything off and start from scratch and it might take till tomorrow. He never spoke to me, but I could tell he knew what he was talking about. They stopped for a bit and I went on a bit about how the waferboard had soaked up water like a sponge over the years and couldn’t get dried out and finally leaked through to the inside. Big Mex nodded along, (he understood me a whole lot better than I understood him) and we finally decided it was doable. When? “Well, we’re going to go get some lunch, but we have a crew coming by with the rest of the guys, and they should be here in a little while. It will probably be tomorrow before we get all finished though.” “Well, just as long as it’s fixed right and doesn’t leak…” “Oh no, we’re gonna fix it just right—whatever’s wrong, we’ll fix it when we’re in there. The more we find wrong and fix, the more we get paid!”

There you go, dude—THAT’S the spirit!

This looks like the start of a beautiful friendship…



OKAY, now—so what’s been going on…

Well, as I mentioned Tuesday, I had my regular bloated bureaucracy meeting yesterday and then had to type up all the minutes which took all the derned day and part of this morning.

So, no time to post.

And as for Miss Reba, she went home early Monday with a raging case of something, and had to go to the doctor Tuesday, where she found out she had an upper respiratory tract infection but, thankfully for me, NOT STREP THROAT! (I’d never hear the end of it if I had given her cooties.) She stayed home from church last night, but I couldn’t convince her to do the same today and stay home one more day from work. Anyone want to hire a workaholic? Never have I seen a person more dedicated, even when saddled with a workplace environment that she dislikes with a brightly blazing intensity.

And, those old contractor fellers…as you all may recall, I finally was able to convince the builder’s rep that they needed to fix my deteriorated chimney enclosure—he promised to call back on a Friday, and of course he didn’t call until later the next week and used a family illness excuse. MEN! They say they’ll call…never mind. Anyway, he said then (about two weeks ago) that he would have somebody out to fix it. No word since then, so I started calling back the end of last week to rattle his chain a bit. One message went unreturned. Left another. And he called back Tuesday…to my home…at 5:10 p.m.

Why call then? Because he is a CONTRACTOR, and he just knew no one would be at the house then and he wouldn’t have to speak to me directly because he is a YELLOW STREAKED COWARD! But, guess who was home? Yes, that’s right, dear sick Wife of Mine who, though in pain and feeling the effects of the wonders of the modern Western pharmacopiea, managed to give him a nicely controlled verbal vivisection. Heh. Serves him right. Yes, he should be frightened of me. But he very much should prefer to deal with me rather than the alternative. Anyway, he committed to calling “his guy” and get him to come fix it. Sometime. “WHEN!?,” said sweet wife. “Uh, hopefully Thursday, ma’am.” “Good!”

So, then he called yesterday to let us know when his guy was really going to be there. And again, not expecting working wife to still be home, he called at 4:30. HAH!! Jerkwad—WE’RE UNAVOIDABLE! She was feeling better yesterday and batted him around a bit like a cat with a eat-up mouse, but made him commit to today. Sometime. “We’ll be out there tomorrow for sure.” SO, this morning, I called him early:30 and left a message at his work that I needed to know EXACTLY when, and if they knew EXACTLY what all they were going to have to do to fix this thing. He called back, holding a spare buttocks in reserve for me to gnaw on, and I was my normal jovial avuncular self, laughing and cutting up and giving him the big verbal glad-hand and got him to nail down that they would be at the house by noon. So, in a few minutes I am back out the door for some fun.

It may be of interest to you that I have now an embedded reporter from the New York Times, Hugh Jass, traveling with me. I’m sure you will all enjoy his reports. Right now, I’m going to go the john, then I’m headed for the house. Talk to you all later this afternoon!

STUNNING SETBACK, ADVANCE SLOWED, REPORTER THREATENED WITH VIOLENCE
BIRMINGHAM—By HUGH JASS: Right now Oglesby is getting up slowly from his cluttered desk and making his way out into the hallway to the “john”, a slang term for a public restroom—right, left, then, out the door. The precision of his movements show a dogged determination in the face of many unknowns—even though he has done this many times, many obstacles litter his path. A secretary slows him down to ask him to take a phone call, but Oglesby presses on, oblivious to the need to answer the phone and he carried on with a single-mindedness that borders on the obsessive.

He orders the secretary to take a message, using words like “please” and “thank you” as if he actually meant them. The secretary dutifully copies down the caller’s information—some might even see fear in her eyes, but she hides it well.

Other obstacles present themselves in quick succession—a pair of glass doors leading into a large elevator lobby. The glass on doors like these is known to have breakable qualities that can cause massive bleeding and even death if they are broken and contact the skin. The doors also offer a host of other horrible injuries that can occur, such as pinched fingers or a startling static electricity discharge which can momentarily stun a user with a painful shock to the fingertip.

Heedless of these dangers, Oglesby strides purposefully though the doors, allowing them to slam into my face. I am dazed, hurt, feeling betrayed that a man so large, so capable of protecting himself is seemingly unable to protect me. I follow him into the room marked “MEN”.

He proceeds with an operation he has practiced here and at home many times, the actions committed to memory not through any sort of nuanced understanding of the mechanics of the situation, but merely through a rote script—stand still, unzip pants with right hand, fumble with bulky underclothing (all while maintaining his balance on only two feet—Oglesby thinks two feet are sufficient to his mission, and doesn’t question the so-called “higher authority” who put him on Earth with only two feet and no chances for reinforcements), releasing his urinary output device and aiming it at the large porcelain bowl in front of him.

His actions belie the amount of effort and danger involved. He finishes his task, reaches up to pull the lever, and in a deafening rush of water, he yells “Aw crap! I’m hit!”

It is a horrifying sight. A tiny drop of moisture, most probably coming from his own body, has landed upon the pristine khaki polyester trousers he is wearing. (Although more than likely a friendly fire incident, it has been alleged that droplets of water can actually splash out of the porcelain urinary receiving device, or PURD, leaving identical stains on clothing. However, these reports come from potentially biased sources, those persons using the devices. The PURD makers disclaim any responsibility.)

He tried vainly to blot the stain away with a scrap of toilet paper, yet it remains—lighter, and drying quickly, but until it is gone, it will be there. A sad reminder of the dangers in going too far, too fast. The betrayal in his eyes is almost too unbearable to describe—something he has done for so long, yet his supposedly rigorous training has failed him. He punches me in the side of the head and tells me if I don’t quit following him so closely and bumping him while he is trying to “pee”, he will push my head into the PURD and pull the lever himself.

And the cycle of violence continues.

With continued setbacks like this, there is much doubt among many whether Oglesby will ever be able to reach his home and supervise the “contractors” he says are coming.



Whew

Still here, lotsa crap to get done yesterday, and some today, including the Return of the Contractors...details to follow.


Tuesday, March 25, 2003

Fixing to git...

Time to head to the house, or the soccer park, or somewhere. (I might just drive in big circles.) Poor Reba had to go to the doctor today--she got sick yesterday at work and sounds horrible. I think I gave her what I had--sickness and health and all that, I suppose, but I still think she might resent it just a bit.

Tomorrow will be a blogging-lite day--my regularly scheduled round of regulatory excess requires that I do some actual work and make myself useful to the public, so possibly nothing in the way of anything interesting for...well, never if you really think about it, but no posts, interesting or otherwise, until later on tomorrow.

Until then.



France Seeks Big Role in Post-War Iraq
PARIS - Worried it could be shut out of business deals in postwar Iraq (news - web sites), France is drawing up plans to win French companies access to lucrative oil and reconstruction contracts, officials said Tuesday.

The government is determined that French companies will be part of rebuilding Iraq, despite President Jacques Chirac's vigorous opposition to the war, a Finance Ministry official said. [...]


Wow--they're weasels AND whores!!





Despite the denials of Iraqi officials...Anti-Saddam rising unfurls in Basra

Hey Saddam--look over there on the wall of your bunker...'mene mene tekel upharsin.'



More from the Nervous Nellie Brigade: Saddam's Bunkers Said 'Impossible' to Destroy
By Nedim Dervisbegovic

SARAJEVO (Reuters) - Underground bunkers built for Iraqi President Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) can resist massive bombardment and those hiding inside could survive for up to six months, a retired Yugoslav army officer who helped build them said.

"I believe that if Saddam does not leave, and I think he has nowhere to go, they will find him in one of these facilities -- if he does not find a way out by then," retired Lt. Col. Resad Fazlic told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday. "These bunkers can resist a direct hit of a 20 kiloton- strong bomb or atomic bomb impact and keep those inside independent of the outside world for six months," said Fazlic, who oversaw the building of the bunkers in the late 1970s. [...]
So? In the overall campaign, whether these bunkers can be destroyed or not is moot.

If he stays in one of them for too long, he might just have to stay there permanently. Sorta like a Roach Motel.



Notable Quotes
HOLLYWOOD (Reuters) - They really said it -- notable quotes from the news:

"If you ever write about my family again, I will (expletive) find you and I will (expletive) hurt you."

TIM ROBBINS at a post-Oscars party to a Washington Post reporter who had written about LENORA TOMALIN, conservative mother of Robbins' liberal girlfriend SUSAN SARANDON.
Press censorship!? Threats!? Intimidation!?

Where is the shock? Where is the outrage? Where are all the people decrying this horrifying incivility?

Oh, yeah, I forgot--Timmy's a liberal. Carry on, buddy.



India Urges United Nations to Stop War
[...] "India hopes that the hostilities will be brought to an end immediately and the Iraqi people will not be allowed to suffer any more," Press Trust of India news agency quoted India's External Affairs Minister Yashwant Sinha as saying.

Sinha made the remarks after a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security, headed by Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Other members include the defense minister, the finance minister and the army chief.

"The United Nations should act immediately both as far as the conflict is concerned and with regard to the humanitarian dimension of the conflict," Sinha said. [...]
Hey, that's a lovely Kashmir sweater you have on...



Just tryin' to hep...

It seems that since the boys up yonder at the BBQ Emporium have done gone now and got international (with their English visitor), some difficulty has arisen when it comes to translating the recipe for pecan pie into Limeyese. This might help--TheBrits.com has a portion of their website devoted to such quandries, and we find that the nearest UK equivalent of Karo Syrup is something called Lyle's Golden Syrup (and here's your link). Having seen several old Saturday Night Live sketches with Dana Carvey portraying "Lyle, The Effeminate Heterosexual", I don't know that I would want to use his golden syrup on MY pecans, but to each his own, I suppose .

The problem really comes in from those pesky pecans--the rundown on these little jewels can be found here on About.com (along with every conceivable pecan pie recipe except Billy Joe Bob's)--and they DO exist in Olde Sodde--ASDA (Wal-Mart's UK subsidiary) has their own brand of pecan nuts packaged in 100g packets at £1.14. (I assume the other UK supermarkets have similar products, but their websites are impossible to search without first logging on and setting up an online account. No thanks.)

Anyway, depending on the recipe (here's one in made-up units), English Guy is gonna need at least 2, or maybe even 3 packages of pecans, which would come to £3.43, which is a bit over 5 bucks in real money (or about $8 per pound, if I converted correctly). Over at Heaton's Pecan Farm in Clanton, a pound of nuts sets you back about $7, so the cost is close to what it is here. Pecan pies are pretty expensive to make if you don't have a relative with pecan trees, but trust the boys at the Emporium--it will be worth it.



Every once in a while I will post something on architecture--not a lot, because shop talk can sometimes get even more dull and tedious than the rest of the stuff here--but today is an interesting date in the development of modern architecture.

On Saturday evening, March 25, 1911, a garment factory housed on the top three floors of the ten story Asch Building in New York City caught fire. The resulting panic to escape resulted in the deaths of 146 workers, the vast majority of whom were immigrant girls and women. The tragedy at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company factory highlighted the grim side of the garment business, leading to a broad range of labor reforms as well as the creation of a wide variety of new life safety codes intended to address the safety of factory and mill workers.

A great site detailing the fire can be found here, via Cornell University's Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives, and an interesting and touching personal view of the fire can be had at New York State Senator Serphin Maltese's website. (The senator lost a grandmother and two aunts in the fire).



Iraq Satellite Jamming Devices Destroyed
CAMP AS SAYLIYAH, Qatar - Six satellite jamming devices, which Iraq (news - web sites) was using to try to thwart American precision guided weapons, were destroyed and have had "no effect" on U.S. military operations, a U.S. general said Tuesday. [...]
I wonder how long it will be before Russia asks for compensation.

Or how long before Reuters or AFP writes that since these devices still exist as smoldering piles of wire that they were not actually destroyed, and therefore the mission was a failure and a setback and another example of quagmiritude.

I give it about another hour or so.



Possum Skinning!?
[...] I’m sure they’ll be fine, and in a way this solitude will be fun. Tomorrow night I will be having one of those rare, precious moments of liberty: I can listen to the TV after ten without headphones! I don’t have to avoid the creaky step on the way the stairs when I come to bed late! I can cook up the heroin in the kitchen and not care if I set off the smoke alarm! No more skinnin’ possums in the garage - hell, put down some papers and do it sittin’ in front of Brit Hume’s show the way it’s meant to be done! [...]
Where did I go wrong? What did I say? Was it because I mixed up the sizes of the spice bottles? Because I got the lemon-scented cleaner instead of the orange? Because I don't have a Mac? Or TiVo? Is my childrens' "chintzy plastic bling" not up to par? Is it just the heroin talking?

UPDATE! Janis Gore suggests the following:
Subject: What you did...

Hon,

You knocked over the dog's water dish!

Some years ago we took in a stray cat. We fed her outside at the beginning, then started feeding in the kitchen because we had all kinds of varmints coming in the night. The dogs from next door, other cats, skunks and one huge, fat, snarly possum. The possum would just hunker and hiss no matter how roughly you spoke to him. Lyman would go out flapping his arms and screaming at the fellow, and he'd just glare and bare his teeth. Not at all the sort of civilized behavior Mr. Lileks would accept.
Oh. Well, in that case, I suppose it's okay. But he needs to put down some of that plastic sheeting he got from the hardware store--icky stuff will go right through paper and get all over the carpet.


Monday, March 24, 2003

Paterfamilias Update

(Thanks for the plug, Dr. Weevil!) Friday was busy, but Saturday just about kill't me--up early (stinkin' children) got dressed, and proceeded to clean all the personal effects out of the Olds in preparation for trading it in. I thought long and hard about this, knowing that I could probably get a few hundred more if I sold it myself, but I just couldn't bear to sell it to someone with the thought that the used tranny I just had installed might not get them to the bottom of the hill. So, give it to the people with no scruples and let it be on THEIR conscience! Anyway, got it all cleaned out of my accumulated junk from the past few years--hard hat, hunting boots, two sets of tools, first aid kit, six large burlap coffee bean bags, fire extinguisher, cig lighter air compressor, assorted highly flammable cloths saturated with petroleum distillates, three ice scrapers, five pounds of assorted bits of stuff much too valuable to throw away (like the broken radio knob)--then I got down to actually cleaning the thing. Amazing how much dirt can be held in a car. Must have been a five gallon bucket full. Or so. After a while, it looked very nice again, and I cleaned the upholstery and even cleaned all the schmutz off the door jambs.

Sometime in there Reba took the other three kids to their games, and I took Rebecca to hers (after first stopping at the car wash--gotta clean outside, too!). Real good game, with a final of 2-2. The other team scored both of theirs on penalty kicks due to our bad habit of touching the ball with our hands, but overall, it was a commendable effort. Got back home, and found the other two kids had both won their games, although Reba only got to watch Catherine. Jonathan was on another field, but from his accounting of the action, he managed to do okay, and got to play most of the first half. I'm sure he ran around slowly and waved his arms. Go with your strengths, as I always say.

Then it was time to go spend huge gobs of cash.

WARNING: MIND-NUMBINGLY BORING RECITATION OF MINIVAN MINUTIAE AHEAD

Readers who have ADHD or who simply detest minivans may wish to skip this part.

We took the van and the car, got over to the dealer on Highway 280 and found that ahhh, no, we don't have any Odysseys. "But I checked this morning, and it said on your website that you still had two, and they were both here." Ahhhh, let me check. Hmm. "Remember, early this week when you said you were going to have them send it over here so we could look at it?" Ahhh. "Well, they were supposed to, but, ummm, someone else was trying to arrange financing on it, and, aahhmmm, it didn't get here yet."

::sigh::

"But we can have it over here in a little while."

I jumped on him and started shoving his head into the tailpipe of a Lexus on the showroom floor..."Oh. Well. How long will that take? We've got things we have to go do later." "Not real long." I picked him up by both legs and started twirling him around my head, then dropped him into one of the nice potted plants by the water fountain..."I guess we can just drive over there, then."

Okay.

Oddly enough, he had to follow us so he could do the paperwork, since he was our "consultant". Whatever--time's a'wastin'. All the Oglesbys clamber onto the vehicles like the Darlings leaving Mayberry and head over to Pelham. Our nice young man called ahead and asked that they have the van pulled up front for us to look at when we got there. What a nice guy.

Got to the other lot, and sure enough, there she was. Silver, with grey interior, spit-shined (Ask For It By Name!) to a fare thee well, and thankfully lacking in the odd smoker's funka-funka that haunted the example we had driven earlier. The kids proceeded in their attempts to demolish it and I went and got the key for a test drive. Drove like a Honda minivan. While we were out, they did the appraisal on my car, which is a fomal way of saying they looked on the Kelley Blue Book website, got the absolute lowest wholesale value and deducted 98%. Gosh, this hurt. Start signing all the paperwork, and quickly banished kids to the children's padded room.

Seriously. Six inch thick crumb rubber padded play floor. And two bean bags. And a filthy doll. And a Busy Bead. And a TV tuned into SpongeBob.

Took forever, and Reba finally had to leave in the Plymouth just to get Oldest back in time to get ready for her play. Finally got finished, and we are now proud Odyssey owners. It's enough to make me want to go plow a seashore.

Comparisons between it and the seven years older Plymouth--'bout equal in terms of interior space, Honda got 'em beat on interior fit and finish and NVH control, seating versatility is the Honda's strong point--the fold down rear seat is really nice. Having had to wrestle the rear seat out of the Mopar in the past, it is not something I relish having to do, likewise the center seats. Boy are they heavy. The new one has dual powered sliding doors--with our group of kids, rapid egress is a blessing. (Gotta hand it to Chrysler, though--they pioneered this feature. Ours was before that time, however). Obviously, the Honda is better, but driving them back to back just points out how comparitively good Chryslers were in '94. They had it going on, and still manage to do pretty well. But, time marches on, and the current Honda and the new-for-2004 Sienna both beat it--it's time for an upgrade, Highland Park boys. I predict the next Chrysler will have the fold away rear seat, too. Just too clever not to have, and will probably have some more power, and some nicer standard equipment. Hard to get much more refined on the concept, though, which is something that must be given to the Detroiters--it was a good idea when they thought it up, and it took over ten years for anyone to even get close. Anyway, enough of that crap.

Got home, Reba took Oldest up to the theater, I stayed home and got the rest fed and scrubbed for church on the morrow and did laundry. (For those who worry about my testosterone output--I also watched racin' while I folded, and I occasionally broke wind and scratched myself in unmentionable places.) Reba and Ashley got home, the rest of the kids got in the bed, and along about Very Late:30 we finally crawled under the covers.

AAAGGGHH!! WHAT'S THAT NOISE!! How did it get morning already? Sunday, up, dress, get kids up and dressed, breakfast, catch a brief glimpse of Donald Rumsfeld tearing Tim Russert a new one, hop in New Van, go to church building, go to class, go to worship, go to parking lot, get buttonholed by one of the moms who wants a picture of us for her kid's scrapbook project. She's got a gigantic 35mm camera and has a purse the size of a suitcase and wants us to go stand over there by the pear tree, and then so that she has some elbow room, she plops said suitcase-sized handbag down BOOM onto the hood of a purchased-just-18-hours-earlier, silver Honda Odyssey. And you know, the hood on those things just slopes down so steep, and this thing had just been waxed or something, so PLOP we had to just shove that satchel back up there and let it hang on the little windshield squirter thing on the hood.

I thought Reba was going to kill her. She had that look in her eye like Jack Nicholson in The Shining.

The woman wandered over to the tree and I gingerly picked up her luggage and sat it on one of the seats. Poor Reba. What could she do? This woman's whole family is like that--not malicious, just abundantly oblivious. ::sigh::

People.

Let her take her precious picture, then it was on to home, and the final performance of The Jungle Book. Hoo-ray. Again, I stayed back with the other kids and tried to finish up the laundry (unsuccessfully), and then after the girls got back, it was on the road to church again, where we learned that one of the coworkers of a member has a husband in the 101st. And that he had not been heard from in the latest round of fighting. Our own contingent includes six men--three of whom are in the Middle East. As always, we prayed for them, for their safe return, for their success in battle, and for the lives of those who oppose us.

God have mercy on us all.



Saddam Vows to Crush Allied Forces

...Says Magic Beans He Traded Cow For Will Allow Him to Climb Tall Beanstalk, Swat Aircraft Out of Skies

..."Well, Not In the Literal Sense--Just These Colorful Map Stickers. BUT CRUSH THEM I WILL!"

...Comparison To Black Knight Scene in "Monty Python and Holy Grail" Displeases Iraqi Leader

...Said To Be Picking Out 72 Selections From Virgin Catalog, Just In Case



Another time, another war, but a similar bunch of idiots.
[...] As was true of the Democratic party as a whole, the influence of Peace Democrats varied with the fortunes of war. When things were going badly for the Union on the battlefield, larger numbers of people were willing to entertain the notion of making peace with the Confederacy. When things were going well, Peace Democrats could more easily be dismissed as defeatists. But no matter how the war progressed, Peace Democrats constantly had to defend themselves against charges of disloyalty. Revelations that a few had ties with secret organizations such as the Knights of the Golden Circle helped smear the rest.

The most prominent Copperhead leader was Clement L. Valladigham of Ohio, who headed the secret antiwar organization known as the Sons of Liberty. At the Democratic convention of 1864, where the influence of Peace Democrats reached its high point, Vallandigham persuaded the party to adopt a platform branding the war a failure, and some extreme Copperheads plotted armed uprisings.

[...] With the conclusion of the war in 1865 the Peace Democrats were thoroughly discredited. Most Northerners believed, not without reason, that Peace Democrats had prolonged war by encouraging the South to continue fighting in the hope that the North would abandon the struggle.
..."doomed to repeat", &c., &c.



Good morning!

Back at it with a ton of stuff to do this morning--let's go to the nutshell...

--Oldsmobyebye

--Odyssey, in more ways than one

--Trussville United--One tie, two wins, drunken soccer hooligans run wild

--Laundry--I'm working on it, so shut up already

--Church? You betcha

--Theater done for now

--Spring Break, When Kids Go Wild

--AAGGHH GIANT NUCLEAR MUTANT LOBSTERS! (Not really)

Anyway, gotta go transfer funds, transfer car tag, go pay some more taxes, do some serious work, and then fill you in later on all the details of the above. See you in a bit!

Ooooh--by the by, go read about the birth of friviledge.


Friday, March 21, 2003

Moving at top speed across the desert to the mythic land of Weekendia!!

Lots to do this weekend--Littlest Girl has soccer practice tonight, Oldest has her Jungle Book, then tomorrow we have three soccer games and a Jungle Book, then Sunday we have church and the FINAL matinee of Jungle Book. (Hooray!)

In amongst all that, there is the normal stuff you have to do when you have four kids--chanting, laundry, ritual sacrifice, rewinding Pocohantas for the fifty millionth time (they can operate any known electronic machine ever invented, yet they won't rewind the tape if they stop it before it finishes).

AND, my car is finally fixed--final tab is a whopping $1,448.49. Once more with the shock and awe. I SURRENDER already!! Anyway, also in among all this other stuff we're supposed to go test drive this on Saturday. (And yes, Cletus, I know it won't be near as good as your new truck, but it's not for me, it's for my wife, and surely you know how picky wives can be. Hmm. Then again, if she married me, how picky can she be?)

So then, we crank closed the windows on the Possumblog Broadcast Trailer and head for the house. All of you have a good weekend, have a Happy Vernal Equinox, and I'll see you on Monday.



I got yer Shock and Awe right here...Auburn Holds Off Saint Joseph's in OT
By FRED GOODALL, AP Sports Writer

TAMPA, Fla. - Auburn answered the critics. It does belong in the NCAA tournament.

Marquis Daniels scored 25 points, five of them in overtime, and the Tigers withstood a brilliant second-half performance by Saint Joseph's star Jameer Nelson to hold on for a 65-63 first-round victory in East Regional on Friday. [...]

Critics of Auburn's selection cited the Tigers' weak early season schedule and their 4-8 record against eight teams that made it to the NCAA tournament. Auburn coach Cliff Ellis countered with the argument that not only did his team play in one of the nation's toughest conferences, but it finished second in its division.

Saint Joseph's won its third straight Atlantic 10 regular season title before losing to Dayton in the semifinals of the conference tournament. The Hawks had one of the stingiest defenses in the country, but were unable to stop Auburn from taking advantage of its superior strength and athleticism inside in the first half.
War Eagle!!

(Not that basketball is a real sport or anything--you know, like football--but as long as Auburn's whupping somebody, I'll be acting like I'm a big roundball fan.)

[Before you start writing in, I consider anything where the players get to wear jewelry not to be a real sport.]



Mindlessness On Parade

Nice photo here of a young fellow demonstrating his throwing ability and a well-honed sense of irony. You know, our ignorant friend might like to read The New Colossus--then again, the author was one of those horrid J-E-W-S, so he might not like it.

In any event, here it is:
Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame,
"Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she
With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore,
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

by Emma Lazarus, New York City, 1883
Hmm. Let's see what might be offensive about Miss Liberty...'mighty woman'--ooooh, offends certain burqa-loving types, and we wouldn't want to inflame the Arab Street over THAT...'ancient lands, your storied pomp'--why that witch is cracking on Old Europe!! What sort of signal does that send about working within the framework of nations!!...Tired, poor, huddled masses of oppressed people--good grief, the absolute HORROR that the most powerful nation on earth was built and is managed by EVERYBODY ELSE'S DREGS!!

How utterly humiliating--no wonder he's throwing eggs at her.

(By the way, what would PETA say about exploiting poor unborn chickens in such a way?)



Of course, being an imbedded reporter doesn't necessarily mean you're the sharpest dart on the board...Tough battle for Umm Qasr
The BBC's Adam Mynott sent this report for News Online from the southern Iraqi port of Umm Qasr.

Many of the young US Marines aged between 19-24 had been told to expect fairly light resistance from Iraqi forces as they crossed the border with the intention of taking the southern Iraqi port of Umm Qasr.
Huh? "Many" of the redundantly young 19-24 Marines were told? Not all? How many? What about the 18 year olds? What about all the old farts? Did they get told something else? Nothing?
But when they crossed, shortly after dawn, through the wide gap cut in the sand reinforcement by 26 Armoured Engineer Squadron of British soldiers, they encountered much stiffer opposition than they had been expecting.

Initially small arms fire was aimed at the front of the convoy of more than 20 vehicles, then mortars were also fired in the direction of the convoy.

The commanding officer of Fox Company, Captain Rick Crevier, called up British artillery, which was stationed in northern Kuwait, just behind the border to target the Iraqi post.

Several volleys appeared to hit the Iraqi positions; some also fell close to US Marines who immediately conducted a hurried and somewhat chaotic withdrawal.

I ran back as fast as I could towards the Iraq-Kuwait border as artillery shells burst overhead.
Uh-huh. When you're running away as fast as you can, just about everything looks like hurried chaos.
The US Marines regrouped and Captain Crevier also called forward two M1-Abraham American tanks to try to help punch a hole through the Iraqi resistance.
"Abrams", you twit. M-1 Abrams. And I really REALLY don't think it was going to have to "try" too very hard to punch this hole you speak of.
The armoured convoy eventually got moving after three or four hours and made its way towards the port of Umm Qasr.

On the way, around 30 Iraqis surrendered to American forces, holding their hands up and waving white flags. [...]
Hopefully the three or four hours was long enough for you to turn around and run the right way.
Umm Qasr remains in a state of some flux.

There are still pockets of Iraqi resistance within the town, somewhere between the new port and the old port in Umm Qasr.
Isn't "some flux" something like being a little pregnant? Anyway, the tone still suggests a dejected defeatism that would probably lead Adam to opine that World War II was still going on because there is a very lonely Japanese guy on New Guinea who didn't surrender in 1945.
The new port is vital in the coalition's plans to bring humanitarian aid into the country.

At the moment, large amounts of aid are stored on ships in the Persian Gulf waiting to come into Umm Qasr.

US Marines fear that the waters in the port may have been mined - and that clearance operation will have to take place first.
Adam, I doubt "fear" is the correct adjective to use right after US Marines. And yes, you are so very right--if there are mines, they will have to be cleared first before anyone can bring in the pointy-ended, floaty things. It's very dangerous. Maybe you should run away.
Umm Qasr is the only deep-water port in Iraq.

It is where around 3,500 tonnes of food and humanitarian aid has arrived every day in the past decade or more, in the UN-organised oil-for-food operation.
Luckily, there are those red lines on your map--they are called "roads' and they lead from several of the countries around Iraq, and then there are those things on your map that look like little airplanes--they are called "aerodromes" and great big flying things can land there, so just in case Umm Qasr is mined, and it takes a week or so to get it unclogged, there ARE alternatives.

Anyway, good luck, Adam, and please don't bother the nice men while they work.





I just love Rooters...Rumsfeld Says Saddam's 'Regime' Losing Control

Why the quote marks around "regime"? My crappy little dictionary says it means a "system of administration or government." Was Rummy up there at the podium making air quotes with his fingers? Is Saddam's dictatorial oligarchy not a regime? Have all of Reuters' headline "writers" been instructed to call into question everything said by anyone in charge?

"Morons"

CORRECTION NOTICE: Regular reader and denizen of the Kudzu Patch, Larry Anderson writes in to the Possumblog Editorial Office:
I think that the use of quotes around the word "Morons" in the context in which you used it is incorrect. It is not a quote nor do you need to set it apart as something your reader needs to understand may not be exactly accurate.
The Possumblog Web Log Editorial Department and staff deeply regret any misunderstanding which may have arisen by the (mis)use of the word "moron" in quotation marks in the above post. As always, we will make every effort to correct errors of a substantive nature as quickly as possible. To that end, we ask that the following be considered as such a corrective action:

Morons.

Thank you for reading and responding.



CNN Ordered Out of Baghdad
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraq ordered Cable News Network (CNN), the U.S. television news channel, to leave Iraq on Friday and accused it of being a propaganda machine.

CNN, on air, said it was "sad to learn" that its four-strong team in Baghdad was being expelled.

"CNN has been ordered out of Iraq...because they have become a propaganda tool to spread lies and rumors," said an information ministry official who declined to be identified.

CNN, based in Atlanta, Georgia, said its staff would probably have to travel overland to Jordan. [...]
Considering the news reports, instead of having to drive to Jordan, you fellows might be able to ask the nice man in the Humvee downstairs for a ride to the airport, if you can hang around for a day or so.



How to get well...

Well, let me tell you...going straight to the soccer park after work, without the benefit of the amoxicillin your doctorbabe called in to the pharmacy for you, and standing out there in the nice damp breeze for an hour and a half doesn't do too much for you. Got home last night afterwards and my throat felt like it was full of angry fire ants. Which made swallowing my pill a bit of a chore, even moreso given the immense size of these babies--each one is about the size of a canteloupe. I have now had two of them, and my throat feels a bit better, and I am, of course, back at work, spewing my filthy germs everywhere. But doggone it, it's payday, and I have to be here to pick up my check.

My prediction about what my lot would have been like had I gone home yesterday was remarkably prescient--while fixing supper, Reba managed to get some dirty water up on the the curtains over the kitchen sink. This required that she remove ALL the curtains (and ALL their niggly little rods) from ALL the windows in the kitchen and put them in the washing machine, and then to add to the confusion she managed to knock a vase full of tulips off the counter and spread glass all over the kitchen floor, requiring the employment of the incredibly loud vacuum cleaner which got up 99.99% of the glass shards, except for one tiny piece that lodged itself into the chubby little foot of Catherine when she got home from school, causing her to limp and whine around the house the rest of the afternoon. Hmmm. Yep, staying at work was a better idea.

After supper, time to get the kiddies scrubbed down, then to bed, and I lay all sprawled on the bed watching the NBC and FOX News reports out of Iraq. I don't know, but it seems like the idea of 'embedding' reporters with the troops is working better than anyone anticipated--I think the biggest reason is that guys are big kids when it comes to blowey-uppy stuff, and the reporters get to act all macho and use words like "klicks" for kilometers. And "Boots on the ground!" Over and over again. PLEASE stop it. Just talk normal, please. You don't have to use jargon. It just makes you sound silly.

And another thing--don't bother the guys while they are WORKING! David Bloom was on the Today show this morning riding on an M-88 across the desert and decided that he would do an impromptu demonstration during a stop to show what the food was like. "Hey, would you hand me one of those MREs over there?" The trooper was very kind and handed it to him, although I'm sure I was thinking "Look, jackhole, I'm busy and you're ***king arms ain't broke." Dave blabbered about how good the MRE is to eat (which I'm sure will endear him to grunts everywhere) and then decided he was going to open the pack. Why? Who knows. He tugged and pulled for a second, and then had the nerve to ask "Hey, do either of you guys have a knife to open this with?"

What a prissy little buffoon. Being a nice man, the patient sergeant who was also on the back of the vehicle stopped what he was doing, dug under his body armor and pulled out a multitool, took the package from him, and neatly sliced it open, and went back to work, again all the while probably comparing Dave to a certain part of the female anatomy. (Find you a knife, Dave baby.) Dave then proceded to pull all the stuff out of the pack and throw it all around him as he sat there describing it. And then worried that he might have lost his sunglasses.

BUT, the one thing is that the reporting itself, not just from Mr. Bloom but from all the dopey reporters, is positive. Having to rely on someone else for your survival tends to do that, I suppose. And it shows that despite what comes out of the mouths of the citizens of Bizarro World, American troops are professional, capable, tough, smart, and compassionate men and women who do what they do not because they were coerced, nor out of psychotic blood lust.

They do it because there still is such a thing as duty and honor.

My thanks to all of you.


Thursday, March 20, 2003

POSITIVE

I am a walking Petri dish of horrifyingly icky streptococci.

Which is why I came back to work. I figure if I make everyone sick here, I'll have the place all to myself next week. Janis Gore suggested that the smart course of action would be to go home and go to bed, which would work fine if I wasn't so danged lazy (or if I was smart). As it is, if I go home, I will be sharing the house with Oldest Daughter, who fell ill at school and had to be taken home by Wife, who will also be there.

Meaning, that were I to show up at home, I would be greeted by Wife with a list of things that we could do around the house. Of course, she would sigh and say I should go on and get in the bed, but the rest of the afternoon would be spent listening to her uuumph-ing boxes around, and errrrrughhh-ing stacks of books off the floor, and CLANG/CLATTERING-ing dishes out of the dishwasher, and turning on the television in the bedroom so she can hear it while she works out in the hallway, and sometime in there Oldest will decide to that, hey, she feels just fine now and will get out her clarinet and start practicing the best way to make it squeak loudly, and then the phone will ring and someone will ask for Terr-uey O... O... Og... Ogu... Ogusl... Ogrigsboy, and I will have to patiently tell them if they don't hang up I'll have to come all the way to Bangalore and rip their hemmorhoids right out through their nose, and then it will be time to go get the other kids from school, and they will come home and re-enact the first twelve hours of Operation Iraqi Freedom at top volume.

So, I think I might just stay here, where it is quiet.

As for the doctor trip, it went very nicely. She was very impressed that I had lost weight since the last visit (15 pounds), and she treated me like the gigantic big fat wimpy baby I am. Which comes across much better coming from an attractive young female doctor, rather than a crusty-but-lovable old man doctor.

Sadly, just as there was with my former crusty-but-lovable old man doctor, there is the issue of the horrid exam room artwork (see earlier posts dealing with Lewitt-Him artwork). And as before, the "artwork" is fish related. AAARGHHH!! Make it STOP!!

One wall had a slick cardboard print of Van Gogh's Purty Colored Fla'rs in a cheapie gold frame, which wasn't so bad, but the other wall...O! the other wall.

Overall composition approximately 24 real live English inches wide by 18 high, in the "Old Man and the Sea"ish genre--guy in a slicker, sitting in a dinghy, battling a marlinesque-sorta looking fish, all done in that peculiar mid-1970s angular mosaic style of rough wood strips of the sort one finds at the best head shops and sea shell emporiums along the Miracle Mile at Panama City Beach.

Each strip of wood had been carefully cut and nailed into place (them's REAL nails!), and each little tortured hunk of timber was apparently lovingly salvaged from old fruit boxes. I imagine it was probably constructed by an earnest young artist struggling to break into the big time realm of rumpus room and doctor's office artwork. "If I can only get just one on The Brady Bunch, I'm set!!" Each strip was painted in the appropriate washed out green and blue and gray colors, and in the corner the proud artist woodburned (another of those fun 1970s craft activities involving possible skin damage) his or her name onto the wood..."degroot".

The Great, eh?

Oh well, then--who am I to argue?



Study: Female rats are better multitaskers

In a related event, Blogger has announced the expansion of its technical staff to include forty female lab rats.

"Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?"

"Uh, I think so, Brain, but culottes have a tendancy to ride up so."



Ouch.

I'm fixing to leave to go see the doctor--the uncomfortable feeling in the back of my throat last night has bloomed into what appears to be a raging case of strep throat. Can't swallow without screaming, the inside of my swallow-thingy looks as red as a monkey's butt, my head's full of lukewarm aquarium gravel, my eyes feel like they're going to pop out like hull rivets in one of those old submarine movies...Ick. So, off to have another of my bodily orifices probed.

Oh well, at least she's a she. And the hole IS topside.

Be back after while--while I'm gone, be sure to check out EVERYone in the blogroll above--you won't be disappointed.



Have I ever mentioned how frustrating it is to use Blogger?



Monica Fills The Bill for Fox

And Bill fills th...never mind.

Anyway, in this hard-hitting WaPo piece by Lisa de Moraes, we find that...
[...] Monica Lewinsky, the former presidential mistress who alternately runs from and toward celebrity, has signed to host Fox's next reality series, "Mr. Personality."

The show gets the coveted "Joe Millionaire" Monday time slot, starting April 21.

In "Mr. Personality," a young, beautiful single woman will court several eligible men who must rely strictly on their personalities to captivate her. That's because each man will have some sort of mask or hood on throughout the "dating" process.

Which is okay because, as Ms. Lewinsky can attest, personality is mostly from the waist down.[...]
Meow.





Saddam Urges Iraqis to 'Draw Your Sword'

America Counters With 'Never Bring a Knife to a Gunfight'



Arabs Angry Over U.S. Attack on Iraq

WOW!! What are the odds of THAT happening!!

In related news, Arabs are also angry that the whole world is not Muslim, that Jews still exist, that a giant genie has not destroyed George Bush, that they can't get the VCR to quit flashing 12:00, that Wal-Mart doesn't carry Semtex, and that Pete Rose is still not in the Hall of Fame.



Holy crapalooie!!

Due to the effect of both a Blairalanche AND a Yourishalanche, this pitiful site managed to get 1,745 hits yesterday!! (Admittedly, about 1,500 were me sitting here hitting reload, but hey...) In any event, for the rest of the hits which came from people who dropped by, the Possumblog Editorial Board and Snack Fund wish to offer their sincere regrets for any disappointment which may have arisen by following the links from Mr. Blair and Ms. Yourish to this site. Those experiencing light-headedness, a hollow ringing in the ears, constipation, or involuntary small motor twitches are advised to seek immediate medical assistance.

Anyone not experiencing deleterious effects due to exposure to Possumblog will receive a door prize of a box of six Cornatees™, the cornbread battered and deep fried manatee treat on a stick.


Wednesday, March 19, 2003

The Wednesday Lileks' Newhouse Column--In Praise of America's Fighting Men and Women
[...] My father, like the men and women in the Gulf today, volunteered. Keep that in mind, because to hear the protesters you'd think that once again Fascist Amerika has rounded up the poor and the dark, manacled them in troop ships and sent them off to be flung against cannon fire in futile waves. No: These people volunteered for this job.

It would be stretching the point to say every soldier wants to be there. We don't have 200,000 killbots straining at the leash, eager to bayonet a hapless foe.

A reservist who kissed her husband and child goodbye and left knowing her employer will cut her pay, she might rather be home. A sailor who's seven months into a six-month deployment, who'd rather be back in San Diego having a cold beer with shipmates or throwing a Frisbee on the beach, he might prefer some shore leave. Some new recruit sweating in his chemical protection gear, sitting out the stinging sandstorms, wondering whether Saddam Hussein strikes first, waiting for the order to go, go, go -- all things considered, he might prefer to be sitting in the rec room with a Bud, the TV and the Final Four.

Yet there they are. On our behalf. Underpaid, overworked, ready to fight. [...]

Saddam's grave will lack a headstone; he'll die unmourned, his ashes scattered. Not so those who deposed him. The green ground of home hasn't been turned to hold the men and women who will fight this next battle, but it will be soon enough. Once again, we owe them everything. Once again, they will give us what we rarely deserve, because now and then a day passes when we do not think of them, or give them thanks.
In peace, vigilance. In battle, valor. In victory, compassion.

Godspeed to the men and women who stand upon the ramparts.



And now for something compleatly different...

We bring you the Magnificent Llama Drivers of the South!!

And not only that, but another excerpt in our ongoing series of excerpts from Everybody's Writing Desk Book (1903 edition), written by Charles Nisbet and Don Lemon.

Today's topic...
5. WRONG USE OF WORDS.

Foreign Words.—It is not in the use of home-grown, but in the abuse of exotic words that blunders are oftenest made in English. As Prof. Freeman, in two articles “On some Recent Abuses of Words”, in Longman’s Magazine (vols. v. and vi.), points out, a crowd of words derived of old Greek and old Roman history and politics are now used in English, each in a sense altogether oblivious of its original meaning. Indeed, a foreign is often preferred to a home-grown word by an “English writer” simply because is it in every respect foreign to him. Among many other words, Prof. Freeman cites:—

DECIMATE, which in the seventeenth century had still the meaning proper to it, the same meaning as ‘tithe’, i.e., take the tenth part of. Now, however, when it is said that this town or this army was ‘literally decimated’, the expression does not really mean that one man in ten was killed. A farmer will write, “My field of turnips was absolutely decimated; scarce a root was left untouched” (Hodgson, Errors in the Use of English).

LITERALLY, etc.—An actor’s playing, according to a newspaper report, “literally brought down the house”—a repetition of Samson’s feat! ‘Vandalism’, ‘Plebeian’, ‘Tyrant’, ‘Ostracism’, ‘Ovation’, ‘Proscribe’, ‘Metropolis and the Provinces’, ‘Aristocracy and Democracy’, etc., etc., are, as shown by Prof. Freeman, continually being misapplied by writers who have a weakness for these words, because they have no notion whatever of the Vandals, the Plebs, Tyrranos, etc., etc.

AGGRAVATE, meaning properly ‘add weight to’, is often misused in the sense of ‘irritate’.

ALTERNATIVE properly means ‘the other of two course’, and yet we often read of ‘three alternatives’. (“Mr. Gladstone gives three alternatives.”—London Times, Feb. 2, 1891.)

ANTICIPATE, ‘take beforehand’, ‘take before the proper time’, is frequently misused in the sense of expect.

AVOCATION properly means calling away from a vocation or pursuit; and it is only in quite recent times that the word has come to be confounded with ‘vocation’,

DEMEAN, from the old French word demener, means to manage or conduct one’s self; but, confounding the word with mean or base (wherewith it has naught in common but the sound), many writers nowadays (ab)use it in the sense of lower one’s self. ‘Why should I so demean myself?’ (instead of abase myself).

An article in the Nineteenth Century (Jan. 1890) cites ‘dilapidated lungs’, ‘christening a horse’, ‘gooseberry fool’ (for ‘gorse-berry foulé), ‘feminine persuasion’, etc., etc.
A couple of the books mentioned in the article include Longman’s Magazine, copies of which can be found at B&N (although I can’t quite put my finger on poor Prof. Freeman), and there is Hodgson’s Errors in the Use of English also available from Barnes and Noble.



From the Referrer Logs...

Obviously my fame has now gone far and wide in the last year of so of rambling, so much so that I get requests like this: trouble shoot leaky toilet tank

Well, now, the best thing to do if there's trouble is to shoot the intruder, not the leaky toilet tank. If you shoot the tank, it'll just be even more leaky.

Glad to be of help.



Via Weevilite Ministress to the Sportsman's Paradise, Janis Gore, who received it via Rand Simberg, the heartwarming story of passion and bolt cutters:

Protester picks wrong spot to lock himself
SCOTT GUTIERREZ THE OLYMPIAN The Olympian Online

OLYMPIA -- A man spent hours chained to the wrong building Tuesday in an ill-planned effort to protest war with Iraq, police said.
Jody Mason padlocked himself to an entrance of the Washington State Grange building at 924 Capitol Way S., thinking it was a sub-office of the U.S. Department of Energy.

Grange employees found him about 11:45 a.m. Tuesday and asked what he was doing.

He told employees he'd chained himself to the building in civil disobedience Monday night after listening to President Bush's televised ultimatum to Saddam Hussein.

Mason padlocked one end of the chain around his neck and the other to a door, which opens to a bottom-floor office. He told onlookers he was protesting Bush's foreign and domestic policies. He had affixed a sign to the building reading, "Reduce Deficit."

Grange employees explained that he was at the wrong building. The Grange is a nonprofit, nonpartisan group that advocates for residents in rural areas.
Uh-huh...and just what do all those so-called "rural" exploiters of farm animals use to grow their pesticide-laden poisons and their freakish genetically-modified cows? THAT'S RIGHT!! OOOIIIIILLLLLLLL!! They had it comin', that's for sure!! FIGHT THE POWER!!
"I don't think that's ever happened before," said Larry Clark, Grange communications director.

Police officers used heavy-duty bolt cutters to free Mason.
SEE!! SEE the violence inherent in the system!! Oh no, can't just use normal bold cutters--oh no, we have to haul out the military/industrial-complex approved HEAVY DUTY bolt cutters, wielded, no doubt by jack-booted racist THUGS!! STIFLING DISSENT!! HELP!! HELP!!
"He asked for help because he didn't have the key," Olympia police Cmdr. Steve Nelson said.
SURRRE he asked for help--TO STOP THIS WAR!!!
Mason wasn't arrested and won't face any charges. Officers let him go and didn't take his name, Nelson said.
I DEMAND HE BE CHARGED!! SUCH LACK OF CRUSHING OF DISSENT MUST NOT BE TOLERATED!!
"He was our first protester since President Bush's speech," Nelson said.
HE WON'T BE THE LAST!! Fight the Grange!! FARMERS KILL BABY ANIMALS!! THEY POLLUTE OUR ATMOSPHERE!! RURAL LIFE CONTRIBUTES TO SPRAWL!
Mason, who identified himself to a photographer, said he had looked up the Department of Energy in the phone book. The phone book, under the Department of Energy, lists a Bonneville Power Administration Office at 924 Capitol Way S.
Just another ploy to hide from the PEOPLE, man!!

What a schmoo.



Possums in service to Her Majesty!
Queen's guards could soon be wearing possum

15 March 2003

It's a novel use for road-kill. Southlander Jonny Hazlett yesterday contacted the Queen's secretary and his London agent with a hairy proposal.

Replace the Queen's guards' bearskin hats – made from the coats of Canadian brown bears – with true blue southern possum from a tannery at Thornbury, near Invercargill.

The British Army's Coldstream Guards' "busby" hats have come under fire from animal welfare groups over the past few years and sparked a global search for a synthetic replacement.

Tourists have flocked to see the iconic hats since the Napoleonic wars and in 1997 Britain's Ministry of Defence launched a so far unsuccessful search for an alternative.

Slinkskins general manager Jonny Hazlett reckons New Zealand's trash could be Britain's treasure. "We're going to give it a go. Possum could be it!"
Indeed they could, Jonny!!
Southland's environmentally friendly fur, from pest possums trapped in the name of conservation, was already gracing catwalks in Germany and Italy and it was worth making some calls to England, Mr Hazlett said today.

Previous attempts by the Defence Force to use synthetic replacements had resulted in "frizzed up hats" and embarrassing situations when static electricity caused the guards' hats to stand on end when they walked under powerlines.

Mr Hazlett said possum fur might not hold up "too well" in wet weather but should be looked at as a very real alternative.

"I don't know if you've ever seen a possum after a rain storm – they look like drowned rats or like they do on the road, but we're still keen to get in touch with them, and give it a go."
Wherever there is conflict in the world, whenever there is a need to see that Freedom's defenders are properly arrayed and equipped, you can be sure that a POSSUM will be there, doing what it does best--being completely and totally dead.



SEC Charges HealthSouth, CEO with Fraud
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said on Wednesday that it has charged healthcare services group HealthSouth Corp. and Chief Executive Richard Scrushy with "a massive accounting fraud."

The commission said its complaint "alleges that since 1999, at the insistence of Scrushy, HealthSouth systematically overstated its earnings by at least $1.4 billion in order to meet or exceed Wall Street earnings expectations." [...]
Couldn't happen to a nicer fellow. Talk about being seduced by hubris.

In any event, there were breathless, but non-specific, reports last night at the beginning of the early-late evening news on the local FOX station (With no network programming, they are REAL heavy into local news--5, 5:30, 6, 9, 10) that the FBI had the HealthSouth complex surrounded. No word at first why (you know, so you'll stay tuned), and with the tension about the coming invasion of Iraq, it could have been any sort of Bad Thing going on--gunmen, bogeymen, bong sellers.

I joked to Reba that they were probably after poor Dick, and he was probably locked in an office with a shredder. Come to find out, when the reporter finally did do her report, they indeed where there carrying out a search warrant in conjunction with an SEC investigation. Dick wasn't really there, though.

Oh well. If nothing else, the lusciously zaftig Nikki Preede was doing the story--she's my local equivalent to the Pride of Wheeling.



Foreign ministers meeting at U.N. in symbolic, likely ineffective war protest

Symbolic. Ineffectual.

Well, you know what they say--go with your strengths.



U.S. Homeland Security Chief Tries to Calm Public

Cookies, Warm Milk Seem To Be Working--Officials Say Some "Might Need Bedtime Story of Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel"



Hey, Cool!! A Tim Blairalanche!!

But, as always, stupid STUPID Blogger just sorta dumps you off at the top of the page here and you can't quite figure out what the reference is about. Well, just scroll down to the story about the aptly named Dick Smothers.

Or you could go and read this and get a similar titter.



Too Many Parents Leave Children Alone in Bathtub

Look, I'm a big guy and there just isn't ROOM for me and a kid...hmm? What?

Oh.

Never mind.



France Snaps at British Jibes, Clarifies Help Offer
[...] France's ambassador in Washington, Jean-David Levitte, appeared to offer an olive branch to the United States on Tuesday when he told CNN that France could help the U.S.-led military coalition if Baghdad used biological or chemical arms.

But French diplomats in Paris made clear this was not a change in France's refusal to join the war. "It is obvious
I think one thing we've learned is that there is quite a difference in the definition of "obvious" when dealing with the French...
we wouldn't sit back and not help if there was a chemical attack.
Oh really?!
But what we are talking about is medical assistance," one said. [...]
Oh. Really.

Here--here's a buck...go play in traffic.



Alliteration Day! Barbecue Big Biz in BHM--Brought to you by the letter B and the Birmingham Business Journal...--Barbecue bests recession in Birmingham in 2002
Leave it to barbecue to beat the economic slump.

Birmingham-based restaurant chain Jim 'N Nick's Bar-B-Q has posted 2002 sales topping $12.8 million, a 20.38 percent increase from 2001. The record sales showed a profit jump of nearly 31 percent from 2001. The chain has five locations in the Magic City.

The increases are well above the state and national levels. According to the National Restaurant Association, the U.S. restaurant industry in 2002 saw sales recover from a dour fall 2001. The association says the nation's restaurants hit $407.8 billion in 2002 sales, an increase of almost 4 percent from 2001. The restaurant industry posted sales growth during the last two years, in spite of fragile consumer confidence and the national economy's first recession in 10 years.

In Alabama, restaurant sales grew at the same pace as the national average, hitting the $4 billion mark.

Jim 'N Nick's was on top. Company president Nick Pihakis says, "While we certainly benefited, in part, from the return to full-service dining by customers who had cut back at the end of 2001, it is our philosophy on quality food and customer service that allowed us to post such great sales."

Pihakis points to loyal customers and an increase in catering services in explaining the sales spike.

The growth might not be over yet. The association's 2003 restaurant industry forecast predicts 2003 sales of $426.1 billion nationally.
Mmm. Meat. I am proud to say that the smoked pork industry can thank my family and me for the largest portion of their success.

Say, I wonder what the boys at the BBQ Emporium think about this news? (They seem to be getting awfully high-tone now that they got international recognition from that English fellow.)



Hey!! Hometown News Alert...Jeffco to replace bridge on South Chalkville Road
ANITA DEBRO
News staff writer

Jefferson County Roads and Transportation will replace a 60-foot bridge on South Chalkville Road that crosses Pinchgut Creek.

The Metropolitan Planning Organization recently agreed to allocate $1.8 million from the Alabama Department of Transportation to replace the aging bridge near the Golden Rule restaurant.

County and Trussville officials don't know the exact age of the bridge, but senior bridge inspector Ben Thomas said that it has become functionally obsolete.

"It's too narrow and the culvert design allows for logs to get trapped under the bridge," Thomas said of the two-lane thoroughfare.

Trussville City Clerk Lynn Porter said that flooding often occurs on the bridge after heavy rains.

"It sure would be nice to replace that bridge," Porter said.

Thomas said that planners are in the early stages of designing the replacement and could finish that phase in about one month. Once the design is completed, county planners will send it to the state department of transportation for approval.

Work on the bridge could begin some time later this summer, Thomas said. He estimated it could take nearly one year to replace the bridge.

During construction, the existing bridge would be closed and traffic would be re-routed to another bridge on Watterson Parkway, Thomas said.
Right down the hill from Casa De Possum, you know. And some of you probably thought I was joshing about the name of the creek--it is indeed Pinchgut, and as I have mentioned before, the one further up the Cahaba is Stinking Creek. Horrible sounding names, but both of them, as well as the Cahaba, are actually pretty little streams.

In a way it's a shame they are going to replace the bridge. The old one is narrow and has the short concrete rails with large openings between the columns, so you can actually see down into the creek as you cross over. Go slow enough and little passengers with keen eyes can see fishies and a crafty old heron that lurks in the shadow and snatches one up every so often. I know the new one will look just like all other new bridges--blinding white concrete, 80 feet wide (wider than it is long), with 4 foot high Jersey barrier rails on either side. No more looking at the fish.

'Progress' my eye teeth.


Tuesday, March 18, 2003

OKAY, now—here is another version of what happened this weekend. I tell you, though, the original post was much, MUCH funnier and poignant and thought provoking and warmly familiar and action packed and it had several guest star cameos (golly, you know that Nipsey Russell is a SCREAM!) and a band and lots of other good stuff that went right down the floor drain in Blogspotlandia.

Not that I’m bitter or nuthin’.

And to the folks who wrote in and told me that I should do this in Word then cut and paste—sometimes I do that (like in this post) but I was at first just going to do a short post and it kept getting longer and longer, and I was typing fast and hot and had several links, which is ONE thing I will give to stupid STUPID Blogger— it has three little buttons that you can click that will automatically insert the proper tags for bolding and italics and links. When you’re typing, it slows things down to have to manually type in all the pointy brackets and a href stuff and remember to close the tags and if you have “smart quotes” turned on it doesn’t work right with the tags and it all just becomes a great big bother.

A bother, that is, until two hours worth of work suddenly vanishes like an Iraqi dissident. THEN you sorta wish you had just taken a second or two to copy the stuff in Blogger to the clipboard, JUST IN CASE.

Ah well, such is life lived upon the edge, eh?

To start—Friday night was the premiere of The Jungle Book, and it went surprisingly well. No major flubs and everything went off pretty smoothly with the scenery changes and all. It was also marked by an appreciative audience, who in some cases made even more noise than the actors. Lots of coughing and talking and passing babies back and forth—in some ways it reminded me of the descriptions of Billy Wigglestick’s Globe audiences. I suppose I should be happy someone didn’t leap up out of the front row and try to chop Kaa the Snake’s head off with a hoe when she came onstage.

To make it even worse, the long tall schmuck who was sitting at the end of the row in front of us decided to improve his seating position during intermission. He plopped down right in front of Jonathan, who sort of whimpered at me and looked up with those great big puppy dog eyes. In my best stage whisper, I leaned over to him and said, “I guess you can see REAL good, now!” Oblivious Man didn’t budge. Until a few seconds later when he hopped up again and moved all the way down to the end of the row. Right in front of Catherine. Who isn’t nearly as civilized as her father. “MAMA!! That MAN setted in front of me and I CAN’T SEE NOTHIN!!” He heard THAT! by golly. He scrunched his sticklike frame further down in the seat until he was quite uncomfortable. Heh.

Back home, then to bed, then up again Saturday. Middle Girl’s game got cancelled due to most of the other team being preoccupied with some sort of non-cookie-related Girl Scout deal, so they had to forfeit. So, her and Mom went up to church to work on scrapbook stuff, while Dad stayed and Dealt Harshly with misbehaving nonadults who did not wish to play nicely with the computer. I also did laundry and dishes….I always forget which one it is you’re supposed to bash on rocks at the creek. Oh well.

They got back late, then it was time to go to Boy’s soccer game. They played pretty well, and wound up kissing their sister from Clay to the tune of 1-1. Jonathan didn’t get to play a whole lot—poor little fellow is as slow as Christmas. But he has fun.

Afterwards, it was time to start the slow descent into madness known as car shopping.

We had decided to sell the Oldsmobooger when it gets out of the shop, and I had figured we would get something else—used, but somewhat newer, in the same appliance-type sort of car.

(As a bothersome and distracting side note, it had been awfully odd having an Olds and a Plymouth in the driveway. Both of them have been sent to the pasture by their parent corporations, so it’s a bit like walking out and finding an Oakland and a DeSoto parked there. You car guys know what I mean.)

Anyway, I had found a ’96 Taurus wagon that looked okay (yes, I know—but with six in the family and an artillery division’s amount of crap to carry around, our choices are kinda limited. And I really don’t think Reba would have appreciated me showing up with this). She got out and started looking at the new stuff, particularly a Silhouette with the child-pacification (i.e. DVD) system. Too ‘spensive.

Until. Later that day as we were doing something, she came up with an idea. Sell the Olds, keep the old van for me to drive, and get something newer she could drive which didn’t have a CHECK ENGINE light that comes on after ten minutes worth of driving. All of which would require the use of The Untouchable Fund of Money That Must Never Be Touched, Ever. But, since it was her idea, I think it was much more palatable. So, okay by me, and it will be nice to have something that won’t leave us stranded on the side of I-65 beside the carcass of a dead armadillo during our next long trip. (And if I squint my eyes real tight, I can pretend the Plymouth has a 340 Six-Pack just like an AAR ‘Cuda. Well, kinda.)

So, starts the search for something nicer. I’ll fill you in on that later on, but as I wrote this morning, Homer would be proud.
TELL ME, O MUSE, of that ingenious hero who travelled far and wide after he had sacked the famous town of Trussville. Many cities did he visit, and many were the car dealers with whose manners and customs he was acquainted; moreover he suffered much by Interstate while trying to save a few bucks and bring his load of screaming children safely home; but do what he might he could not save his children, for they had great gastric distress through their own sheer folly in eating the Twinkies which had been left to the mercy of the Sun-god Hyperion in the rear storage box…
(Not really—just throwed that in for dramatic effect.)

SPEAKING OF WHICH, after we figured that car mess out, sometime in there it was time to use our other currently operating vehicle to transport daughter back to the theater for Saturday night’s performance, which caused daughter, who had to ride in the shotgun seat of said vehicle, no small amount of agony for the indignity of having to be seen in such a…a…pile of rust! We pulled up and she nearly shot out of the cab, and would have except no one was there yet. So we waited as more and more kids and parents showed up with their sparkly SUVs and there we sat in the creaky old pickup until she was nearly beside herself with pent-up embarrassment. HEY! Get used to it, chick! Your old man is going to be a source of constant consternation for years to come. (And for what it’s worth, I would stack up stinky ol’ Franklin against Baloo’s mom’s new H2 any day of the week!)

They finally opened the door and she ran in like I was a kidnapper, and I came on in and stayed backstage during the play, which, of course, caused her great gobs of additional embarrassment. As I said, get used to it, sugar! I did get to prove my manliness, however, when the director needed a pocketknife to fix something. And I was the ONLY MAN IN THE ROOM with a pocketknife. Sheesh, what’s wrong with you guys! The play went well again as it did the night before, and then it was back home, some supper, a shower, and in the bed.

Sunday, up early, off to church, where I remembered that I had forgotten that I was supposed to substitute for the 3rd and 4th grade teacher. Oops. Luckily, it’s a good class, and I’m not saying that because two of the kids are mine. It really is a good bunch of kids and they listen very well—the lesson was a survey of Esther, which is near ‘bout impossible to adequately cover in 40 minutes, but I managed it and even got in a reference to Joe Millionaire. I asked Rebecca and Jonathan later at lunch some questions about it, and they got them all right, so I guess some of it took.

After class, worship, after worship, home for a quick lunch, after quick lunch it was time for Mom to go sit with Wolf for her afternoon matinee, while I read the paper and refereed the inevitable he-said—she-said; he-pooted—she’s-a-snothead exchanges that always happen when children are freed from working 16 hours shifts in textile mills.

Reba and Ashley home, then time to head right back up to the church building for the girls to do their song-leading lessons while the rest of us went to Wal-Mart. (Because no weekend post of mine is complete without an obligatory Wal-Mart reference, and we really did need stuff.) Then back for evening services, then home for supper, then to bed, then I got to work Monday and Dogger ate my homework, so I did some actual work and fumed and fussed.

So there, now. That’s the bones of what I put down Monday, without any of the hilarity or the guest stars (except for John Tesh, and he won’t leave) or all the other stuff.



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