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.


Friday, August 29, 2003

Ohh, a weekend we will go, a weekend we will go...

Gonna be a tough one--Boy has soccer practice tonight, then Bec has two tournament games tomorrow, then my sister is home and wants us all to take our dear old mommy out for her birthday meal tomorrow, and there's church, and there's Labor Day on Monday (which around my house really is a day of incredible physical labor), and all sorts of other stuff that I will be told all about in due time. So, I am already pre-tired. And I still have this nagging pain in my throat, and the headache, and the stiff neck...

Anyway, all of you have a good weekend and holiday, and I'll see you Tuesday.



Once again, the mighty Axis of Weevil swallows up another unsuspecting victim...

I was just lounging around doing a bit of welding in my new kilt when Chet the E-Mail Boy very nearly caused me injury as he blasted in the door screaming at the top of his lungs. (He's not that loud, but he has a nasty, rather rattly wheeze.) Chet has been not the least bit busy lately and was greatly excited that a new message had come clicking across his keyset.

It was from Dougal Campbell (of the South Alabama Campbells) who, being now fully dug in to his surroundings, was casting about for inclusion into the Alabama Blog Writing and Monument Carving Association. He wrote:
So, what must one do to be considered a member of the Axis of Weevil? I live in Enterprise, home of the Boll Weevil Monument. Is that good enough? Or must I perform some depraved act of weevilness?
Well, Dougal (and the rest of you, too), the Axis is a fine and upstanding group of folks, and the idea that any of us would countenance any sort of depravity is beyond imagination.
When I was in college, I was once detained for questioning by the police regarding an incident involving goats...

Oh wait, was that TMI?
::thumbing through handy Internet Lingo book:: Three Mile Island? No. Temporomandibular Inflammation? No. Too Much Information? That's it!

But really when you think about it, not enough information! Look, around here, goat incidents and police questioning stemming therefrom aren't that uncommon. Just because you did the same things every other college student does is not necessarily evidence of the high creativity demanded by the rest of the team. And in any event, there ARE rules you know...
Anyhow, please enlighten me on weevil qualifications.
Oh. Okay.

So I quickly scribbled down a response to Dougal on Chet's pad of yellowing Western Union telegram forms and sent him back down to the basement to send them on their speedy electronic way.

I went back to work cleaning my cutting torch and not long Chet fell into the office with Dougal's response--
1) Born in, or now live in, or once lived in, or would like to live in, Alabama;

2) Not ashamed to admit to #1;


Check and check.

3) Staunchly anti-idiotarian, or can at least pretend pretty good

I've always firmly maintained that the average person is an idiot.
Well, a lot of that depends on what the definition of "is" is, now isn't it?
4) Functionally literate

5) Don't type in ALL CAPS or all e.e. cummings case or MiXeD.

6) Update your blog more than once a month


10-4
For the kids in the audience, "10-4" is the number we all used to use before we invented "24/7".
7) Willing to be made fun of

I didn't cry when you asked me not to bend over when I'm wearing a kilt.
I hope that's not some sort of oblique reference to The Crying Game. Anyway, men who wear skirts should never cry, no matter what.
How am I doing?
So far, very well. Just keep standing up straight and you should be fine.
8) Willing to make fun of yourself

Every day.
Well, there's no requirement for frequency, so as long as you're willing, it doesn't have to be every day. Don't want to tire yourself out.
9) Have a framed picture of John Moses Browning

I have some signed copies of Cerebus the Aardvark. Does that count?
Did Cerebus invent the M-1911 pistol? NO! So your going to have to go here and cut you out a picture from your computer screen. (And why would you want an aardvark picture when you could have one of Jaka!?)
10) Personal library must contain more books than you will ever read
I've read most of them, but I'm always buying more.

11) Must be able to recite Monty Python and the Holy Grail and give an episode synopsis of all Andy Griffith shows from memory

I love the one where Opie tells John Cleese about the guy that walks around in the larch trees, and Barney keeps saying "Splunge!" over and over again.
Even better than the one in which Helen Crump is given a sound thrashing with a birch rod by Terry Gilliam.
12) Your pickup truck must be in good working order--use of ether to get it started is not recommended, but will be allowed on a case-by-case basis

My wife drives an Explorer. Does that count?
I don't see why not--once you cut the roof off and take out them back seats, it'll haul just like a regular truck.

SO THEN, it looks like Dougal is MORE than well qualified for inclusion into our august group, so by the power vested in me by the 8 out of 9 members of the Alabama Supreme Court, it is with great passion and pride that we hereby grant unto one Dougal Campbell, writer of geek ramblings, full, complete, permanent, indelible, non-smearing membership in the The Cotton State Free Range Blog Society, also styled as the Axis of Weevil, with all of the benefits and promises of greatness falling thereto.

CONGRATULATIONS, Dougal, and as with all of our new members, you will receive your very own World Famous Axis of Weevil Gift Pack, containing a slab of Dreamland ribs, a gallon jug of Milo's sweet tea; a G-Lox Wedgee gun rack from Mark's Outdoor Sports for your sweetie-pie's Explorer, a package of Bubba's Beef Jerky (according to Dr. Weevil, this is homemade and is available only at the gas station at the end of Highway 82 in Bibb County); a three piece, 24 ounce box of Priester's Pecan Logs; a box of Jim Dandy grits; a 16 ounce bottle of Dale's Steak Sauce; AND a six pack of Buffalo Rock Ginger Ale.

As an added bonus, Jimmy (from next door, not Jimmy from Accounting) has once again branched out in his therapeutic line of handmade crafts--as you know, he has gone from Kool Sealing trailer roofs, to painting rocks, to handpainted stationery, but his newest line is the Ten Commandments lovingly engraved in a variety of clean-smelling and vigorous soaps for your bath.

All of these valuable gifts will be heading your way sometime within the next couple of days, although since Monday is a holiday, Lurdean is not wanting to have to go anywhere and make delivers. Anyway, we'll work it out somehow.



Principal breaks 'ugly' school windows

The Associated Press
8/29/2003, 12:40 p.m. CT

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- An elementary school principal frustrated with the aging condition of 49 windows at her school smashed them herself in hopes of getting replacements.

Dianne Gilbert got her wish, but she will end up paying $830.12 of her own money for the repairs at Caldwell Elementary School.

"They needed to be replaced," Gilbert said. "There's not another school in Nashville where the windows are cracked, filled with silicone, taped over and covered with pockmarked green-and-yellow Plexiglas.

"I had had enough with the state of repairs."

Gilbert, who has been principal at Caldwell for eight years, immediately e-mailed the maintenance department to tell them what she had done, voice her frustration and offer to pay for the damage.

The school had been undergoing a summer-long renovation when Gilbert broke out the windows, which weren't expected to be replaced as part of the project.

Nashville Schools Director Pedro Garcia said no legal action was taken against Gilbert and no record of the incident was listed in her personnel file. The only punishment Gilbert received was paying for the damages and a verbal reprimand.

"I think what happened was we were replacing windows because it was part of finishing that building, and those windows were dirty and ugly," Garcia said. "For whatever reason, she did not think they were going to be replaced, so she took it upon herself to break them."

If a student had broken the windows, the child could have faced criminal vandalism charges as well as suspension or expulsion.
Well, a kid probably wouldn't have a teacher's union and tenure, either.

(Probably working with about the same level of intelligence, though.)





What It Was, Was FOOTBALL!!

With the autumn sky ablaze with the brilliant colors of changing leaves and waving pennants; the crisp air filled with the smells of hamburgers and popcorn and the sounds of cheering and brass bands, it can only mean one thing...that's right, Wal-Mart already has their Christmas stuff out for sale!!

AND it means FOOTBALL SEASON! AND not just football season, but time for the ferocious Auburn Tigers to take the field!

The Plainsmen have been talked-up a great deal this year, predicted to win the Western Division of the SEC, along with the SEC title, and then the really stupid guys at The Sporting News ruined our chances for any sort of success by predicting we would wind up the season at Number One. As it stands, the AP has positioned the team in a bit more realistic berth at 6th place, which gives some breathing room.

The Tigers look relatively strong this year, with 18 starters returning, although the loss of sophomore offensive lineman Taylor Bourgeois is bound to be a detriment. Troy Reddick, another sophomore of equal tallness and girth, shares duty at the weak-side guard position with Bourgeois, and might be slotted in his place.

Biggest hoss of the team is sophomore offensive tackle Marcus McNeill of Decatur, GA, tipping the balance at 322 and scraping the ceiling at 6'-9". Tiniest Tiger honors belong to kicker John White, a junior from Midlothian, VA who at 5'-7" and 143 pounds is too small for a picture OR a jersey number.

The Tigers' foes for their first game of the season (Saturday, 5 pm Central, CBS, with lead reporter Jill Arrington) will be the 9th ranked Trojans from the University of Southern California. Despite being named after a brand of male contraceptive devices, and having a man in a dress as a mascot, the Trojans beat the tar out of the Tigers at the opener last year out in the depressing, smog-filled LaLa Land. This year the Ancient Warriors might have their hands full when they reach the sweet-smelling and verdant plains of east Alabama. (No jokes about having their hands full of cow poop, please.)

Although ranked a bit lower, So Cal is still a very strong team with a lot of young talent, but of even more worry to the Tigers is their incredibly strong lineup of Song Leaders. This is what USC calls their cheerleaders, despite the fact that they do not sing nor carry any sort of karaoke machinery.

In any event, this is one area where Auburn has usually held a relatively strong lead over rivals, but it appears that the Trojan's webmaster has been hard at work in the off season and come up with a exciting and handsome layout for the girls. They have their own page with a photo of the entire squad (and PLEASE notice that there are no guys in the picture), as well as individual pages for each of the young ladies. Such as Lindsey, a Business major who is hot and whose favorite movie is Dumb and Dumber, favorite book is Love In a Time of Cholera, and favorite TV shows are Friends and Sex and the City! And then there's Michelle, a junior in communications from Fresno, CA whose hobbies include reading, going to church, and spending time in the sun--one reason why she is hot.

Nice looking bunch of kids, but when you look over at the Auburn crew and do a comparison, you see some potential pitfalls--still a good looking bunch, but there are all sorts of guys in the picture. This is bad. And there are no individual pictures--with the guys, this is no problem, but they need some for the girls. Finally, the actual cheerleader website appears to have been done by someone whose only exposure to the Web is the stack of AOL 8.0 discs he found in a dumpster. If they keep this up all season, I don't know what will become of us.

Anyway, to wrap it all up here at Possumblog Sports Center, I have asked our Chief Statistician Ipsa Dixie to give us her scientific prediction. However, being that she is not speaking to me at the moment (other than the stream of invective and obscene hand gestures wholly unrelated to the game) due to the toaster oven incident, it makes it difficult to discern what she might have come up with. I did go by and rummage through her pencil drawer, where I found a slip of paper upon which it appeared she was predicting a score of Auburn 21--USC 17, although it's a bit hard to read. It might say Auburn 0--USC 23. Nah, that COULDN'T be right.

So there you go.



And once more on the hometown front...

Jim Smith over at Unfreezing was shocked on Tuesday to see that I had let go an opportunity last week to make mention of this article from The Birmingham News about the proposed dredging of portions of the mighty Cahaba River and its tributary, seething, roiling Pinchgut Creek.

Professor Smith opines thusly:
[...] Trussville's mayor wants to dredge these two main waterways. The stated cause is flooding but I think other things are going on. If Alabama could pass a law, like in Mississippi, to allow riverboat gaming, then Trussville would be set. Ah, casinos on the Pinchgut. The Pinchgut Palace Casino. What a thought, all we need now is the ability to get the things in there.
Well, that may be less a function of statute than stature.

Seeing as how even the most geezerly and feeble old man could easily send an arc of pee from bank to bank, fitting a full-sized riverboat between the shores would be something more difficult than even getting a permit from ADEM or the Corps to dredge the creek. The Cahaba is a bit wider. However, the gaming experience might have to be limited to a canoe.
Also, as I was reading the article, I wondered when silt became siltation.
Jim refers to the sentence in the article reading:
Under the agreement, Trussville would provide the track hoe and operator for the dredging, while Jefferson County Roads and Transportation would provide dump trucks and drivers to haul the siltation away.
Well, you see, by removing the process of silt accumulation ("siltation") you eliminate any further silt buildup! It is a very clever way to deal with the problem. Just get that whole siltation deal up in a truck and put it in a landfill, where it will automatically siltate to fill in the hole.

Either that, or the reporter gets paid by the letter.



Birmingham, Birmingham--Greatest City in Alabam'

Candidates target city blight, apathy, negative attitudes

As if we don't have a negative enough image among folks from beyond our borders, we seem determined to enhance it as much as possible.

It's really not a bad place here at the foot of Red Mountain--could be better, but then again, what couldn't (aside from Trussville, obviously). But that kind of talk won't get you elected. Of course, it doesn't help attract new people and businesses to a place you describe as a crime-ridden, broken down, blighted, illiterate, poor, and apathetic, so you're probably not doing the folks who live here any favors.



Good Morning!

My, aren't you all looking chipper today! Hmm? What's that? Why yes, I am about to fall under my desk and go to sleep--thank you for noticing!

Long day yesterday. The cont. ed. seminar was pretty good--it was held down the street at the Southeastern Conference headquarters building, and there was a nice box lunch with a sandwich, pasta salad, a pickle, a cookie and a drink. Yumm. Saw a bunch of folks I haven't seen in a while, including several I graduated with--Prissy Boy, Mullet Dude, Mike the Aging Hippie, and an even larger number of current and former employees of The Bad Place. (Many times more former employees, by the way.)

The fire marshal was from the City of Fairfield, one of the smaller cities next door to Birmingham, and he had some good comments. Building codes are funny things--there is a huge effort that goes into continually upgrading them with the results of new research and testing, but it's rare that cities likewise continue to adopt the latest version. For folks working in a place like Jefferson County, you have to be very conscious that every incorporated entity is more than likely going to have adopted something different. Even though they may say they've adopted one of the standard codes, it could still be the 1994 Edition. Or the 1988. Jefferson County has 33 separate municipalities, plus the county government. Most use some variation on the Standard Building Code, but few use the latest version, and none have adopted the new International Building Code, which is the result of the merger of all the former competing building code publishers across the U.S. Aside from those codes are the entity-specific standards for folks like the Federal government, the military, and the postal service.

The kicker is that even though the city has adopted a particular code edition, it is still up to the city building official and the city fire marshal to interpret and enforce those codes, and they generally have the authority to modify those requirements with further changes as they see fit. Some officials are more interested in protecting the public, others are more interested in showing who's in charge. SO, the best advice he had was to check first before you get going. Hard to believe we don't do that already, but the 'local interpretation' clause has bitten more than one architect. Sadly, there are those of my professional brethren for whom every project is their first. (You know people like this--give them something to do, and no matter how many times they've done it, they still make the same mistakes.) ::sigh::

After the fire marshal was the guy from the International Code Council. He used to work here in our department before moving on to the Southern Building Code Congress International, which is the long fancy name of what was one of the grandaddy code-writing groups around the country, which produced the Standard Building Code. The other groups writing codes were Building Officials and Code Administrators (BOCA) and the International Congress of Building Officials (ICBO). As I mentioned, all three of these groups merged with the intent of regularizing, coordinating, and streamlining building codes to cut down on the amount of conflict and confusion within the building professions and among product suppliers. They no longer publish updates to their old codes, which means that if a city or state wants to update its building code, they will eventually have to adopt the new IBC. It is step in the right direction, but there will still be a problem of one city having maybe the 2001 edition, while the one next door will adopt the 2006. The International folks have tried to lobby for adopting agencies to attach language to their ordinances which automatically adopt the newest versions of the code as it is released, but I'm not sure how much success they've had.

Anyway, the ICC Guy talked about fire alarms and sprinklers as they are handled under the new codes. Although he is a big, boisterous, animated sort of guy--tiny little esoteric changes from one version of code to another can be bit on the tedious side and cause you to nod off.

Much like you're doing now.

Don't feel bad, I'm bored, too.

He brought along a couple of brochures of all their spiffy products--probably the most useful thing in there for foks working around here is a book titled, Jobsite Phrasebook, written by Kent Shephard-- "Improve communication on your jobsite with the handy new Jobsite Phrasebook, English-Spanish. This handbook is filled with Spanish translations and pronunciations for common jobsite phrases in the most heavily populated Hispanic construction fields: concrete, framing, drywall, and roofing." Hard to beat at 23 bucks.

ICC Guy had to keep talking for a while, which he was more than happy to do, due to the rep from the fire extinguisher place not showing up. A break, and then it was time for the Mohawk door guy, who was a very entertaining older Yankee fellow. And sweaty. Reminded me a lot of Matt Foley, Motivational Speaker. As with everyone else who sells stuff, he had the requisite product binders full of info, and his very own white cotton terrycloth sweatbands. Cool. I didn't get one, though, although at the end of his speech on testing methods for fire doors, he did put one on his own head.

He also gave out samples of intumescent fire door seals. These look like rubber gaskets, but they have magical foamy material inside that expands to seal off the door when fire hits it. The kind they use is a fast-react sort that when the temp hits about 300 real, Fahrenheit, degrees, it Jiffi-Pops to about twenty times its compressed size. Can't wait to get a lighter and try it out.

And then, that was it. Only 6 1/2 more hours to go by the end of September, and I'll be nice and legal for another year.

AFTER THAT, I walked back here for a bit to check on stuff, then it was off to the house for a five minute meal with the family, then over to the City Hall in Exile for our local Board of Zoning Adjustment meeting. The city of Trussville had to move everything out of City Hall due to the floods from earlier this year--the fire department moved to the two other stations, the police department moved to the old junior high, City Hall itself moved to the Community Center, then all of the other boards and stuff met where they could--we are meeting in the Heritage Hall, which is a small meeting room that's part of the Chamber of Commerce and which also serves as the green room for the community theater. They say we can move back into City Hall by next month--we'll see.

Anyway, if you ever have grumped and complained about such boards and agencies, you ought to at least go to the meetings to find out how they work, or better yet, find a way to get appointed to one. It's a good way to get to meet your neighbors and get them all mad at YOU for a change (hasn't happened to me yet--last night was mainly just folks wanting exceptions to allow them to run their business out of their home) but more importantly, it's just very American.

You know, I complain about dumb stuff in government all the time, but in the end I at least have some sense that I am the one to blame if it's not going right. Nothing irks me more than some sanctimonious foreign schmutz prattling that while he hates the U.S. government, he really loves the Amrikan pipple. Actually, the one thing that irks me more are Americans saying the same thing.

Up yours, dudes. It's all one and the same.

Hard to believe a fellow could get all hot just because he got to sit at a table in some small town meeting, but there you go.

Got finished up pretty quickly, then ran to the park to meet Reba who had brought Middle Girl for her soccer practice, jabbered with the parents some, then sat in my folding chair and read and swatted West Nile virus vectors. Every time I get a headache or sleep funny so that my neck is stiff, I swear I'm coming down with West Nile. And I've got this scratchy throat...

Home late, check homework, get some of the kids in bed, get Oldest an article off the Internet about the London blackout for one of her classes, read some more, nodded off several times, bothered the wife some, got the rest of the kids in bed, and finally could stay awake no more. And then came here, where staying awake is still VERY HARD.


Thursday, August 28, 2003

What a day

Lot o’stuff in the news yesterday, and here I was stuck with no Internet having to do actual work. Oh well.

In case you’re wondering how I got up my single post from yesterday, I copied it onto a disc and took it over to the Regional Library Computer Center, which is a room full of pretty machines over on the third floor of the Linn-Henley Research Library over across the park. The Linn-Henley used to be Birmingham’s central library building, until a new facility was built across the street in 1984. This is what it looked like when it was built in 1927, and this is what it looks like today with the new building in the background. Pretty cool place, and the short walk over was a nice way to catch up with our wonderful group of urban campers making themselves at home on the park benches. Looked like we had a good crowd yesterday of approximately 30 men, highlighted by one who felt moved by the urge to remove his shirt to show us all his prodigious belly and saggy chest. Thanks, guy!

At least I was able to get part of my stuff done. UNFORTUNATELY—I will not get to play anymore today, either. I have a continuing education seminar to attend starting at 11:30 that runs all day, so I have to put my shoulder to the wheel, my nose to the grindstone, my hand to the plow and lift that barge and tote that bale and sit here and type. Whee.

At least the topics for the seminar sound interesting— during lunch, the city fire marshal will be discussing buildings and fire safety, then from 1:00-2:00 a fellow from the Birmingham office of the International Code Council will be chatting us up about sprinklers and fire alarms, then from 2:00-3:00 will be a presentation from the fine folks at Amerex (world headquarters in the lovely hamlet of Trussville) to talk about fire extinguishers, and then the final hour from 3:00-4:00 will be wrapped up by a rep from Mohawk talking about the exciting topic of fire door testing.

I have to do 12 hours a year of stuff like this to maintain my registration—8 hours of which has to be directly related to health, safety and welfare topics, and 8 hours of which must be done in a structured setting with an instructor. As always, I tend to wait until time to renew to start scrambling around for hours—so far this year I have only done 1.5, which was the fun time I had back in December of last year with the moron talking about laminated lumber. (I am also a licensed procrastinator.)

So, no play time for me today.

Tomorrow, on the other hand, will be jam packed with capriciousness, and FOOTBALL!! And not that silly European crapola, but REAL football! The Possumblog Sports Center is cranking back up, and Possumblog’s Sports Statistician Ipsa Dixie is once again back at her desk in all of her redheaded, vivacious (or vicious, depending on whether one of the male staff made her uncomfortable in the workplace) glory with tale of the tape on the Auburn Tigers and their August 30 foes, the University of Southern California, with their Man in a Skirt on a Pretty Horsie Mascot.

Until then, then.

OH WAIT!! Speaking of manliness and evening gowns, Dougal Campbell left us a note down in the comments below and I didn't want any of you to miss it.
[...] The Alabama Highland Games are coming up next month.

http://www.alabamahighlandgames.com/

This year's honored clan is Clan Campbell, so expect to see me marching on the field
Thanks, Dougal! Our, well, MY only request is that you not bend over.

For those of you out of the Scots loop, the Highland Games consist of several competitions, including piping, dancing, riot, mayhem, and the traditional athletic competitions of:

The Clachneart or "Stone of Strength" (similar to shot put, but done with a stone and a pint)

The 28 and 56 Pound Throw (thrown using steelyard weights on a chain and a pint)

The Scottish Hammer (a twenty two pound hammer thrown for distance--some contestants wear spiked shoes in addition to carrying a pint)

The Sheaf Toss (hurling of a twenty pound bag of straw over a crossbar using a pitchfork and a pint)

The 56 Pound Weight Toss (not the same as the 56 Pound Throw, in that this one is attached to a handle then flung over a cross bar--pint is still included, however)

And finally, The Caber Toss (130 pound tree trunk tossed so that it turns end over end--requires such incredible strength and concentration that a bystander is usually asked to hold the pint until the toss is completed).

Glad to be of assistance in giving you all some culture--you may now return to your regular blogreading schedule.


Wednesday, August 27, 2003

Experts: Put kids in back seat of car

Well, okay, if you say so...but I gotta wonder how they’re going to reach the steering wheel and pedals when Daddy’s all passed out down in the floorboard.

GOOD MORNING!! GOOD DAY!! GOOD AFTERNOON!! WHATEVER!! What a fun and educational meeting (but I’m being redundant, now aren’t I!?) I had this morning. Actually, these little exercises aren't that bad, but it's just so ‘me’ to complain about meaningless stuff.

Such as, say, our Internet connection being down half an hour, an hour, two hours, all morning, ALL FLIPPING DAY leading to this little blurb not getting posted until now, this afternoon WHENEVER. The guy from downstairs tells me that they pulled the plug to keep the Mr. Fixit worm from getting in. (The one somebody unleashed after the last malicious worm, to go around and try to fix the holes but which wound up being worse than the original. Road to hell and all…) If any of you have been desperate to contact me, and are puzzled as to why I have not been my usual prompt self in answering or thought maybe Chet the E-Mail Boy had kicked the bucket, well, this is why.

And then there was the mysterious “Wizards of Redmond Anger-Inducing Error”, which shut down my computer entirely—working along happily, click, fade to black, then a nice helpful blue screen with red and white ASCII text from back in the Olden Days, informing me of some sort of foul distemper and imbalance of humours which had gripped my machine, and recommending that I chant the otherworldly “Ctrlaltdel” incantation. Or just try to keep working. Whatever pleased me more.

I hit the Any Key, and was dumped back out into the Forest of Word, which had been clearcut and otherwise rendered unusable. I carefully read the entire Windows Operating Manual, then hit the power switch. The computer guys tell me not to do this, as it really screws everything up on their network. Whatever. “Turn it off, turn it back on again” works 99% of the time. Which is actually an order of magnitude more reliable than the operating system. According To The Guy Downstairs, I am in for a vigorous upgrading tomorrow in which I will receive the wondrous Windows 2000. I can barely wait.

Even though at the moment I have an operational computer, it’s been very hard to do without the Internet. I really like having some connection to the outside world, virtual though it may be. Otherwise, I have to interact with the real live people here, and a high percentage of them are Insane-Americans. Which makes that interaction somewhat less than rewarding.

Anyway, I really need not to worry so much about that and exercise my carpal tunnels by typing up the thrilling and thought-provoking minutes. I’ll check in with you in a bit after while later much later tomorrow?

If I’m not passed out.


Tuesday, August 26, 2003

Tomorrow

...is either the second or the fourth Wednesday of the month. Meaning that I will be in before 7 for my twice-monthly duty manning the regulatory thumbscrews to insure the built environment remains pretty and pleasant.

So, expect the normal low quality bloggage, BUT with the added benefit of low quantity!

BUT WAIT!! A newfound toy which will be valuable for spending HOURS of time--Library of Congress to show new cartoons
By CARL HARTMAN
The Associated Press
8/26/2003, 4:20 p.m. CT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Library of Congress offered a glimpse Tuesday of its new acquisition of 36,000 cartoons — three centuries' worth of drawings that ranged in theme from comic to political, and social to cinematic.

The drawings, which were acquired from collector and former cartoonist Art Wood, will more than double the library's holdings of cartoons. Library officials gave reporters on Tuesday a sneak peek of some of the new drawings, and the collection will be open to the public in 2005.

Wood drew cartoons for the Richmond News Leader and the Pittsburgh Press. He grew up in the Washington area and kept his collection in the cellar of his home in suburban Washington.

Among his treasures is a color transparency from Walt Disney's first full-length animated feature from 1937, "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," and a rare 1921 drawing by Elzie Segar of "Olive Oyl" — a decade before he created her friend "Popeye."

There's a 150-year-old satirical drawing by British artist George Cruikshank on the evils of drink, one by Richard Outcault of "The Yellow Kid," grandfather of all comic strips, and a fantastic voting machine rendered by Rube Goldberg.

A drawing by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was not shown.

"Obscene," explained curator Sara Duke, briefly. [...]
Indeed. Although there is "Uncle Sam's Girl-Shower", which seems awfully racy.

Anyway, the rest of the collection sampler can be accessed here.



Well, when the news is slow…

What better way to pass the time than a selection from the 1901 Edition of Everybody’s Writing-Desk Book! As I have mentioned previously, these little extractions have gotten less frequent due to the fact that the book, although full of good advice, is still a finite resource. I am going to have to bring in something else to quote from, I believe, but until then, let’s see what Messrs. Nisbet and Lemon have to say about:
The Parts of a Sentence Should Harmonize.—That the different parts of any writing may be all congruous with one another, and even the boldest ‘figure’ extravagant, the whole must throughout be strictly subservient to the purpose in view, and the energy in any one part be duly correlated with the energy in all other parts. The writing on any one subject should be, in manner as well as in matter, all one creation, each part sustaining and complementing the others, and no part so silent or ‘ornamental’ as to obscure any other or divert to itself any of the attention due to the whole. Or, as the professor advised his students, whenever on reperusal you come on any particularly eloquent passage, out with it. If Memnon and the rising sun figure in the report of modern Egypt under British administration, the rest must be of the same texture. Else all the world that reads the report will point its finger at the patch.

Alteration of Plan.—If in the course of writing the writer’s appreciation of his subject undergo essential alteration, then will the new and the old matter be no longer reconcilable. In such case, if the whole writing is to be coherent, all the old matter must be rewritten in accordance with the new views.

When a literary work is protracted throughout a long period, so that in the latter part thereof the author is a man considerably older than he was at its start, the likelihood is that the change wrought by years in the man will be reflected in his work, and so far mar its unity. An instance of such phenomenon is Goethe’s Faust, which reflects the whole of Goethe’s literary life. The youthful and the aged Goethe there stand side by side in marked contrast—the active, passionate man in the first part; the contemplative, artistic man in the second. Goethe in advanced years contemplated the First Part comparatively aloof, the Second Part with immediate appreciation. The young world, on the other hand, inclines all to the errant Faust of the First Part, and regards the chastened Faust of the Second—at a respectful distance.



News from good old Alabama Polytechnic Institute: The Cullars Rotation

A neat story--well, it is to me, at least--about a soil experiment that has been going on at Auburn University for 92 years. The field where the experiment has been conducted has just been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. (The world's oldest crop rotation experiment is the nearby "Old Rotation", which started in 1896. It's on the Register, too.)



Miss Janis is home now and blogging again--keywords include pernicious, Spanish, split bottoms, Bishop, slap me, and broken glass!

Do go tell her hello.



How very odd--Chinese union body pressuring Wal-Mart to establish trade unions

BEIJING (AP) -- China's government-controlled union body is pressuring Wal-Mart to establish trade unions for thousands of its employees, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The All-China Federation of Trade Unions says Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's biggest retailer, has not set up trade unions in any of its branches in China, leaving workers without protection of their legal rights, Xinhua said.

"The best way to protect workers' rights is to sign group contracts with employers through trade unions, which can protect workers' rights involving wage negotiation, vacations, and discharge regulations," Feng Lijun, a Beijing ACFTU official was quoted as saying Sunday by Xinhua.

Arkansas-based Wal-Mart opened its first outlet in Beijing in July, adding to its list of 22 other stores in the country.

Feng said the organization has contacted Wal-Mart several times since its Beijing stores opened but "no progress has been made in establishing trade unions." [...]
Somehow, the idea of a Beijing Wal-Mart is just beyond my comprehension, not to mention that it's just one of 22 other ones in the country. But it's so nice that the Chinese are concerned about the folks who work there:
The All-China Federation of Trade Unions is the only group China's communist government allows to organize workers. Unions do exist, but they are controlled by the government, and those who start independent organizations are routinely arrested and sometimes given harsh sentences as a warning to others.
Nice people, eh?



Believe it or not, bagpipes are loud--Bagpipes hit sour note for hearing
FOR many a Scots regiment, the Highland bagpipe was as potent in the advance toward battle as artillery and rifles.

But a survey conducted by Piper & Drummer magazine has revealed the resonating force of the pipes can damage more than the morale of enemy troops.

Half of those surveyed reported hearing loss and repetitive strain injuries after years of playing.
Well, as they say, "Than' Gad there's nae smell."
Some 10 per cent also reported that their passion for the pipes had led to the break-up of marriages, while 84 per cent claimed to know pipe-band members who are alcoholics. [...]
You know, it seems odd that a loud, deaf, cripple-handed, drunken man in a dress would ever have troubles at home...
James Bousquet, an acoustics expert and bagpiper, said many band members ignored his advice to wear customised ear plugs at a cost of £60 per pair.

Mr Bousquet said: "Sounds don't have to be uncomfortably loud to be damaging. If pipers think hearing protection is too expensive, they should consider what they pay for a new pair of ghillie brogues and ask themselves what is worth more." [...]
60 quid'll buy a lot of Guinness.

Almost enough to last a whole day.

(And as an added bonus--The Bagpipe Joke List!)



For all you trivia buffs--
On August 26, 1791, John Fitch was granted a United States patent for the steamboat. Four years earlier, on August 22, 1787, Fitch demonstrated the first successful steamboat, launching a forty-five-foot craft on the Delaware River in the presence of delegates from the Constitutional Convention. He went on to build a larger steamboat which carried passengers and freight between Philadelphia and Burlington, New Jersey.

Fitch was granted his patent after a battle with James Rumsey over claims to the invention. [...]
Steam power is just as important today and, in fact, powers this blog.



From the "Headlines Which Defy All Attempts at Parody" File: Mike Tyson Offers Empathy for NBA Star Kobe Bryant

What's next, O.J. offering tips on shopping for gloves?


Monday, August 25, 2003

Come with us now for a Thrilling Tour of Paradise Along the Pinchgut!

Good weekend—lots of dirt and sweat and hollering and tools and stuff. Bear with me.

But even before we get into all of that, I was reminded yesterday at lunch by Middle Girl of something funny she said last week. Seeing as how this blog is fast becoming my substitute for memory, I figure I best write it down. (Part of the problem is being so harried in the mornings—anything that happens prior to letting the kids out at school every day seems to get washed away quickly by the sudden drop in adrenaline level.)

Anyway, we had to go get Reba’s mom and dad’s mail last week while they were on vacation and as we drove into their neighborhood, we saw that one of the homeowners had been visited by one of the first signs of autumn, a yard full of toilet paper.

(For those gentle readers who visit Possumblog from other parts of the globe, the festooning of trees and homes with rolls of toilet paper has a long and fascinating history in this country, and at least when I was a lad, signified that someone, somewhere, really hated your guts. So much so that they would strew paper all over you mom and dad’s trees, which is just asking for it, you know. It seems to pick up when school starts as old rivalries kick in again. Times seem to have changed, though—I was told recently by a young lady that having your yard rolled was a sign that you were really cool. Go figure.)

In any event—huge, towering, mature trees, full of paper. Poor homeowner guy out there with his wife and kid trying to get some of it down.

By lighting it.

That’s right. Setting it on FIRE. Little tendrils of flame wound up into the tree branches and I could barely keep from running off the road in dismay. “Look kids! That guy’s trying to set the whole NEIGHBORHOOD ON FIRE!” The kinder were quite taken by the display, and Rebecca noted quite correctly that this seemed to be a rather dangerous endeavor to undertake.

“They need a monkey!”

I don’t know if it was the bright, self-assured, way she said it, or the idea of a panicky spider monkey spreading flaming toilet paper throughout an entire heavily-wooded subdivision, but I got to laughing and couldn’t quit. I chuckled all the way from there to school, and making Daddy laugh really seemed to make her day. I’m a tough audience, you know—stern, foreboding. But, it’s like I always tell the kids, “Dying is easy—COMEDY is hard.” They need good, solid, preparation.

She seems to have learned well, though, that uncontrolled conflagration and lower primates just go great together . (She even managed to work in the hard-K sound that is the staple of all great komedy.)

Nicely played.

And then I completely forgot about it until yesterday when we were eating lunch after church and she mentioned it again. “Remember what I said? Tell Mama what I said.” Blank look from me. “You know, Dad…when we were on the way to school last week.” Still blank look from me. “And we had to go get Grandmama and Grandaddy’s mail.” Still a blank look. “And the man was lighting the toilet paper? And we said he shouldn’t be doing that?” OH, yeah, I remember that…but I don’t remember what you said. “DAAaaaaad—I said he needed a monkey!?”

Oh yeah! And I started giggling all over again. A monkey! Heh. I need a monkey too, you know. One to write stuff down for me on little scraps of toilet paper so I won’t forget.

ANYWAY, Friday night was soccer night, and Rebecca was supposed to be there at six, which is exactly the time that Reba got to the house, so I ran screaming out the door with Middle Girl’s bag and Jonathan’s bag and told them to jump into my van and we spent a nice ten minutes together in the Runaway Mine Car ride to the park. As they changed clothes. We were late, obviously, but the game had not started so she didn’t miss anything. And the ride itself was thrilling and terrifying.

Turned out to be tougher than I thought it was going to be when I wrote about it last week—this was the first time the girls had played on the regulation-size field, and the first time with eleven players—practice has always been on a sliver of a shared field and broken up into small groups. And the boys they were playing had five subs, while the girls only have one extra player. SO, I don’t suppose that it was too surprising the lads got in two quick goals right off. And then another. But, the girls kept in it, scored a goal themselves, and then dominated the second half. No scores for either during the second, but the girls managed to look very poised toward the end, while the boys were getting ragged and going for the histrionics of dramatic slides and leaps and general falling and flopping about on the ground. There are about four of the girls who have incredible footwork skills and it was fun to watch them zipping around—especially Bathmat Dad’s daughter, who even at eleven years old, has The Look when she plays. Balanced and smooth and confident—a natural athlete. She’s going to be something in a couple of years.

(Bathmat Dad gets his name from the fact that he ALWAYS wears shorts and a tee-shirt with the armholes cut out to his waist, so that we all get a nice view of his sweaty, deeply-burnt skin; which is actually only barely visible, obscured as it is by his plush covering of Brillo Pad body hair. He too, has The Look, but an entirely different one. And even though I refer to him as Bathmat Dad, I would not for a moment even THINK of touching any part of him with my feet. Eww.)

While they finished up, Jonathan’s practice started and thankfully was on an adjacent field, so I just turned my lazy self around and watched him after Rebecca’s game was over. It appears he is going to have another long season—since he’s not that great of a player, he naturally gets stuck on a team with others of equal skill. But, their skill level has much less to do with physical ability than mental. I don’t think I have ever seen a group more needing of either a) massive doses of Thorazine, b) a daily appointment time at the woodshed, or c) both. The coach seems to be a good guy, but the kids have the attention span that can be measured in microseconds. Poor Jonathan tries to listen and do what the coach says and everyone else is acting like they should be confined to straitjackets. The parents seem glad to allow someone else to try and control them for a while. ::sigh::

They got finished up after 8:30 and we stopped off at Sonic for them to get something to eat. Neither one had been able to eat supper before we went careering off to the park, and they were both hot, and doggone it, every once in a while it’s nice to have your dad give you a forbidden late-night ice cream sundae. (Especially when he wants to try some of it.)

Off home, then off with their stinky clothes and into the tub, and then to bed for everyone, and then it was time to get up. BLESSEDLY, Mom and Dad got to sleep in a bit Saturday morning—no phone calls, no weird dreams of phone calls, no mayhem in the corridors. ‘Bout time, I say!

Up then, and I got on my yard-tending clothes and ate a couple of Miss Reba’s muffins and watched a little “Crocodile Hunter” and a little news and got started. First up, more hummingbird juice, then filled the bird feeders, then got out the ol’ Oracle of Murray for some spirited laps around the yard and noisy meditation. Nothing quite like the combination of high heat, humidity, physical exertion, and carbon monoxide to really clear the mind. Or confuse you more.

As always, I spent a good deal of time arguing with myself (occasionally even doing this silently in my mind, so as not to arouse too much suspicion) about the world. My conclusion is that there sure is a lot of stupidity out there. Best to avoid it.

Yep, that’s it.

Stay away from stupid people, don’t congregate with them on street corners, avoid eye contact with them and if that’s not possible, nod politely and run away as soon as you can. And don’t try to argue with them—if you do, that makes you just as stupid. Which is probably the best advice—don’t be stupid yourself. If people are always saying you’re stupid, it’s probably a pretty good indication that you are, and that you need to change and not be so stupid. If you are around a lot of people who act stupid, and you decide to hang around for a while, you’re stupid, so you need to quit that. If you think someone has mistaken you for a stupid person, and the best you can say is, “am not, am not!”, well, you’re probably stupid.

So, there you go. Worth exactly what it cost you to get in the door.

In my many circumlocomotions, I also found a great treasure in our flower bed—a worn-out lawnmower blade, a brand new blade puller, and brand new Craftsman 12 inch adjustable wrench. Right out there in the open, left by the lawnmower repair fairies (who have names like Bud and Ed). Well, well, a nice new wrench for ME! You leave it in my yard and it’s MINE, bucko. Especially when you leave it with all your discarded cardboard and plastic bagging! Kept on cutting until my next-door neighbor’s middle-aged son came home and asked him if he had lost a wrench. Finally figured out it was his brother who had left all the junk out there. So I gave him his wrench and blade puller back. You didn’t really think I was going to keep it, did you?

Finished up, then went to Marvin’s down at the foot of the hill for some weed killing chemicals. I have given up on finding the stuff that kills nutgrass, but I figured I had better find something because everything else is about to take over what’s not already taken over by nutgrass. Got back quickly—they had a new cashier whose idea of conversation was rudimentary at best, and she was not able to fall back on being young and blonde. Hooked up the sprayer and carefully poured in the prescribed amount of liquid destruction and after taking a big swig for myself, set about to spray everything down. Finished that and then it was time to get ready to go to the store.

Reba had mentioned several times during the day that there was a wonderful sale going on at the High-Priced Purveyor of Moderate-Quality Goods, but by the time I finished all my stuff, she was worn to a frazzle by the combined effects of laundry and naughty little children. So, Wal-Mart. Of course!

But first, kids in the tub, heads scrubbed, hair dried, then Mom and Dad similarly cleansed, and it was off to shop. BUT FIRST, we got some grub at Bennigan’s. Despite my ongoing hate affair with this place, I decided to stop in anyway because it was close and I was hungry. This time, the service was good, the waitress was professional, and the food was good and hot. First time we’ve ever hit the Trifecta like that. (For Jim Smith’s benefit, I had the smothered chicken—served with onions, mushrooms, Swiss cheese, bacon, and a tiny little pillow over the bird’s head. I have never like the idea of eating anything smothered—it just sounds like a bad way to go.)

Got out of there and rolled over to Pappy Walton’s and spent the next three hours wandering around. Reba and Ashley and Rebecca stayed over in the clothes, while Jonathan and Catherine and I looked at fish, shampoo, bug killer, Japanese beetle traps, the bathroom, DVDs (I got The Great Escape with Steve McQueen. Incredible movie, although I’ve only seen it little. That Steve McQueen guy was cool—none like him today), video games, toilet paper (we need a monkey…::chuckling lightly::), various snack foods, bathroom, car stuff, books, bathroom, then back to the books again before we were finally summoned to go check out. Wow. That’s some expensive stuff, whatever it was. (But at least we were helping out the economy, according to this story.)

Home, bed, up, breakfast, church, lunch, monkey talk, home, read paper, doze fitfully while slobbering on the couch, back to church, lead singing (without coughing a single time), home, supper, bed, here, meet, scramble around trying to tie up loose ends, type, post, and then go meet some more.

Whee.



Hey--I made it!!

And now I have to go waste it on a staff meeting. ::sigh:: Oh well, could be worse, I suppose.


Friday, August 22, 2003

Getting to be that time...

Soccer last night--Boy had his first practice and nearly ran himself in the ground. He has about four kids on his team that were on it in the spring--unfortunately, the ones who seem to take great pleasure in being constant nuisances. Middle Girl had her practice and was run around mercilessly, too, but tickled to pick up the handy skill of sliding on the ground to steal the ball away from someone. (Stealing the ball is called 'tackling' in soccer, but I steadfastly refuse to use that term because if you actually do a nice open field tackle on someone and put them on their backs in the grass, you get a penalty. What sort of game is that!? Well, it AIN'T football, that's for sure.)

Reba had to go up to the school for a meet-the-teacher night for Jonathan's class. He got the same teacher Rebecca had last year, and she had nothing but high praise for both of them. She shouldn't have too much trouble out of Jonathan--I think he's rather sweet on her.

Got home at nearly nine, then had to turn around and go get gas in Reba's van, then come back and try to get everyone in bed. Took forever, due to homework left undone. Grr. Tonight, right back at it--Jonathan has practice again, and Rebecca's team is scrimmaging the 11 year old BOYS!! I imagine her team will do very well--the boys tend to not think the girls are any good, and hold back a bit to keep from hurting any of them, which, given the group of girls on her team means that the boys should get their clocks cleaned. These girls, even at 11 years old, are big and fast and good. Should be fun to watch.

Then, tomorrow, I HAVE to get out and cut the weeds down. They are taking over, and I haven't done my farm duties for far too long. And then, yet another trip to the park in the afternoon for YET ANOTHER scrimmage for Rebecca's team.

I suppose I have no reason to be tired since I'm not the one out there running around, but still, I sense an impending period of great fatigue.

And then there's our normal allotment of churching-up on Sunday, and I imagine there will be several small children in our house who will be plotting my overthrow as benevolent dictator during the weekend, and I forsee much effort expended trying to stay on top of the ever-lengthening honey-do list, and probably some food in there, and probably no nice, long, naps.

BUT IN ANY CASE, I think I will head toward the ranch and see what happens, and if I make it back in one piece on Monday, I might even write something about it. (Not that I ever do anything like that, but you never know...)

SO, you all go and have yourselves a nice weekend and let's see how it goes!





Fires, vanadalism hit cars at dealership
WEST COVINA, Calif. (AP) -- Fires at an auto dealership destroyed several SUVs and a warehouse Friday. Other vehicles were vandalized with scrawled messages that included "Fat, Lazy, Americans."

"With all the evidence ... its highly likely it's an arson fire," said Rick Genovese, fire marshal for West Covina, a Los Angeles suburb.

The blaze broke out about 5 a.m. at a Hummer and Chevrolet auto dealership. Flames engulfed several vehicles, including Hummer H2s, which are luxury SUVs patterned after the military's workhorse Humvee.

A separate blaze about 100 yards away caved in a warehouse roof and sent up plumes of smoke. There were no reports of injuries.

The word "ELF" was written on at least one vehicle, a possible reference to the ecoterrorist group Earth Liberation Front. [...]
Fat? Lazy? Maybe so, Sweetpea, but I can always go on a diet. On the other hand, you'll always be an idiot.

It might be putting too fine a point on it, but these precocious little imps never seem to understand that the burning of a single vehicle or building releases more toxins and pollutants into the environment than a lifetime of driving done by a whole fleet of vehicles.

Morons.



West Nile: Caution, not panic, urged

Well, I'll be! I bet everyone was sitting around, just WAITING for the Panic Alert to be issued.



Mother given 25 years for placing infant in hot oven
WETUMPKA, Ala. (AP) -- A 27-year-old woman pleaded guilty to attempted murder and received a 25-year prison term for placing her infant daughter in a hot oven.

Melissa Wright of Coosada pleaded guilty Thursday before Elmore County Circuit Judge Sibley Reynolds. The court hearing had been set to consider a defense bid to relocate the trial, but became a plea proceeding.

Wright placed her 18-month-old daughter in the oven in June 2002, with the setting on broil. The child received third-degree burns over 70 percent of her body. Her screams brought help from her father, who was outside the house.

"The child has made a remarkable recovery, considering the injury she sustained," said District Attorney Randall Houston.

The child remains in the care of relatives and still faces years of reconstructive surgery. [...]
Would that her sentence was 25 years, served in an oven set on broil.

But that's just my cruel and unusual side talking.



For a little light reading...

Those of you who may wish to find out all the reasonings behind the current Broadway show going on at our Supreme Court building in Montgomery, here is the original case opinion (pdf format) detailing the case for and against the placement of the monument, and the judge's ruling on the matter, then there's the appellate ruling from the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals (pdf format) which was issued back on July 1, and the final order from the original judge (Word format--silly thing kept crashing when downloaded as a pdf file) issued back on August 5.

They give a good run down of the story of the whole production, unburdened by all the yammering.



Newhart Sets Sights on 'ER' for Guest Arc
By Nellie Andreeva

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Comedy great Bob Newhart is embarking on a rare venture into drama with a recurring role on NBC's "ER."

He will play Ben Hollander, an architect suffering with macular degeneration. As his progressive loss of sight increasingly affects his ability to work, Hollander also begins to lose interest in the world. He befriends Dr. Susan Lewis (Sherry Stringfield), who develops an odd attachment to him.

The first episode of Newhart's three-episode arc is slated to air Oct. 30. [...]
::sigh:: Yet another plum role, PLAYING AN ARCHITECT, goes to some other guy. And I WEAR GLASSES, too! AND, I can do that telephone-call schtick just as well as Newhart---"Uh-huh. Uh-huh. You say you're INSIDE the wall? Uh-huh. And the contractor has left for the day... Mmmhm. Are you near the bathroom? Oh. Well that might be a problem then."

I would rather play opposite of Maura Tierney, though. Or Ming-Na Wen.

Rrrowll.



The Kiss of Death--Al Sharpton to endorse governor's tax proposal
THOMAS SPENCER
News staff writer

Democratic presidential candidate the Rev. Al Sharpton will endorse Gov. Bob Riley's $1.2 billion tax package at an appearance today in Birmingham.

Sharpton's campaign said that he would be meeting with Birmingham ministers and at a noon press conference at Bethel Baptist Church would make "a rare and unusual endorsement of a Republican governor's tax bill for education in Alabama." [...]
Say goodnight, Gracie.

If there was anything Bob Riley DIDN'T need, it was this lunatic coming to town.

(It's not like we don't already have them pouring in over the gunwales already...)



Peg Watches Man Eat Burger...

And it makes the AP wire!!--Man Eats Burger in Every Kansas County

(Of course, Mrs. Britton's version of events is much more interesting.)



In news about one of our other limelight-seeking, self-aggrandizing, mental homunculi--Scrushy continues to live the high life
MICHAEL TOMBERLIN
News staff writer

The HealthSouth Corp. accounting scandal hasn't slowed down Richard Scrushy.

In the past few weeks, his private company bought a $3 million marina in Orange Beach. Scrushy also entered his speedboat - named Monopoly - in a Gulf Coast race and vacationed with his family in the Bahamas.

The expenditures come days after another of Scrushy's companies bought a jet.

Former U.S. Attorney Doug Jones, who represents investors with shares that sank with the disclosure of HealthSouth's accounting fraud, said his clients are not happy to see Scrushy living an opulent lifestyle.

"It's thumbing your nose at the shareholders and at the face of all who were harmed in this case," Jones said.
OH BOO HOO! They should have cashed out early, just like Dickie-baby, and they could be living the high life, too.
Donald Watkins, a Birmingham lawyer representing Scrushy, said Thursday his client has not done anything wrong and shouldn't have to change his lifestyle.

He said the Orange Beach marina, for instance, is a good investment. Days ago, Marin Inc., a private company operated by Scrushy, paid $3 million for the 3.5-acre Walkers Marina on nearby Terry Cove. The property had been on the market more than a year and is zoned for a condominium development.

"It's my understanding that the property is very valuable," Watkins said. "He is investing his money in things that appreciate in value. Under no definition is that a waste of assets."
Of course not. But everyone, please, just remember that past performance is no guarantee of future results. I mean, you know, it might lose a lot of money and have to be written off on taxes or something. Man, that would be terrible.
Watkins said the boat race will do Scrushy good. Scrushy has entered his 40-foot Skater racing boat Monopoly in Sunday's "Thunder on the Gulf Coast" Super Boat Grand Prix event, and Marin Inc. is a sponsor of the race weekend.
Oh, good. You know, I bet there are scads of former HealthSouth employees and broke stockholders who have just been beside themselves with worry wondering if po' Rich was doing okay and feeling good about himself. A nice boat race should cheer him us just fine--like a nice golf game does for O.J.
Among the boats scheduled to race in the event is one owned by Nick Carter of the Backstreet Boys singing group. Watkins said Scrushy will pilot Monopoly.
Oooh, Backstreet Boy meets Backroom Blowhard! I hope there's video.
"I thought that was a healthy exercise for him to undertake," Watkins said. "I just told him if he decided to enter the race, he must win."
At all costs?

(Sorry, how impertinent of me.)
Watkins said he is confident Scrushy will never have to surrender any of the wealth he accumulated while serving as chief executive of HealthSouth. Surveys in Fortune magazine have shown Scrushy was one of the nation's highest-paid CEOs.
Of course he's confident. That's what he gets paid to be.
Watkins said he recently joined Scrushy and his family on a trip to the Bahamas. Though Watkins was pursuing a business venture there, he said the Scrushys were there for pleasure. [...]
And who doesn't need a little pleasure in life, eh? Oh, by the way, the business deal was reported here, and involves expanding Watkins' banking business to the Bahamas. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

He also assures all of us that his client has no involvement in the venture.

Oh.

Okay then.
Scrushy's spending comes after the SEC failed to persuade U.S. District Judge Inge Johnson in Birmingham to freeze Scrushy's assets, estimated at $150 million.

A former SEC lawyer not involved in the case said Scrushy's actions validate the SEC's concerns.

"This is the government's worst nightmare in the sense it looks like he intends to dissipate the fortune he has accumulated over the years by pursuing an extravagant lifestyle," said Chris Bebel, now a partner with Houston's Shepherd Smith & Bebel law firm. "Even if his fortune is of an enormous nature, it won't stand up to this type of spending pressure much longer, especially when his legal fees are factored into the equation."
But isn't enough that he's happy?
At the hearing, SEC attorney Bill Hicks argued Scrushy shouldn't be allowed to "continue living the lifestyle of the rich and famous when every dollar he spends is one less dollar that will be around to compensate the victims at the end."
Oh come now, let's remember HE'S a victim, too. No, really.
In that hearing, Scrushy's attorneys argued he needed $223,237 per month to cover basic living expenses such as $3,180 for lawn maintenance at his mansions and $13,000 to pay the crew on his yacht. [...]
So terribly, TERRIBLY, misunderstood...
Bebel said Scrushy's public extravagance is likely not to win him new fans.

"It helps establish the degree of arrogance which seems to permeate every aspect of his being," he said. "News of this type of conduct will cause his foes to boil over with anger while at the same time engender confidence among his supporters."
Confidence inspired by the continued flow of cash--I would think that the percentage of supporters on his personal payroll is probably much higher than among the general public.

Anyway, live it up, Dick.



California Gov. Suffers Double Blow of Bad News
By Adam Tanner

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - California Gov. Gray Davis suffered more bad news on Thursday when the state's Democratic Congressional delegation said they were supporting Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante should a recall vote remove incumbent Davis from office.

Davis had originally hoped to defeat the Oct. 7 recall vote keeping other Democrats from the ballot, but Bustamante, who is barely on speaking terms with the governor, split the party by putting his name on the ballot.

With fewer than 50 days until Davis' political judgment day, House minority leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi said Democrats have changed their strategy and would back Bustamante should voters remove Davis, who is unpopular over his handling of state finances.

In more bad news for Davis, a poll released on Thursday suggested that he could well be out of a job soon. A Public Policy Institute of California telephone survey of 993 likely voters from Aug. 8 to Aug. 17 found 58 percent wanted to recall the Democrat. [...]
Wow--not only have evil Republicans tried to steal the governship, they have somehow managed to replace California's Congressional Democrats with ZOMBIES!! AND at least 576 of 993 likely California voters!!

Boy, if poor Gray had only installed a 5,300 pound block of Old Testamentation, all of this could have been avoided!!


Thursday, August 21, 2003

Iraq's 'Chemical Ali' to be questioned

REALLY!?!

Man, who saw that coming?!



Ahhh--memories of life upon the Plains: Residents accuse trailer parks of discrimination
The Associated Press
8/21/2003, 3:08 p.m. CT

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) -- Residents of two troubled mobile home parks near Auburn University claim the operators are trying to run them off to clear the way for college students.

At least 60 residents of Webster's Crossing and Auburn Estates contend managers have been making living conditions unbearable so they will move out and college students can move in.

Both parks are owned by the same California-based company and operated by the same two managers. Company officials denied the claims.

Tuesday night, the Auburn City Council heard allegations of excessive fines, unreasonable rate increases, unfair evictions and racial slurs directed toward residents.

"It is stressful living over there," said Wanda Marshall, a resident of Auburn Estates. "They're making conditions rough for us to make us move out."

Cathy Yazdanbakhsh, office manager of the California-based SDD Enterprises, which owns both parks, said new managers are enforcing rules fully, something their predecessors didn't do.

Evictions, Yazdanbakhsh said, resulted from numerous domestic violence calls placed to police, threats to management, vandalism and rule-breaking. [...]
The more things change, eh?

Oh, the nostalgia this brought back. Webster's was up the road a bit from Campus Trailer Court where I lived (long-time readers will remember my recollections of my tidy 7'x22' Terry Taurus Travel Trailer dwelling/changing room--scroll down to the entry for the 6th because Blogger is still stupid).

Webster's was where all the really cool rich kids lived, and had quite the party reputation. Campus, on the other hand, was pretty darned quiet to have so many college kids in it.

Although, I have to say that the family of screaming itinerant laborers and their assorted womenfolk who moved in next door during my junior year were a bit on the boisterous side.

You know how folks are.





Oh, they're getting better!

Just got another nice e-mail from a guy in Nigeria--but with a twist!!:
Jeff Adams.

Lagos-Nigeria
DEAR SIR/MADAM
I am Jeff Adams.
Chairman of the Tender Committee of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). My Committee is principally concerned with payment of all contract awarded from 1998 to date, in order of priority as regard capital projects of the NNPC. The information we gathered from the Foreign Office of the Nigeria Chambers of Commerce and Industries is so positive as to convince us that you would provide us with solution to a money transfer deal valued at Thirty One Million United States Dollars and subsequently a joint business venture.


[yadda-yadda "liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) project", "over-invoiced", "we have worked out all modalities", "please contact me...with the following...Account Number", "Please be informed that this subject is classified sensitive"]

Yours Faithfully,
Jeff Adams.
Most of these things are automatic deletes, but the use of a plain old Anglo-Saxon name was such a nice touch. Deserving of an answer:
Jeff? THE Jeff Adams I went to high school with!? The last I heard, you and Nelda had gotten married and were living in Gulfport, Mississippi!! How in the world did you wind up over there in Nigeria? Are y'all still together?

You know, me and Tim Brand was looking at the yearbook a couple of weeks ago, and it's funny (especially considering where you are now) but you got voted Most Likely to be Incarcerated! But now it looks like you've gone legit, man! How did you ever swing such a sweet gig? The closest you ever got to petroleum was that jar of Vaseline you kept in your underwear drawer!

I was sorry to hear about your mom, by the way. I know you always said she was a real beeatch, but you know, when it's your mom like that, well, it's gotta be hard to deal with.

I hope Nelda is doing good--tell her I said hey if y'all are still hooked up. I hope all that stuff between me and her hasn't put a strain on you. It's like we said back then, that was band camp, and you know how band camp is.

Well, I guess I should let you get back to work, good luck on that deal and all.
Nah, I didn't sign it. He knows me, after all.



That Peg Britton gal sure knows how to eat!
[...] We ate at Potrillos, or however it is spelled. I like #19, Brit had #15. Actually, I like them all. [...]

[...] Thursday I'm going to Sterling to eat a hamburger with Bill Bunyan #1033, a Kansas Explorer who has eaten a hamburger in every county in the state. It is his birthday and he has chosen to eat his last burger at Paddy's with his fellow Explorers, and others. Sterling also hosted Larry the Bowler's last bowl. Everyone is invited to attend. They'll ask Bill to make a few remarks; we'll ask him questions (no doubt regarding hamburgers) and eat a hamburger with him in the back room at 1:00. Just show up. [...]

[...] A friend from Pawnee Rock is coming tomorrow for lunch and a visit. I’m looking forward to that. Big salads are on the menu along with a side of white-fleshed nectarines. I bought some today and they are almost too sweet to eat. They are marvelous.

Oh, one more thing. I'll divulge a secret combination that is my own creation. Toast two slices of whole wheat bread and spread both slices liberally with Jiff extra crunchy peanut butter. Then take a ripe, homegrown tomato that has never seen the inside of a refrigerator and peel it. Slice it thick and put the whole thing, one way or another, on one of the slices of toast. Then take a very thick slice of icy cold Walla Walla, Vadalia or some very sweet onion and put that on. A thick slice! Put the sandwich together and enjoy. It's an incredible combination. Really it is. I have variations on that theme too, if you really twist my arm! [...]
My father was quite fond of peanut butter and dill pickles on white bread sandwiches. Smooth, though, not crunchy.

And by the way, Miss Peg, consider your arm twisted.



Hamas abandons truce after Israeli strike

I realize I am unsophisticated in the ways of the world, but it seems to me that Hamas abandonded the truce when one of its learned and esteemed academic clerics boarded a bus full of civilians and triggered his explosive belt.



A refreshing beverage AND a handy writing fluid!--NBA's LeBron James Inks Deal with Coke

Having suffered through the effects of a spewing 20 ounce bottle of the diet version while driving to work this morning, I can attest to its indelible qualities. At least when applied to a white oxford cloth dress shirt.

OOPS! It appears there was some sort of headline snafu--here ya go: LeBron James Signs Deal With Sprite

Okay, I hope that's more clear.


Thank you, folks! You've been a great audience--be safe getting home!



Well, whaddya know...

The story is still being edited together, but the basics are that the other sitting members of the Alabama Supreme Court have agreed to overrule Chief Justice Moore:
[...] The associate justices wrote that they are "bound by solemn oath to follow the law, whether they agree or disagree with it."

The monument was briefly walled off from public view Thursday as the federal court deadline passed for the marker to be out of public sight. Then the plywood-like wall came down, displaying the monument again.

[Senior associate justice, Gorman] Houston said the building manager may have put up the partition in order for the state to be in compliance until the associate justices made a decision. Their seven-page order, signed by all eight, was issued about 10 a.m. [...]




Oh, I'm here, alright

Just more junk to do. ::sigh:: At least tomorrow is payday.


Wednesday, August 20, 2003

Say what? Man with ear ache gets vasectomy

He's probably figured this out by now, but that ain't gonna help any.



Oh please...Dems start group to try to 'recall' Bush
By SHARON THEIMER
The Associated Press
8/20/2003, 3:59 p.m. CT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The latest Democratic drive to make sure President Bush serves just one term takes a page from the effort to oust a Democratic governor in California, calling its web site "bushrecall" and garnering support through petitions.

A new committee called the Fair and Balanced PAC plans to launch its www.bushrecall.org Web site Thursday. The PAC's founders include Joe Lockhart, a press secretary to former President Clinton, and Mike Lux, a Democratic political consultant.

The Constitution provides no way to recall a president through a ballot initiative, as California voters have a chance to do to Democrat Gray Davis in October. [...]
You know, what's sad is that the reporter felt it necessary to include that last sentence.



What a cool idea!

The Bryn Mawrvelous Irene Adler has decided to host a story-writing contest!.

You got yourself until September 19, so get to work.



This one's for the fellows at the Barbecue Emporium: Hunting wild hogs requires stamina
By ELLIOTT MINOR
The Associated Press
8/20/2003, 2:41 p.m. CT

ALBANY, Ga. (AP) -- Tommy Cantrell strapped on his hefty, .44-caliber Magnum revolver, threw 35 pounds of equipment over his back and vanished into the swamp along with a pack of yelping hunting dogs.

Their prey this weekend is the same as every weekend — the gluttonous, wire-haired wild hogs that don't like to be cornered and have been known to charge hunters with their tusks.

"You never know what you'll get into," said Cantrell, a forklift mechanic who, during weekend hunts, kills 50 to 75 hogs a year.

He has learned a thing or two about hogs in his 61 years.

"They can fight back. They're very smart. They can cut a dog to pieces. When you kill him, you need the firepower to stop him. I've had them drop dead at my feet."

His largest kill hangs on his living room wall: a 700-pound boar with four-inch tusks. [...]
Cletus' free-range barbecue idea suddenly becomes even more enticing.



Well, it's not like they're in charge anyway...Supreme Court rejects last-minute Alabama chief justice appeal
By GINA HOLLAND
The Associated Press
8/20/2003, 3:12 p.m. CT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court refused Wednesday to block the removal of a Ten Commandments monument from an Alabama judicial building, rejecting a last-minute appeal from the judge who installed the display.

The justices said they would not be drawn, at least for now, into a dispute over whether the monument violates the Constitution's ban on government promotion of religion.

The high court was Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore's last hope to avoid a federal judge's midnight deadline to remove the display. It was unclear if Moore would comply. Other state officials have said the monument would be moved.

Moore's lawyers told justices in a filing that Moore should be allowed to "establish justice by acknowledging the guidance and favor of Almighty God, placed upon him by his oath of office and the Constitution of Alabama."

Moore installed the 5,300-pound stone monument in the rotunda of the judicial building two years ago after being elected chief justice amid publicity of his support of the Ten Commandments.

The Supreme Court has never ruled on the constitutionality of such indoor and outdoor government displays. In 1980, the court barred Ten Commandments from classroom walls in public schools.

The justices' refusal to intervene was not a surprise. An appeals court had twice refused to give Moore a stay.

"It's not like somebody's about to face execution, if the court doesn't enter a stay the person will be dead and the appeal will be moot," said David Frederick, a Washington attorney who specializes in Supreme Court practice. "If the Supreme Court were to decide it's constitutional, it can always be put back."

Moore had pledged last week to defy the judge's order. His emergency stay request was filed Wednesday with Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, who oversees cases from Alabama. Kennedy referred it to the full court, which said in a one-sentence order that it was rejected. [...]
It is at times like these I am reminded of the words of a famous Oscar-winning American actor...

Overture, curtains, lights,
This is it, the night of nights.
No more rehearsing and nursing a part,
We know every part by heart!

Overture, curtains, lights,
This is it, you'll hit the heights.
And oh what heights we'll hit,
On with the show this is it!

Tonight what heights we'll hit
On with the show this is it!



[Maynard G. Krebs] WORK!?! [/Maynard G. Krebs]

A whole line of stables to muck out today, so blogitude will be light.

In the meantime, Possumblog's Iron Ranger and Yankee States Reporter, Toni Albani, sent me word that the Minnesota State Fair in St. Paul will be beginning TOMORROW, and will run through Labor Day. Sadly, Lynyrd Skynyrd had to cancel, so you will all have to do an impromptu karaoke version of "Sweet Home Alabama", BUT there is still a way to smell "That Smell"!

The State Fair in EVERY state is one of the best places to enjoy the rich aroma of Food On A Stick, and to assist you in this effort, the Minnesota State Fair has a handy food directory you can use. Just scroll down to the bottom, choose the category "On-A-Stick" from the dropdown menu, press search, and you will be rewarded with information on FIFTY-FOUR purveyors of tasty, nutritious, skewered fare, such as Bayou Bob's Gator Shack, which has Alligator (aka Chicken of the Swamp) On a Stick; Cheese on a Stick, which, in a shot to the head to snotty ironic postmodernism, actually serves cheese on a stick (with lemonade!); Grannie's Kitchen Fudge Puppies, serving those wonderful Belgian waffles dipped in Swiss chocolate, topped with a crunch coating and whipped topping (on a stick, I might add); all the way to the piscine crown jewel of Minnesota, Walleye on a Stick--BUT WAIT!! It's not JUST on a stick, it can also be had on a bun, and in a boat!

I WILL eat it on a stick! I WILL eat it on a bun, and on a boat! I LOVE Walleye on a Stick!

Anyway, y'all go look while I do something productive with my morning (and Miss Toni wanted you all to know she cribbed the link from those baseball-loving regular guys over at Fraterslibertas.com).


Tuesday, August 19, 2003

Here's the story about the e-mail virus we all seem to have been getting today: New Fast-Spreading Sobig Worm Adds to 'Worm Week'
[...] Sobig.F, a variant of an older worm, began spreading on Monday in Europe and has infected an estimated tens of thousands of Windows-based computers, said Patrick Hinojosa, chief technology officer at Panda Software, based in Madrid.

It arrives in e-mail and includes a variety of subject lines, including "Your details," "Thank you!," "Your application" and "Wicked screensaver." It has caused some corporate e-mail systems to grind to a halt, according to Sophos Inc.

When the .pif or .scr attachment is opened, Sobig.F infects the computer and sends itself on to other victims using a random e-mail address from the address book.

It also prepares the computer to receive orders and tries to download files from the Internet, said Hinojosa. It was unknown exactly what files they were, he said. [...]
Probably bears repeating, but DON'T OPEN FILES YOU DON'T KNOW ABOUT.



Constant Positive Reinforcement…and FOOD!!

As you all know, I live for constant positive reinforcement, so imagine my surprise to see Chet the E-Mail Boy scuttle out of the coat closet to let me know I had received the following:
Re:Sriracha!

Good morning sir!
Oh, holy cats--another Nigerian e-mail!
I have read and enjoyed your blog for months now.
I admire your both your fortitude and your ability to lie convincingly!

It was then that I read down and figured out that this was not from a spammer, but in fact, was a letter from an actual person. (Imagine!)
Congratulations on discovering Sriracha hot sauce. It IS very tasty. As a 12 year resident of California, I have enjoyed it for many years, but didn't realize it was so hard to find, or so poorly known.
Ah, yes—the wonderful, tasty concoction from our good friends at Huy Fong Foods, Inc.

I don't know which it is--the little Chinese place we visited certainly puts great stock in it, so it may be better known than I realized. I just haven't found it in the bigger grocery stores yet. The Roomba Queen of Vidalia (who likes off-beat hot sauces, too) mentioned that she is familiar with Huy Fong's brand of salsa, Sambal Oeleck.

Anyway, the Sriracha is good stuff--I first tried a little dab on an egg roll, and then started slathering it on everything.
I have shipped it to my father in Chicago, and when I recently moved to Texas, I had to bring several bottles with me, as none was available locally. I offer the following suggestions for your further enjoyment.

It is really good on scrambled eggs (the runnier the better), or with ketchup on bacon and egg sandwiches.

It is very tasty if added to Campbell's Cheese and broccoli soup, (esp. when you add chopped bacon.)

It's really a good substitute for chili peppers in a Thai inspired cucumber salad:
Peel one 10 inch cucumber, quarter lengthwise, then cut into 1/4" thick pieces.

Combine 1/2 of small onion, finely chopped; with cut up cucumber in bowl.

Combine 1 tbsp sugar, 2 tbsp rice (or white) vinegar, 1/2 tsp salt, and 1/2 tbsp (more if desired) Sriracha in small bowl, whisk well.

Pour mixture over cukes, stir well, let sit in fridge to chill, enjoy!
(I stole most of this recipe from "Simply Thai Cooking" by Young and Auanoglu, but the use of the Sriracha is all me, baby.)
Well, as anyone who has ever read this pile of poo knows, you send in a recipe, and it gets posted!!

But then, suddenly, the tone turns somber:
Unfortunately for me, I fail several of the key tests for inclusion in the Axis of Weevil, (infrequent blog updates, no ties whatsoever to AL.) but perhaps, with work, some of my other character faults can compensate?
Boy howdy, a cry for help if I ever heard one.

I don’t know what we can do, though…everyone knows what sticklers we are for strict adherence to the rules around here.

Of course, there is the oft-abused Calvinball rule...
Congrats on your 12 years of marriage, and thanks for writing.

Bill Zukley
Thank you very much, Bill, and thank you for writing to me. As I have told several of you, it never ceases to amaze me that anyone would ever read the silly mess I post, much less that they would ever come back for more!

So, thank you, Bill, and thanks for the recipe!



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