Wednesday, October 27, 2010

damn straight..

The Ten Do's and Don'ts on The Great State of Texas Foods

















Like other states or cities who are very particular about their cuisines, Texas has its own little set of rules when it comes to eating. In Chicago, for example, putting ketchup on a hot dog is slightly worse than trampling on the American flag after setting it on fire using the Eternal Flame from John F. Kennedy's gravesite. And in Germany, putting a slice of orange or lemon into your hefeweizen is akin to ordering a beer and then pissing straight into the mug before drinking it. Refreshing!

read on 


The Houston Press












Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

a great lady passes

most of the remembrances of Barbara Billingsley will, of course, be her work on "Leave It To Beaver", I prefer her twist on the Beav's mom as a multi-lingual airplane passenger.




P.S. did you know Barbara is Peter Billingsley's cousin by marriage?

Monday, October 11, 2010

a little bang

do not try this at home...

Saturday, October 9, 2010

up, up and away...

the 2010 Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta 


Balloon Fiesta from Michael Salisbury on Vimeo.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

all I want for Christmas is...

my own barrel o' whiskey..






















Cask strength, 3 Years Old. unchilfiltered and not coloured. Numbers limited for this baby. Delivery in November 2010
inc. 30 L cask, contents and delivery (mainland England)
Price: £1,200.00

that's about $1900.00 not counting delivery to Texas

and I would certainly let the barrel age for a decade or so....

sure I would...

English Whiskey Co.

Friday, October 1, 2010

why can't Johnny program?

we are losing an innovative edge ...

Amazingly, America - the birthplace of the Internet - is the only developed nation that does not teach programming in its public schools. Sure, some of our schools have elected to offer "computer" classes, but instead of teaching programming, these classes almost invariably teach programs: how to use Microsoft Office, Adobe Photoshop, or any of the other commercial software packages used in the average workplace. We teach our kids how to get jobs in today's marketplace rather than how to innovate for tomorrow's.

Just last year, while researching a book on America's digital illiteracy, I met with the Air Force General then in charge of America's cybercommand. He said he had plenty of new recruits ready and able to operate drones or other virtual fighting machines - but no one capable of programming them, or even interested in learning how. He wasn't even getting recruits who were ready to begin basic programming classes. Meanwhile, he explained to me, colleges in Russia, China, and even Iran were churning out an order of magnitude more programmers than universities in the US. It is only a matter of time, he said - a generation at most - until our military loses its digital superiority.

As we continue to look at programming as a menial skill to be outsourced to developing nations, we will lose our innovative superiority as well. While this may not hurt American corporations capable of sourcing its code from anywhere, it would certainly hurt Americans looking for a skill set to replace our manufacturing jobs.

more

finder kudos to BoingBoing...


you should really read BoingBoing and it would not hurt to read this...

it will piss you off, it will make you think, it will change your world view..

Thursday, September 30, 2010

USA!!! USA!!!

ladies and gentlemen, I knows my American History..

How American Are You?

Incredible!

Was the national anthem your first dance at your wedding? Does it flow red, white and blue when you nick your skin shaving?

Score: 90% (18 out of 20)

Thursday, September 23, 2010

real war games..

playing for real..

nuclear bomb detonations from 1945-1998..

kinda hypnotic..kinda scary..




notice that although 2 and 3 are on historical targets, parts of the USA and the USSR , not to mention the South Pacific received a battering.

Anyone wanna buy some only partly radioactive real estate?

take notice

I’m overwhelmed with the urge to share a dark, dirty literary secret: that I not only read science fiction, I love it, I learn from it — and I think you should too.

This isn’t because the genre is producing great literature. For the most part, it isn’t. A lot of the best known science fiction looks either dated (Jules Verne, HG Wells) or dumb: the platitudinous and banal ‘philosophical’ discussions of the Star Trek crew on their pointless and endless galactic cruise. Or take (please!) the movie Avatar, a lot of science fiction is about flashy special effects grafted onto silly politics and creaky plots.

Nor should you read science fiction to find out where technology is going.

Science fiction is perhaps best understood by an alternative name for the genre: speculative fiction. It is fiction that asks questions about the human condition and the meaning of life by taking us beyond everyday life. We go to strange planets, far distant futures or even to our own past — in order to learn about who we really are.

Taken as a whole, the field of science fiction today is where most of the most interesting thought about human society can be found. At a time when many academics have become almost willfully obscure, political science is increasingly dominated by arcane and uninspiring theories and in which a fog of political correctness makes some forms of (badly needed) debate and exploration off limits, science fiction has stepped forward to fill the gap.

The biggest single task facing the United States today is the unleashing of our social imagination. We are locked into twentieth century institutions and twentieth century habits of mind. Science fiction is the literary genre (OK, true, sometimes a subliterary genre) where the social imagination is being cultivated and developed. Young people should read this genre to help open their minds to the extraordinary possibilities that lie before us; we geezers should read it for the same reason. The job of our times is to build a radically new world; speculative fiction helps point the way.


excepts from the article by Walter Russell Mead


please read this article in it's entirety,it will provide links to some of the most innovative and forward thinking writers out there.

AND ABOVE ALL, READ , JUST READ!!!!

Monday, September 20, 2010

economic theory

as good an explanation as any...

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

a cat tale

a lost cat, some coworkers(?) and a series of emails..





































read the whole thread...


Thanx Steve !!!

Monday, September 6, 2010

are you gonna eat that?

never really liked McDonald's but I did not know that the food had such a long, almost freakish shelf life....

from The Happy Meal Art Project

















The Ahnold sings

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

evolution in action

A doctor involved in an "on-again, off-again" relationship apparently tried to force her way into her boyfriend's Bakersfield, Calif., home by sliding down the chimney, police said Tuesday. Her decomposing body was found there three days later.

Dr. Jacquelyn Kotarac, 49, first tried to get into the house with a shovel, then climbed a ladder to the roof last Wednesday night, removed the chimney cap and slid feet first down the flue, Bakersfield police Sgt. Mary DeGeare said.

While she was trying to break in, the man she was pursuing left from another exit "to avoid a confrontation," authorities said.


more at NPR

Thursday, August 26, 2010

too much? or just right?

The ultimate dessert..



twigged by Mental Floss

Monday, August 23, 2010

slip, sliding away




If only the commute downtown could always be this much fun.

Thousands of people — at least those who are at least 48 inches tall — descended this past weekend into the low-lying center of Grand Rapids, Mich., for a free trip on what promoters believe is the world's longest inflatable water slide. The puffy blue-and-yellow slide is about 500 feet long, stretching about three city blocks. It carried participants on an elevation drop estimated at 100 feet.

The megaslide is the brainchild of Rob Bliss, a 21-year-old maestro of social media. It is the latest of about a dozen public events he has conceived and publicized via Facebook, drawing dozens to thousands of participants to downtown Grand Rapids.

Bliss' first event was a pillow fight in 2008 that drew more than 1,000, according to The Grand Rapids Press. Next, the call went out for zombies. About 4,000 arrived.

The goal of each event, he said, is "creating a unique moment in time and reimagining what a downtown space can be used for."

The slide's builders say the $30,000 contraption can last about 20 years with good maintenance and careful storage, so the plan is to reinflate it annually.


The Denver Post

Thursday, August 12, 2010

see, one vote does count...

The New York Daily


WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Schumer supplied the only voice Thursday as the Senate passed by voice vote a $600 million border security bill seen as a down payment on immigration reform
But Republicans quickly mocked the security bill they supported and said they don't trust President Obama's broader reform effort that might provide a path to citizenship for immigrants.
Since Republicans had already signed off on approving the bill by unanimous consent, the Senate invoked a rarely used procedure to avoid bringing members back to vote during a summer recess.
Schumer was the only senator on the floor for the voice vote while Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) was the presiding officer. Schumer had to set up his own lectern to speak because Senate pages were also on recess.
The border security bill calls the Republicans' bluff, Schumer said, "because it pulls away their No. 1 excuse, which is we can't do comprehensive [reform] until there is border change. Certainly we were getting nowhere the old way.
"And this new law will also strengthen our partnership with Mexico in targeting the gangs and criminal organizations that operate on both sides of our shared border," Schumer said.
The bill will fund hiring for 1,500 border and customs agents, set up forward bases for the agents along the border and boost the number of unarmed drones flown on the U.S. side of the border to track illegals attempting to sneak across.
Schumer said the bill will be paid for by raising fees on foreign-based companies that use U.S. visa programs, including the popular H-1B program, to bring skilled workers into the U.S.
Obama, who was expected to sign the bill Friday, said it "answers my call" for tighter border security and "will make an important difference" in the battle for overall reform.
there is of course a dissenting opinion...


But Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) said the bill "seems more like an effort to receive positive press than to genuinely improve the critical border situation."
"The Masters of the Universe in Washington are always proposing new plans to deal with the massive illegality at the border," Sessions said, but they then fail to put them into effect.
Mr. Sessions, elected in 1994, yes, 16 years ago, in Alabama, a state with as far as I can tell, not a lot of border issues to deal with...

Oh, wait...

Florida.

But that whole Masters of the Universe in Washington stuff.. 

Man, you've been there for 16 friggin' years...









Wednesday, August 11, 2010

no,, really?!?!

Austin Police have discovered something new ....


Austin police said Tuesday that they've seen people try to hide drugs in just about anything. Just last week, senior patrol officer Jared Manning said, he found painkillers inside a fake battery.
At a news conference Tuesday, Manning showed off other innocuous-looking objects in which police have discovered narcotics, including a Dr Pepper can that had a pill bottle glued inside.
Police also have found drugs in an altered WD-40 oil can and a dictionary that had been hollowed out with a key-locked box inside, Manning said. These drug-concealing containers are made at home or bought online or at local novelty shops, he said.

 Really!!...Wow !!!

I'm sure this kind of super Hi-tech, James Bond type stuff never,never happened before....


Austin American Statesman

notice that my fingers do not leave my hand...












.
Abracadabra .. Hocus Pocus

Gov. Hair's latest attempt to... I'm not really sure what he trying to do...

read on...


Gov. Rick Perry wants the White House to make a better offer on talking with Texas about border security.
A National Security Council briefing? Not good enough.
Perry said Tuesday that he declined a border-security briefing from the security council — a high-level panel chaired by President Barack Obama and key Cabinet members — because he "doesn't need to meet with some more down-level staff people."

Whahhhh?!?! 

Well, after all,he has been the Governor of a state that while he has attended numerous meetings and events outside Texas, High School graduation rates have dropped to 71.9% (39th in the nation), children living in poverty has increased by 5%, and citizens who have no health insurance has risen to over 24 % (2007 figures)*!

*BTW the next worst state is Florida. Whose Gov. is not conservative enough for the GOP. Go figure.


Enough is enough!!!






Wednesday, July 28, 2010

it can happen in your town

the following occurred in Summit, Mew Jersey, but with the current background of hate it could, and probably has ,happened in your town..

SUMMIT, N.J. (AP) -- Dusk fell around Salvadoran immigrant Abelino Mazaniego as he sat on a bench on a promenade in an upscale New York suburb after finishing his restaurant shift. As night encroached, so did a group of teenagers, including one with a cell phone videocamera at the ready.
Then, authorities say, they beat him unconscious, with the camera rolling.
Days later, the 47-year-old father of four was dead - but not before the video had been circulated among teenagers in Summit, N.J., authorities say. And not before a nurse in the emergency room where he was taken the night of July 17 was accused of pilfering several hundred dollars from his wallet.

In Summit on Tuesday evening, a young girl sobbed, trembled, and clutched the waist of an older woman as they stood in a group of five people in front of a shrine of sunflowers, votive prayer candles, handwritten notes and a photo of Mazaniego that had been placed on the bench where he was attacked. Speaking quietly in Spanish, a woman with red-rimmed eyes said she was Mazaniego's wife of 29 years, and the rest were family members. She declined to give her name, saying she was too upset and scared to speak about the attack.
Mazaniego was "a hardworking, punctual, friendly employee," said Colin Crasto, manager and chef at Dabbawalla Indian restaurant, across the street from where the attack took place, and where the victim had worked for three years as a cook's assistant. A photo of Mazaniego was taped to the front window, with a message saying he had been the sole supporter of his family and asking patrons to donate money to help his family




AP


At times I despair and weep.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Happy 30th !!!

 the greatest movie ever made ...

about golf....


"yeah, that's a Titlest"

and my sister does a devastating "Carl"



and take the test..


I did!!



  The 30th Anniversary Caddyshack Quiz

  Score: 100% (9 out of 9)

Thursday, July 22, 2010

this could be good

I have high hopes for this...



c'mon it's easy

know your cities?

know what they were named in a previous time?

Take the Test!




  Tales of Two Cities
 
  Score: 100% (12 out of 12)

Thursday, July 15, 2010

it coulda been

A different take on The Shining..




I feel all warm and fuzzy inside..

Monday, July 12, 2010

the coming Ad Age

We have been told that soon advertisements will become ubiquitous..

from pop-up ads to giant floating commercials ala Blade Runner, to pitches beamed directly into our brains..

and it all starts with beer glasses...








Now how am I supposed to remember that number?

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

glad that one got away




The massive skull and jaw of a 13-million-year-old sperm whale has been discovered eroding from the windblown sands of a coastal desert of Peru.

The extinct cousin of the modern sperm whale is the first fossil to rival modern sperm whales in size -- although this is a very different beast, say whale evolution experts.

"We could see it from very far," said paleontologist Olivier Lambert of the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, France, who led the team which found the fossil.

The giant 3-meter (10-foot) skull of what's been dubbed Leviathan melvillei (in honor of the author of "Moby Dick") was found with teeth in its top and bottom jaws up to 36 centimeters (14 inches) long. The discovery is reported in the July 1 issue of the journal Nature.

Living sperm whales have teeth only in their lower jaws and are specialized to feed on giant squid, Lambert explained. They suck down squid like large spaghetti noodles rather than catch the prey with their teeth. The much toothier fossil sperm whales, however, may have eaten more like a outsized-orca, or killer whale: chomping great big bites out of its prey.

"These are very unusual attributes," said cetacea evolution expert Ewan Fordyce of the University of Otago in New Zealand. "It's remarkably big. That is unexpected."

Another sign that this ancient whale had a killer bite is the large hole in the skull to accommodate a large jaw muscle.

"This was a hunting predator that took chunks out of prey," said Fordyce.


Yikes!!!!!

This one would even the odds against a whaler.

Discovery

Monday, June 28, 2010

the Windy City should change it's name..

to  Lightning City...

Lightning strikes three of the tallest buildings in Chicago at the same time! from Craig Shimala on Vimeo.



For the third time in the last 6 days, another line of nasty storms rolled through Chicago on Wednesday evening. In this clip you will see three of the tallest buildings in Chicago get struck by lightning at the same time. Willis Tower (Tallest), Trump International Hotel and Tower (2nd Tallest) and the John Hancock Building(4th tallest).

Craig Shimala

Thursday, June 24, 2010

bigger but not better

it seems the infamous KFC Double Down has met it's match...

introducing the Grilled Cheese BurgerMelt.



This gut buster is served at Friendly's.

here are the stats.

1500 Calories
870 Fat Calories
79g Total Fat
38g Saturated Fat
180g Cholesterol
2090mg Sodium
101g Carbs
9g Dietary Fiber
4g Sugar
54g Protein

I might add, Friendly's motto is "Where Ice Cream Makes the Meal" and yes, that appears to be a dish of Ice Cream next to the burger.

The Consumerist by way of Neatorama

Monday, June 21, 2010

a little help

The Obama administration has pledged to come to the aid of the small to mid-sized farmer.

here is one result..

When Kathryn Thomas wanted to turn her sheep into lamb chops, the federal government required her to haul them across Puget Sound on a ferry and then drive three hours to reach a suitable slaughterhouse.

Not anymore. These days, the slaughterhouse -- and the feds -- come to her.
A 53-foot tractor-trailer rattles up to her farm on Lopez Island, the rear doors open and the sheep are led inside, where the butcher and federal meat inspector are waiting. When the job is done, the team heads out to the next farm.
The slaughtermobile -- a stainless steel industrial facility on wheels -- is catching on across the country, filling a desperate need in a burgeoning movement to bring people closer to their food. It is also perhaps one of the most visible symbols of a subtle transformation at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, long criticized for promoting big agribusiness.

"There are farming operations that are really big and do huge volumes of food and that's part of American agriculture and that's good," Deputy Agriculture Secretary Kathleen Merrigan said. "But there are a lot of people who want to do alternative markets, and we want to find a way to help them find a living and stay in rural America and help those towns and villages thrive. This really is a rural development strategy."

The agency is promoting small meat producers in part by funding and approving more mobile slaughter units, staffing each one with a federal inspector, educating farmers and USDA employees about the units, and setting clear guidelines for farmers who want to build one. In December, the department set up a toll-free help line dedicated to small producers.
"People want to buy their stuff locally and they want to buy it from you instead of the counter at Safeway or Food Lion or from some anonymous slaughterhouse that stuffed it full of antibiotics so it wouldn't get sick," said Dick Stoner, who raises black angus cattle on a farm in Sharpsburg, Md., near the Antietam Civil War battlefield.
Like neighboring farmers, Stoner sells some cattle to bulk slaughterhouses in the West. He has been consumed with the idea of a slaughtermobile ever since he heard Merrigan give a talk six months ago. "We've got all these farms within an hour and a half. All we have to do is connect the buyers in the city with these farms and figure out a way to get the meat to them."
At roughly $250,000, a basic slaughtermobile costs about one-fourth of a permanent facility and is likely to face less opposition from the community. "No one wants to live next to a slaughterhouse," Stoner said. "So getting a new one built, even on a farm, is almost out of the question."
"Mobile slaughter units are a bit of a quick fix," said Joe Cloud, a landscape architect who joined farmer Joel Salatin -- celebrated among the "locavore" movement -- to buy a small slaughterhouse in the Shenandoah Valley in 2007 that was about to shut down. Their operation, T&E Meats, is so busy they are turning away business.

"You still need to cut up the meat, you need saws, grinders, stuffers, vacuum packers, smokehouses, curing areas, drying units and all of these things that take a lot of space," Cloud said. "I just don't see how we're going to rebuild the local community-based system using mobile units."
Merrigan agrees. "This is just one strategy," she said.


by Lindsey Layton of The Washington Post

Friday, June 11, 2010

watch out Iron Chef!!

TexSquid knows cookin'




  Name that Cooking Technique
 
  Score: 100% (10 out of 10)

a great bleacher bum

only at Wrigley..




I'm positive it was a Old Style.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

they built this city


from GIZMODO


Back in 1990—top—Shanghai looked like a lovely green city. Only twenty years later—bottom—you can film the second part of Blade Runner in it.
Shanghai has always been an important place. Located on the Yangtze river's mouth, this Chinese city was already a world commerce hub back in the 30s. But it wasn't until Deng Xiaoping's economic reforms that the city exploded. Only fifteen years later, it became the largest cargo port in the world. Twenty years later, it's the megalopolis you are seeing in this photo

now that's urban renewal gone amuck.
.

Monday, June 7, 2010

a sure hit

ladies and gentlemen....


CHICKEN MONKEY DUCK





sing along, won't you

Thursday, June 3, 2010

something about this appeals to me

the solution to the Gulf of Mexico or maybe other deep water oil spills could be..


Super Quick Undersea Incident Device

or S.Q.U.I.D.


from the inventors website..

Most underwater solutions attempt to hold the pressure using concrete and stiff metal piping. Unlike an oil spill containment dome, the SQUID uses no chemicals in the water, equalizes pressure by allowing the oil to naturally flow to the surface in a contained fashion, and even allows salvaging of that oil for use, rather than burning it off or letting it dissipate across the ocean's surface. This solution uses flexible high strength plastic to capture every drop of oil and is impervious to deep sea currents and low temperatures. It "goes with the flow" of the water.
The scale of the SQUID can be altered, based on the size of the sea floor leak site and depth needed at the rig site. Current prototypes are 48' in diameter, easily assembled on site (sea surface) by divers and tug boats. The ring is delivered hollow; once it is assembled, a heavy agent will fill the inner ring, allowing the ring to sink, while deflating the flotation devices holding the ring above water.
The ring then sinks to cover the leak site, draping the high strength plastic around the leak site, creating a guided flow to the surface. The connection points between the ring and plastic are porous, allowing divers and equipment to flow freely in and out of the shroud, facilitating work to fix the leak or build anew.
The SQUID can be used to control disasters like the one the Gulf of Mexico and British Petroleum are facing right now, or to capture and capitalize on sea floor oil leaks like this that occur naturally all the time.
New World Inventions

Tracy Staedter at Discovery News contacted S.Q.U.I.D. 's creator Steve Dvorak.

I called Dvorak to ask him about his idea, which is so simple and seemingly workable that surely anyone at BP who knows about it must be having a "DUH" moment.

I asked Dvorak about whether the ring and sleeve would suffer from the buildup of the icy methane hydrates, which rendered BP's containment dome a failure.

In short: No.

"The specific gravity of hydrates is a little less than water, so they will continue to rise."

Plus, the sleeve is wide enough that it won't cause a bottleneck. The other advantage to this proposed solution is that it will contain gases and keep the oil from moving toward the coast. And repair operations can go on, such as directing remotely operated subs, while the sleeve is covering the well.

"This is such a low cost option, it seems like why not try it?" said Dvorak.

So far BP has not contacted Dvorak directly about his innovative solution. But they have submitted questions to him via second parties and he said he has "heard from people directly down the food chain from BP saying this is a great idea." And if this solution doesn't get used on the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe, it could be used any number of other rigs leaking in the Gulf.

I say let's give SQUID a try!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

song and dance

Pretty cool...

Monday, May 31, 2010

our neighbors need help


A series of natural disasters have hit Guatemala in the last few days.

First the Pacaya Volcano,only 19 miles from the capitol, Guatemala City,  woke up..

Lava flowed, black sand and rock and ash spewed everywhere. A newscaster covering the news near the volcano was killed by flying rocks.

then two days later on May 29th, Tropical Storm Agatha hit.

... destroying homes, causing floods, and creating tens of thousands of internally displaced. Infrastructure in this country—where the majority live in poverty—is very poor, and ill-equipped to handle such a double blow. As of last night, official numbers on storm: about 30,000 "refugees," close to 120,000 evacuated, 93 dead and rising.
The poor always suffer the most when events like this happen, and the two events together caused surreal conditions: knee-deep black sand mud, and "instant concrete" that forms when rain meets ash, clogging up drains and fragile sewage systems.


Below is a result of the torrential rains from the storm.  An incredible sinkhole within Guatemala City.



















you can help here.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

why can't stuff like this happen more often

Picture it. the team you play for is just creaming the other team.
I mean creaming them, would you do this?

By Rick Reilly
ESPN.com

It happened at a junior varsity girls' softball game in Indianapolis this spring. After an inning and a half, Roncalli was womanhandling inner-city Marshall Community. Marshall pitchers had already walked nine Roncalli batters. The game could've been 50-0 with no problem.

It's no wonder. This was the first softball game in Marshall history. A middle school trying to move up to include grades 6 through 12, Marshall showed up to the game with five balls, two bats, no helmets, no sliding pads, no cleats, 16 players who'd never played before, and a coach who'd never even seen a game.

One Marshall player asked, "Which one is first base?" Another: "How do I hold this bat?" They didn't know where to stand in the batter's box. Their coaches had to be shown where the first- and third-base coaching boxes were.

That's when Roncalli did something crazy. It offered to forfeit.

Yes, a team that hadn't lost a game in 2½ years, a team that was going to win in a landslide purposely offered to declare defeat. Why? Because Roncalli wanted to spend the two hours teaching the Marshall girls how to get better, not how to get humiliated.

"The Marshall players did NOT want to quit," wrote Roncalli JV coach Jeff Traylor, in recalling the incident. "They were willing to lose 100 to 0 if it meant they finished their first game." But the Marshall players finally decided if Roncalli was willing to forfeit for them, they should do it for themselves. They decided that maybe -- this one time -- losing was actually winning.

That's about when the weirdest scene broke out all over the field: Roncalli kids teaching Marshall kids the right batting stance, throwing them soft-toss in the outfield, teaching them how to play catch. They showed them how to put on catching gear, how to pitch, and how to run the bases. Even the umps stuck around to watch.

"One at a time the Marshall girls would come in to hit off of the [Roncalli] pitchers," Traylor recalled. "As they hit the ball their faces LIT UP! They were high fiving and hugging the girls from Roncalli, thanking them for teaching to them the game."

This is the kind of thing that can backfire with teenagers -- the rich kids taking pity on the inner-city kids kind of thing. Traylor was afraid of it, too.

"One wrong attitude, one babying approach from our players would shut down the Marshall team, who already were down," wrote Traylor. "But our girls made me as proud as I have ever been. ... [By the end], you could tell they were having a blast. The change from the beginning of the game to the end of the practice was amazing."

Roncalli wasn't done. Traylor asked all the parents of his players and anybody else he knew for more help for Marshall -- used bats, gloves, helmets, money for cleats, gloves, sliders, socks and team shirts. They came up with $2,500 and worked with Marshall on the best way to help the program with that money. Roncalli also connected Marshall with former Bishop Chatard coach Kim Wright, who will advise the program.

"We probably got to some things 10 years quicker than we would have had without Roncalli," says Marshall principal Michael Sullivan.

And that was just the appetizer. A rep from Reebok called Sullivan and said, "What do you need? We'll get it for you." A man who owns an indoor batting cage facility has offered free time in the winter. The Cincinnati Reds are donating good dirt for the new field Marshall will play on.

"This could've been a thing where our kids had too much pride," says Sullivan. "You know, 'I'm not going to listen to anybody.' But our kids are really thirsty to learn."

And they are. Marshall never won a game, but actually had leads in its last three games. In fact, it went so well, the players and their parents asked if they could extend the season, so they're looking to play AAU summer softball.

Just a thought: Major League Baseball is pulling hamstrings trying to figure out how to bring baseball back to the inner city. Maybe it should put the Roncalli and Marshall girls in charge?

Anyway, it's not an important story, just one that squirts apple juice right in your face. And who knows? Maybe someday, Marshall will be beating Roncalli in the final inning, realize how far it has come, and forfeit again, just as a thank you.



I passed this story along in it's entirety and I only disagree with the Writer, Rick Reilly on one thing, it is an important story.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

islands? I know islands!

Take the Islands map test..

if you dare..

Eye-lands?



Score: 100% (10 out of 10)

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

at least they make right turns

The Grand Prix is coming to Austin..

AUSTIN, Texas — Formula One racing is coming back to the United States in 2012 with a long-term deal to race in Austin on a track built specifically for the event.

Formula One, city and Texas state officials announced the agreement Tuesday, saying Austin would host the U.S. Grand Prix until 2021.

Formula One president Bernie Ecclestone said the race in the Texas capital would mark the first time a course would be built specifically for an F1 race in the United States.

AP

Personally I'm not a fan of auto racing, as practiced in the good ol' USA..

nothing but left turns, you see,

but the Grand Prix !!

And why in Austin, Texas, you query?

In addition to the State of Texas being the 11th strongest economy in the world, it has more Fortune 500 company headquarters than any other state. Key features of Austin include:
- State capital nicknamed ‘Silicon Hills’ for being one of the most important regions in the US for the Technology Industry;
- USA’s 15th largest city and is located 145 miles from Houston (4th largest US city), 70 miles from San Antonio (7th largest US city), and 180 miles from Dallas (8th largest US city), population in this triangle is over 22 million;
- perfectly located geographically for North, South and Central American visitors;
- over 130 daily departing international flights within 180 miles;
- over 250,000 hotel rooms within 180 miles;
- desirable year-round climate, with an average annual temperature of 68 degrees Fahrenheit (20 Celsius);
- geographically located in the Texas Hill Country, easily the most beautiful city in the State, and considered one of the most in the US;
- hotels/downtown/Formula 1 circuit/airport located within close proximity of each other, which is nearly impossible for any other large city in the US;
- world class night life entertainment along renowned ‘Sixth Street’; and
- large film industry presence - many movies filmed in the area.


Austin’s National Recognition
- Known as “The Live Music Capital of the World”
- Voted “Greenest City in America” (MSN)
- Voted “Least Stressful Large Metro” in the United States (Forbes)
- Voted Top Two “Best Cities” in the United States (Money Magazine)
- Voted Top Three “Hippest Cities” in the United States (Forbes)
- Voted Top Five “Safest Cities” in the United States (Forbes)
- Voted Top Ten “Sports & Fitness Cities” in the USA (Sports Business Journal)

Formula 1

Yep, that's my hometown.

Start yer engines!

Monday, May 24, 2010

do you know Disney, like I know Disney?

take the test..

Check your knowledge of the less kiddie side of Disney films.



Disney Gone Blue



Score: 100% (10 out of 10)

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

don't forget your steel umbrella

Video of an "insane" hailstorm that hit Oklahoma City on May 16, 2010.

the commentary is a bit repetitive and give it a minute for the real action to start.




think of this the next time you get caught in the rain.
 Beyond the Beyond

Saturday, May 15, 2010

it's this big

The Shuttle Atlantis is on it's final mission to the International Space Station with the final large unit to complete construction.

But, how big is the ISS?

well...


I think I'd rather stay on the other Space Station.


Life's Little Mysteries

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

let's get juiced!!

yes, you can ferment your own alcoholic beverage with....

SPIKE YOUR JUICE

















yummy....


saw it at gizmodo

Monday, May 10, 2010

I do not recall my actions on the night in question

In January, Gerard Wall was at a strip club in NYC and later found that $21,620.60 had been charged on his Discover card.

from his lawsuit statement...

On Friday, December 12, 2008, Plaintiff WALL entered the premises at about 8:30 p.m.
At the aforementioned time and place, he was approached by a dancer who invited him to have a private lap dance in a separate room from the bar area.

At no time did Plaintiff willfully submit his Discover card to the Defendant.

Plaintiff has no recollection of what transpired after he was led from the bar area into the private room.

Plaintiff has absolutely no recollection of what transpired once he left the bar area and entered the private room.

[Plaintiff's credit cards were] charged an aggregate amount of $21,620.60.

Plaintiff did not receive Twenty One Thousand Six Hundred Twenty Dollars and Sixty Cents ($21,620.60) worth of alcoholic beverages and/or other services throughout the evening.

By way of the foregoing, Defendant has been and continues to be unjustly enriched.

if only Gerard had seen this Public Service Annoucement...




more at Lowering the Bar

shout out to BoingBoing

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

IRON MAN 2 ROCKS !!

When I was a kid. a long,long time ago, I reads comics, lots of comics.

After a while, I came to a realization.

Superman was alright, but a little too powerful. Batman was just a bit too intense. Spiderman had way too many issues.

Iron Man was just right.

No special powers, no years of training, just a lot o' money and a ton of smarts.

And he got the ladies....

Which leads me to this post.
I attended  a sneak preview of the spanking new movie Iron Man 2 this evening.
Wow!

Monday, May 3, 2010

I quit

I deactivated my account on Facebook today and so should you...

a funny look at a serious situation...




Addendum
and it not just me...

Futurismic

Saturday, May 1, 2010

blimey

Jon Stewart Of the Daily Show, assisted by Daily Show's Senior British Correspondent report on the latest in the British election...


The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Clustershag to 10 Downing
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full EpisodesPolitical HumorTea Party



is this thing on?

Friday, April 30, 2010

crikey...



sharks to the northwest, sharks to the southeast, sharks to the southwest and sharks with frickin' lasers to the south.

LET'S GO SURFING, DUDE!!!!




digg

if you still want to go..

Monday, April 26, 2010

making

as I kid, I built model airplanes, so this is cool..

don't get glue on your fingers, now..





I'd especially like to be the guy that tests the landing gear and the flaps.

Neatorama

Sunday, April 25, 2010

everyone's a critic




his criticism is succinct and to the point

Thursday, April 22, 2010

an homage

One of my favorite movie genres is the Spaghetti Western and one of the best is Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo  better known here as The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.
 A few years ago a twist of the genre was released,  Sukiyaki Western Django*. A Ramen Western ?


and now from South Korea...



I can't wait...

* small part by a big American Director/Screenwriter

Monday, April 19, 2010

tea is brown, the tea party is not..

op-ed from the New York Times


On Thursday, I came here outside Dallas for a Tea Party rally.
At first I thought, “Wow! This is much more diverse than the rallies I’ve seen on television.”
Then I realized that I was looking at stadium workers. I should have figured as much when I approached the gate. The greeter had asked, “Are you working tonight?”
I sat in the front row. But when the emcee asked, “Do we have any infiltrators?” and I almost raised my hand, I realized that sitting there might not be such a good idea.
I had specifically come to this rally because it was supposed to be especially diverse. And, on the stage at least, it was. The speakers included a black doctor who bashed Democrats for crying racism, a Hispanic immigrant who said that she had never received a single government entitlement and a Vietnamese immigrant who said that the Tea Party leader was God. It felt like a bizarre spoof of a 1980s Benetton ad.
The juxtaposition was striking: an abundance of diversity on the stage and a dearth of it in the crowd, with the exception of a few minorities like the young black man who carried a sign that read “Quit calling me a racist.”
They saved the best for last, however: Alfonzo “Zo” Rachel. According to his Web site, Zo, who is black and performs skits as “Zo-bama,” allowed drugs to cost him “his graduation.” Before ripping into the president for unconstitutional behavior, he cautioned, “I don’t have the education that our president has, so if I misinterpret some things in the founding documents I kind of have an excuse.” That was the understatement of the evening.
I found the imagery surreal and a bit sad: the minorities trying desperately to prove that they were “one of the good ones”; the organizers trying desperately to resolve any racial guilt among the crowd. The message was clear: How could we be intolerant if these multicolored faces feel the same way we do?
It was a farce. This Tea Party wanted to project a mainstream image of a group that is anything but. A New York Times/CBS News poll released on Wednesday found that only 1 percent of Tea Party supporters are black and only 1 percent are Hispanic. It’s almost all white.
And even when compared to other whites, their views are extreme and marginal. For instance, white Tea Party supporters are twice as likely as white independents and eight times as likely as white Democrats to believe that Barack Obama was born in another country.
Furthermore, they were more than eight times as likely as white independents and six times as likely as white Democrats to think that the Obama administration favors blacks over whites.
Thursday night I saw a political minstrel show devised for the entertainment of those on the rim of obliviousness and for those engaged in the subterfuge of intolerance. I was not amused.


neither am I ...

The quote Tea Party unquote has rapidly become a gathering place of cranks, right wing nuts,and more dangerously ,militants who may have extreme methods in mind..


On this the anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing of a federal building that killed 149, 19 of which were children in a day care facility, a line must be drawn.

Recent statements by members of the so called Tea Party have been racist, homophobic and just plain hateful.

Irresponsibly, certain members of Congress have fueled the fire.

This should not stand.

If you cry out fire!! in a crowded theater, you had better be able to back it up.

However, some comments by elected officials seem to only fan the flames of  hate and provide justification to those that wish to divide our country from within.



If left without public scrutiny something similar to the tragic bombing in Oklahoma City will occur again, and we, as Americans will be much the less for it.

ahhhh, nature...



The Eyjafjallajökull volcano

taken on April, 17th, 2010 as on APOD

as far away from the sweet idylls of spring that I can imagine..

and a weird coincidence, I started reading Krakatoa, The Day the World Exploded a few days before the eruption made the news.


BTW, this pic is now my computer background

Friday, April 16, 2010

I hate corks, I really do


I have always been a fan of the Stelvin closure for wine solely for it's ability to prevent cork taint, now it appears that it works well in the case of ageing too.

that's it!! case closed!!

What's it about? All 14 bottles contain identical samples of a Leasingham Estate 1999 Clare Valley Semillon, all cellared together for a decade. The colors tell the tale that 10 years of aging wrote: They range all the way from watery pale to a dank, dead dark brown.

The bottle on the left, perfect in color (and reportedly in taste), was closed with a sturdy Stelvin-brand metal screw cap. All the others are plugged with a variety of natural and processed cork or synthetic stoppers. If this doesn't close the case, it makes a mighty strong argument to the jury.

It is well known that screw cap closures eliminate cork taint (TCA) and premature oxidization, but what this trial reveals is the fact that wine does mature/age in the bottle over time under screw cap. This is the most misunderstood aspect of the closure debate. Australians have been conducting both red and white wine screw cap trials for 20-30 years, so experience tells us this is indeed the case, but this is the first trial on such a grand scale to highlight this little-known fact.
The wine involved was a 1999 Clare Valley Semillon made by Kerri Thompson of Leasingham Estate. Thousands of bottles were sealed with 14 different closures, including multiple natural and synthetic corks as well as one sample under screw cap.

UK wine Journalist Jamie Goode has followed the trial closely while remaining independent and was fortunate enough to taste the Semillon after being in bottle for 10 years and 8 months, saying 'It's a full yellow color, with a minerally, flinty edge to the attractive honeysuckle and citrus fruit nose. The palate has a lovely focused fruit quality to it with pithy citrus fruit and a hint of grapefruit. There are also some subtle toasty notes. Very attractive and amazingly fresh for a 10 year old Clare Semillon.


more at Wine Lovers Page

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

ohhh Nellie!!!



Nellie Cruz of my Texas Rangers is tearing it up...


CLEVELAND -- Nelson Cruz struck again on Wednesday in continuing his potentially historic start to the season.

With two out in the third inning, Cruz smashed a 2-1 fastball over the left-field wall off Indians starter Justin Masterson to give the Rangers a 4-0 lead. It was also his sixth home run in the first eight games, as the Rangers went on to a 6-2 victory at Progressive Field.

Cruz leads the American League with both the six home runs and 12 RBIs. But the home run was also just his only hit in five at-bats so his league-leading slugging percentage slipped to 1.172.

"You see it when you're leading the league," Cruz said. "But I'm not here to lead the league, I'm here to win games and help the team."

Cruz has also driven in 32 percent of the 38 runs scored by the Rangers. Guerrero and Julio Borbon, who had a two-run single in the eighth inning on Wednesday, are tied for second with four RBIs while Hamilton has two and Davis has just one.

Of course Davis has an excuse. He has been hitting behind Cruz, who hasn't been leaving much out there. Cruz's six home runs are the most by a Rangers player through eight games and his 12 RBIs match what Juan Gonzalez did in his first eight games of the 1998 season. That was the season Gonzalez ended up setting a club record with 157 RBIs.


Texas Rangers

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

time moves a little slow some places

Walthall County in Mississippi has backslide on desegregation a bit..

More than 55 years after Brown v. Board of Education, it is unacceptable for school districts to act in a way that encourages or tolerates the resegregation of public schools,” said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “We will take action so that school districts subject to federal desegregation orders comply with their obligation to eliminate vestiges of separate black and white schools.”

According to the motion, the district’s practice of permitting hundreds of students — the vast majority whom are white — to attend schools outside their assigned residential attendance zone without restriction prompted a disproportionate number of white students to attend a single school in the district, leaving a number of other schools disproportionately black.

Indeed, evidence in the case suggested that the community regarded certain schools in the district as “white schools” or “black schools.” The United States also asserted that officials in certain district schools grouped, or “clustered,” white students together in particular classrooms, resulting in large numbers of all-black classes at every grade level in those schools.

Think Progress

Those running Walthall Co. must of thought no one was watching, and maybe no one was...

Civil rights hiring shifted in Bush era
Conservative leanings stressed

July 23, 2006

WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration is quietly remaking the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, filling the permanent ranks with lawyers who have strong conservative credentials but little experience in civil rights, according to job application materials obtained by the Globe.

The documents show that only 42 percent of the lawyers hired since 2003, after the administration changed the rules to give political appointees more influence in the hiring process, have civil rights experience. In the two years before the change, 77 percent of those who were hired had civil rights backgrounds.
In an acknowledgment of the department's special need to be politically neutral, hiring for career jobs in the Civil Rights Division under all recent administrations, Democratic and Republican, had been handled by civil servants -- not political appointees.

But in the fall of 2002, then-attorney general John Ashcroft changed the procedures. The Civil Rights Division disbanded the hiring committees made up of veteran career lawyers.

For decades, such committees had screened thousands of resumes, interviewed candidates, and made recommendations that were only rarely rejected.

Now, hiring is closely overseen by Bush administration political appointees to Justice, effectively turning hundreds of career jobs into politically appointed positions.


The Boston Globe


Or it could have been intentional..

WASHINGTON — Seven months after taking office, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. is reshaping the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division by pushing it back into some of the most important areas of American political life, including voting rights, housing, employment, bank lending practices and redistricting after the 2010 census.

“I think the wounds that were inflicted on this division were deep, and it will take some time for them to fully heal,” said Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.

As part of this shift, the Obama administration is planning a major revival of high-impact civil rights enforcement against policies, in areas ranging from housing to hiring, where statistics show that minorities fare disproportionately poorly. President George W. Bush’s appointees had discouraged such tactics, preferring to focus on individual cases in which there is evidence of intentional discrimination.

To bolster a unit that has been battered by heavy turnover and a scandal over politically tinged hiring under the Bush administration, the Obama White House has also proposed a hiring spree that would swell the ranks of several hundred civil rights lawyers with more than 50 additional lawyers, a significant increase for a relatively small but powerful division of the government.

The New York Times

both newspaper articles by Charlie Savage

Sunday, April 11, 2010

blow, baby, blow




AUSTIN, Texas -- Feb. 28, 2010, was a banner day for Texas wind to set the clouds -- and electrons -- flying.

In the Panhandle, gusts reached 47 miles per hour and wind generators delivered a record 6,242 megawatts of power to Dallas, Austin and other population centers. At 1 p.m., 22 percent of all the electricity consumed in the Texas grid was coming from wind.

At the end of 2009, the capacity of Texas wind turbines, reaching to the horizons of farm and prairie land, totaled 9,410 megawatts, well more than the combined total of the next three largest wind-power states, Iowa, California and Washington. Over the course of a year, wind power is providing 5 percent of Texas' demand, and that would more than double if the state's grid goals are achieved.

More than half the states now have renewable energy mandates or goals, but Texas was at the front of the pack.



more at Scientific American

Friday, April 9, 2010

what's next? flying pigs?..

ladies and gentlemen ..

The Standing Cat



The cat's name is Rocky. He is 2 years old and his owners are French (Daisy and Yann). Rocky used to stand up because he couldn't see the birds through the windows, and wanted to, so he stood up. Why does he raise his leg in the middle of the video? Probably because there was a bird outside, according to Daisy, or maybe a dog wandering around. Rocky hates dogs.

boingboing

from the local

short item from the Austin American Statesman


COPENHAGEN — Hundreds
of Carlsberg workers walked
off their jobs in protest after
the brewer tightened rules
on workplace drinking. The
Danish workers are rebelling
against a new company policy
that lets them drink beer only
at lunch in the canteen. Previously,
they could help themselves
to beer throughout the
day from coolers placed around
their work sites.


the horror, the horror...


I have had Carlsberg, you can drink it all day and it will not affect your performance..
except, maybe, an inordinate amount of pee breaks..

Thursday, April 1, 2010

04/01/2010

there is water on the moon!!!



kudos to APOD, one of my favorite sites for eye candy.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

poetry

A fellow worker and I were having a rough day Tuesday with two of our co-workers out sick. Towards the end of double shifts, we were getting homicidal tendencies towards our customers when tis bit of whimsical rhyme restored our equilibrium...

Images by Tyrone Green


Thursday, March 25, 2010

it's just a jump to the left...

do you know time travel..

TexSquid knows time travel..

would have scored better, but have not read Crichton since Andromeda Strain...


Do The Time Warp



Score: 80% (8 out of 10)

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

breaking through

Superman does not know how to knock...

Monday, March 22, 2010

this looks like fun

local wunderkind Robert Rodriguez' latest



Sunday, March 21, 2010

The President speaks

after the historic Health Care Reform vote..


Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Yes, We Can

It took a little(a lot) longer than it should have, but it appears that Health Care reform is finally on it's way.

from the President..
For the first time in our nation's history, Congress has passed comprehensive health care reform. America waited a hundred years and fought for decades to reach this moment. Tonight, thanks to you, we are finally here.

Consider the staggering scope of what you have just accomplished:

Because of you, every American will finally be guaranteed high quality, affordable health care coverage.

Every American will be covered under the toughest patient protections in history. Arbitrary premium hikes, insurance cancellations, and discrimination against pre-existing conditions will now be gone forever.

And we'll finally start reducing the cost of care -- creating millions of jobs, preventing families and businesses from plunging into bankruptcy, and removing over a trillion dollars of debt from the backs of our children.

But the victory that matters most tonight goes beyond the laws and far past the numbers.

It is the peace of mind enjoyed by every American, no longer one injury or illness away from catastrophe.

It is the workers and entrepreneurs who are now freed to pursue their slice of the American dream without fear of losing coverage or facing a crippling bill.

And it is the immeasurable joy of families in every part of this great nation, living happier, healthier lives together because they can finally receive the vital care they need.

This is what change looks like.

My gratitude tonight is profound. I am thankful for those in past generations whose heroic efforts brought this great goal within reach for our times. I am thankful for the members of Congress whose months of effort and brave votes made it possible to take this final step. But most of all, I am thankful for you.

This day is not the end of this journey. Much hard work remains, and we have a solemn responsibility to do it right. But we can face that work together with the confidence of those who have moved mountains.

Our journey began three years ago, driven by a shared belief that fundamental change is indeed still possible. We have worked hard together every day since to deliver on that belief.

We have shared moments of tremendous hope, and we've faced setbacks and doubt. We have all been forced to ask if our politics had simply become too polarized and too short-sighted to meet the pressing challenges of our time. This struggle became a test of whether the American people could still rally together when the cause was right -- and actually create the change we believe in.

Tonight, thanks to your mighty efforts, the answer is indisputable: Yes we can.

Thank you,

President Barack Obama

This was a hard fought win and not pretty, not pretty at all; but as the President and the Democratic Party leaders have said, now is the time.

If not now, when?

The Congress can now work on the many other needs of our country. We need to expand on the jobs bill already passed, we need to pass the banking regulation bill in committee, we must listen to the  voices calling out for immigration reform and we will continue to make America stronger internationally and internally.

The opposition has gambled that Congress failing to pass the Health Care bill would weaken the President and the Democrats in general. This short sighted and partisan strategy has and will continue to backfire in the GOP, as will their alliance with the retroactive Tea Party movement.

The events of the last week or so, both in Congress and in protests in Washington have spotlighted the divisive and at times outright hateful agenda being pursued.

If the Republican Party really wants a say in guiding this country, they must stop obstructing and start offering  practical and workable solutions.