Wednesday, December 10, 2003
Sunday, November 30, 2003
Thanksgiving 2003
Went to Indy and almost everyone was there:
Kevin, Trish, Meghan and Maddy
Eric & Lori
Juli
Super Grammy and her brother
Stacey spent some time going through Gramma Snyder's things
Friday night drove to Louisville to stay over, but my parents were already in Central City.
Saturday went down to see Mamaw & the Judge. And drove home Saturday, because Stacey & Steve had to work on Sunday.
Went to Indy and almost everyone was there:
Kevin, Trish, Meghan and Maddy
Eric & Lori
Juli
Super Grammy and her brother
Stacey spent some time going through Gramma Snyder's things
Friday night drove to Louisville to stay over, but my parents were already in Central City.
Saturday went down to see Mamaw & the Judge. And drove home Saturday, because Stacey & Steve had to work on Sunday.
Saturday, November 15, 2003
Saturday, October 25, 2003
Thursday, October 16, 2003
Guitar Songs to learn
Family Favorites
Happy Birthday (started) * Home on the Range * I've Been Working on the Railroad
Jazz Standards
I Can't Get Started * Where or when * Let's do it * Night and Day
Night in Tunisia * Salt Peanuts * Take the A Train
Classics
Hound Dog/Black Dog * Blue Moon of Kentucky * Mystery Train
Folsom Prison Blues * Ring of Fire * O Death * Take Me to the River
Modern
Rodeo Clowns * Sledge Hammer (Gabriel) * Never There (Cake) * Happy Hour (Housemartins)
Love Cats (Cure) * Celebrity Art Party (Embarrasment) * (it sounds great when you're dead) Robyn Hitchcock
Family Favorites
Happy Birthday (started) * Home on the Range * I've Been Working on the Railroad
Jazz Standards
I Can't Get Started * Where or when * Let's do it * Night and Day
Night in Tunisia * Salt Peanuts * Take the A Train
Classics
Hound Dog/Black Dog * Blue Moon of Kentucky * Mystery Train
Folsom Prison Blues * Ring of Fire * O Death * Take Me to the River
Modern
Rodeo Clowns * Sledge Hammer (Gabriel) * Never There (Cake) * Happy Hour (Housemartins)
Love Cats (Cure) * Celebrity Art Party (Embarrasment) * (it sounds great when you're dead) Robyn Hitchcock
Other books
Started a biography of the Buddha, and it was interesting, but not great, so I moved on.
A Lesson Before Dying, about the black man convicted of murder in 1950s south, and the teacher who is tasked with "teaching him to be a man", but the same man who wrote The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.
Started a biography of the Buddha, and it was interesting, but not great, so I moved on.
A Lesson Before Dying, about the black man convicted of murder in 1950s south, and the teacher who is tasked with "teaching him to be a man", but the same man who wrote The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.
Another good book - Kubler Ross on LIVING
Life Lessons: Two Experts on Death and Dying Teach Us About the Mysteries of Life and Living
by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross (Author), David Kessler (Author)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0684870754/qid=1066320446/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/104-2049330-5592717?v=glance&s=books&n=507846
Kubler-Ross, who identified the stages of grief (anger, denial, bargaining, acceptance) worked with another expert in end-of-life issues to talk about the things that people who are dying wish they had learned earlier. I've listened to part of it on tape, and it seems really good. Would be a good book-group book.
Life Lessons: Two Experts on Death and Dying Teach Us About the Mysteries of Life and Living
by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross (Author), David Kessler (Author)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0684870754/qid=1066320446/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/104-2049330-5592717?v=glance&s=books&n=507846
Kubler-Ross, who identified the stages of grief (anger, denial, bargaining, acceptance) worked with another expert in end-of-life issues to talk about the things that people who are dying wish they had learned earlier. I've listened to part of it on tape, and it seems really good. Would be a good book-group book.
Friday, August 29, 2003
Thursday, August 28, 2003
Where do I get me one of these cool jobs, where bonuses are 100 times salary?
And the base is not bad, I think I could get by in NYC for $1.4 mil. But the bonuses would certainly smooth things out.
Grasso to Get $140 Million Pay Package
Bowing to criticism of the secretive way it compensates its chief executive, the board of the New York Stock Exchange disclosed yesterday that its top executive, Richard A. Grasso, would receive lump-sum payments totaling $140 million in accrued savings and incentives, in addition to a base salary of $1.4 million and a bonus of at least $1 million.
And the base is not bad, I think I could get by in NYC for $1.4 mil. But the bonuses would certainly smooth things out.
Grasso to Get $140 Million Pay Package
Bowing to criticism of the secretive way it compensates its chief executive, the board of the New York Stock Exchange disclosed yesterday that its top executive, Richard A. Grasso, would receive lump-sum payments totaling $140 million in accrued savings and incentives, in addition to a base salary of $1.4 million and a bonus of at least $1 million.
Tuesday, August 19, 2003
Three positive steps to take
http://www.bestfootforward.com
http://www.voyageweb.com
http://www.takebackthemedia.com
http://www.bestfootforward.com
http://www.voyageweb.com
http://www.takebackthemedia.com
Wednesday, July 09, 2003
Taking pot-shots at the mayor
The farkers have done it again. Why they pick on our mayor, I don't know. http://forums.fark.com/cgi/fark/comments.pl?IDLink=580356
The farkers have done it again. Why they pick on our mayor, I don't know. http://forums.fark.com/cgi/fark/comments.pl?IDLink=580356
Monday, July 07, 2003
random links
http://www.artsandlettersdaily.com/ - has long been an outstanding compilation of good stuff on the web
http://www.acton.org/ - study of religion in everyday life
http://www.opinionjournal.com/ - can the Wall Street Journal be opinionated?
http://www.beacon.org - Beacon Press - home of some very interesting books
http://www.artsandlettersdaily.com/ - has long been an outstanding compilation of good stuff on the web
http://www.acton.org/ - study of religion in everyday life
http://www.opinionjournal.com/ - can the Wall Street Journal be opinionated?
http://www.beacon.org - Beacon Press - home of some very interesting books
Tuesday, July 01, 2003
Recent books
Started Farewell to Arms as a book on tape, and it was interesting, but when the tape messed up, I wasn't really caught up, so I moved on.
I really like McMillian's A Day Late & A Dollar Short that I'm listening to now. Intertwined family stories, told from a rotating perspective.
It's amazing the difference that a good book makes on the road.
Started Farewell to Arms as a book on tape, and it was interesting, but when the tape messed up, I wasn't really caught up, so I moved on.
I really like McMillian's A Day Late & A Dollar Short that I'm listening to now. Intertwined family stories, told from a rotating perspective.
It's amazing the difference that a good book makes on the road.
Wednesday, June 11, 2003
Trip to Indy
Friday we left for Indy, and met Kevin, Trish, Meghan and Maddy by about 4:30. We stayed at the Omni, and it was more kid-friendly than I thought it would be.
Friday night we just ate at the City Centre food court.
Sat. we went to the zoo with Paul & Jan, and the weather was nice.
Sun, we went to the Children's museum, and Buca di Beppo for dinner. Then off to Lsvl, where Stacey & I saw "L'Auberge Espagnole". Funny take on a "trying to unite Europe", from the framework of a student-exchange program. Set in Barcelona, in Catalan, French, Spanish, German, English, etc. etc. The younger British brother was a racist, and the news comes out Monday that Britain still won't join the euro. The Sun reports that Blair is going from "wait and see" to "hope and pray".
Friday we left for Indy, and met Kevin, Trish, Meghan and Maddy by about 4:30. We stayed at the Omni, and it was more kid-friendly than I thought it would be.
Friday night we just ate at the City Centre food court.
Sat. we went to the zoo with Paul & Jan, and the weather was nice.
Sun, we went to the Children's museum, and Buca di Beppo for dinner. Then off to Lsvl, where Stacey & I saw "L'Auberge Espagnole". Funny take on a "trying to unite Europe", from the framework of a student-exchange program. Set in Barcelona, in Catalan, French, Spanish, German, English, etc. etc. The younger British brother was a racist, and the news comes out Monday that Britain still won't join the euro. The Sun reports that Blair is going from "wait and see" to "hope and pray".
Gelb "genius" books
I got the tape of "discover your genius", and liked listening to the beginning enough that I wanted to see the book, since it has "genius activities". Gelb has picked 10 genuises, and shows you how to think like them. I may not remember them all, but Jefferson, Elizabeth I, Shakespeare, Plato, Ghandi, Copernicus and Einstein.
So, I broke down and actually bought "how to think like Leonardo". I have yet to read any of it. I hope I will be able to work through it this summer.
I got the tape of "discover your genius", and liked listening to the beginning enough that I wanted to see the book, since it has "genius activities". Gelb has picked 10 genuises, and shows you how to think like them. I may not remember them all, but Jefferson, Elizabeth I, Shakespeare, Plato, Ghandi, Copernicus and Einstein.
So, I broke down and actually bought "how to think like Leonardo". I have yet to read any of it. I hope I will be able to work through it this summer.
Wednesday, May 21, 2003
Nickel & Dimed by Barbara Erenreich
Was interesting to read. A writer who goes for a journey in the world of the working class. Lots of interesting tribulations that some people never have to think about. Especially strange to read it as Chuck Sohner was dying.
More on peace & justice, and living wage at http://www.peaceandjusticeky.org
Was interesting to read. A writer who goes for a journey in the world of the working class. Lots of interesting tribulations that some people never have to think about. Especially strange to read it as Chuck Sohner was dying.
More on peace & justice, and living wage at http://www.peaceandjusticeky.org
Tuesday, April 29, 2003
Monday, March 31, 2003
Campaign Finance Reform
Not supposed to be thinking about this sort of thing anymore, but, in case you are http://www.opensecrets.org/.
Or a whole Yahoo section at http://dir.yahoo.com/Government/U_S__Government/Politics/Elections/Campaign_Finance/Reform/
Not supposed to be thinking about this sort of thing anymore, but, in case you are http://www.opensecrets.org/.
Or a whole Yahoo section at http://dir.yahoo.com/Government/U_S__Government/Politics/Elections/Campaign_Finance/Reform/
She can't really say that, can she
Molly Ivins rules. Check out her current column at http://www.creators.com/opinion_show.cfm?columnsName=miv
Molly Ivins rules. Check out her current column at http://www.creators.com/opinion_show.cfm?columnsName=miv
Tuesday, March 04, 2003
The Unknown, and Laudable, Osbourne
Sharon and Ozzie Osbourne have three children, although you only see two on the reality show. The eldest, I think it is a daughter, has chosen NOT to be on the show.
All congratulations to her. I hope she is enjoying her time out of the limelight. It is good to see someone choosing NOT to get the embarrasment and hyperattention of reality TV.
We have constructed a feedback loop that is very dangerous: we are showing people how to act by these reality TV shows, and we may not be upholding the highest possible aspirations. Be careful what you watch: it influences more than you may realize.
Sharon and Ozzie Osbourne have three children, although you only see two on the reality show. The eldest, I think it is a daughter, has chosen NOT to be on the show.
All congratulations to her. I hope she is enjoying her time out of the limelight. It is good to see someone choosing NOT to get the embarrasment and hyperattention of reality TV.
We have constructed a feedback loop that is very dangerous: we are showing people how to act by these reality TV shows, and we may not be upholding the highest possible aspirations. Be careful what you watch: it influences more than you may realize.
Monday, March 03, 2003
Smart Growth in Kentucky
There is a link to what is going on with smart growth in Kentucky http://www.planning.org/growingsmart/States/Kentucky.htm.
Found via http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/policy.html, a collection of policy pointers.
There is a link to what is going on with smart growth in Kentucky http://www.planning.org/growingsmart/States/Kentucky.htm.
Found via http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/policy.html, a collection of policy pointers.
Saturday, March 01, 2003
Suburban Nation by Duany, Plater-zyberk and Speck. Another interesting book. Read it, too.
Points to city- and neighborhood-planning as the source of many problems. The design of the neighborhood has lead naturally to isolation and not knowing your neighbor, since you have to drive everywhere. The wide, smooth arcs and wide streets that allow for easy car navigation naturally let drivers go faster, and people don't want to walk, even if there are sidewalks. Even, and perhaps too far, points to the isolation of the neighborhood as leading to teenage problems: the isolated 13-, 14- and 15- year olds either can't wait to drive, or go wild when they finally can.
Says that zoning in 99% of the U.S. does NOT allow the useful, walkable, mixed development of the classic "neighborhood", with shop owners living over the stores, etc. Sprawl is REQUIRED by zoning. Not any one decision, but a series of small mistakes too us to the illogical extreme. If you require parking for retail, you have to have big parking lots which discourage walking, and you naturally get blots on the landscape of big-box retail.
Adovates use of a "traditional neighborhood checklist", with several pages of suggestions.
Points to Congress for New Urbanism at http://www.cnu.org and Traditinoal Neighborhood Development at http://www.dpz.com.
Points to city- and neighborhood-planning as the source of many problems. The design of the neighborhood has lead naturally to isolation and not knowing your neighbor, since you have to drive everywhere. The wide, smooth arcs and wide streets that allow for easy car navigation naturally let drivers go faster, and people don't want to walk, even if there are sidewalks. Even, and perhaps too far, points to the isolation of the neighborhood as leading to teenage problems: the isolated 13-, 14- and 15- year olds either can't wait to drive, or go wild when they finally can.
Says that zoning in 99% of the U.S. does NOT allow the useful, walkable, mixed development of the classic "neighborhood", with shop owners living over the stores, etc. Sprawl is REQUIRED by zoning. Not any one decision, but a series of small mistakes too us to the illogical extreme. If you require parking for retail, you have to have big parking lots which discourage walking, and you naturally get blots on the landscape of big-box retail.
Adovates use of a "traditional neighborhood checklist", with several pages of suggestions.
Points to Congress for New Urbanism at http://www.cnu.org and Traditinoal Neighborhood Development at http://www.dpz.com.
The Future of Success by Robert B. Reich
Really interesting book. Go read it.
Some suggestions from the end:
Three conversations we are currently having (that probably need to be brought together):
1) how wonderful technology is - we are all getting terrific deals
2) the fear of unfettered capitalism, greed of corporations, and global problems (this book was pre-9/11 and pre-Enron)
3) creating balance in our lives
Really interesting book. Go read it.
Some suggestions from the end:
- "Earnings insurance" - people who get a sudden, substantial (30%? 50%?) rise in income would pay part of that into a fund. People who have a corresponding bad year (30 or 50 percent loss in earned income) would get some money from the fund, maybe half their loss, to smooth out the shocks in the fast-moving new economy.
- "Community insurance" - corporations who want to move to a new location would pay into a fund that would help the old locations re-train/re-tool/recover from the shock.
- Invest in education of course, but even further, hand everyone a nest-egg of $60,000 at a certain point (age 18 or age 21), funded by a tax on the very rich. Or, my idea, phase back in the estate tax to create this endowment.
- Raise the pay of the "caring professions" (nurse's aides, home health-care aids, child-care workers, schoolteachers, social workers) so that more people will be attracted to those professions.
- (Possible danger here- why not allow parents themselves to do this) Create preschools for 3- and 4-year-olds, and create more after-school care for school-aged children.
- Encourage businesses to give people more flexibility to care for their children or elderly.
- Staying home with a child under three would be subsidized.
- Fund schools through other means than property taxes. Perhaps a national net-worth tax.
- Break the cycle of poverty by requiring a certain percentage of low-income housing in upscale developments.
Three conversations we are currently having (that probably need to be brought together):
1) how wonderful technology is - we are all getting terrific deals
2) the fear of unfettered capitalism, greed of corporations, and global problems (this book was pre-9/11 and pre-Enron)
3) creating balance in our lives
Tuesday, January 07, 2003
Interesting link of the day - illegal art - negativland's U2, a prof who has copyrighted the phrase "freedom of expression", and some corporate culture-jamming. illegal-art.org
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