Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Stupid airport security

I think this issue is making people madder and madder, maybe some smart official will see the light at some point, but it really seems embarrassing that we still are frisking the old ladies and obviously non-threatening airport passengers.

Is it because if we are accused of targeting racially or based on profile that it would offend someone? I really don't think that would happen. It could be defended by logic.

Columnist Walter Williams has eloquently focused on this recently, and his column; Stupid airport security III says so much that makes sense.

Quote:
In managing our personal security, should we guard against possible or probable threats? Consider the measures and the resource expenditures I might take to guard Mrs. Williams and me against all possible threats to our security.

Even though I live in Pennsylvania, well outside of tornado alley, I'd construct a tornado shelter because it's possible for a tornado to strike anywhere. I'd no longer get into my car and drive off without doing a thorough check of my car's hydraulic brake system for leakage. I'd build an iron-reinforced roof to guard against the possibility of a meteor. I'd also purchase a metal detector to do sweeps of my property, to guard against the possibility someone might have buried a land mine. [. . .]
Were I to take those measures, I'm sure the average person would label me as either paranoid or stupid. Why? It would take resources away from guarding against more probable threats to our security, such as burglary. While my focusing on all possible threats wouldn't be smart, it would make me a prime candidate to become a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) official. Their vision of airport security is to focus on the possible as well as the probable.

It is indeed possible for an 88-year-old man crippled with debilitating arthritis to be a terrorist. It's possible that one of our Marines returning from Iraq for stateside reassignment, carrying ID and official reassignment orders, is also a member of al Qaeda ready to take out an airplane. It's possible for a mother accompanied by her four children, or a 92-year-old woman, to be "mules" paid by terrorists to bring something on board to blow up the plane. It is also possible that a pilot plans to blow his plane up with a shoe bomb. That's reason for making him take his shoes off. It's possible that a blind person carrying a cigarette lighter will give it to a terrorist accomplice to light a shoe bomb in flight. [ . . . ] End Quote
I think most people would accept the risk of ignoring these remote possibilities if we were really sure we were focusing and targeting the smarter probabilities.

Terrorists:

Friday, April 08, 2005

Quarters

Quarters. I have said for quite a while that I would be willing to chair the committee to eliminate dimes, nickels and pennies, and round off to the nearest two bits: the quarter. Financial transactions could still reflect cents, or fractions thereof, if they want to. Lets face it, these little dimes, nickels and pennies are more annoying than they are worth. My plan,for a period of time you could turn them in for real money, then after a deadline, they would be history. There would be negatives, but the positives are stronger.

Ever since they started the State Quarter minting a few years ago, I am not so happy with the quarter either, to be honest. It is thinner, and just looks cheaper and tinny compared to the older ones, but times do change. Click the coin below to see images of all the states issued so far. I think it is surprising what some of the designs the states ended up with, but a lot are predictable.

New Hampshire has a particular problem. No sooner than the coin came out, the Old Man of the Mountain's face fell off. Really.
I haven't heard if they plan to reconstruct it.






Click for other state quarters.

Update: I don't know about you, but I see a new "Old Man" profile in the new rock face. He even has long flowing hair if you squint right. I propose thet they call him a little old and tired and laid back now, give him a ball cap and call it a new era.






Sunday, March 27, 2005

Optical dilusions

I have to pass on a couple of optical illusions that I ran across. Our eyes actually don't see things perfectly like cameras. Instead they have to report to the brain the partial data that they see, and then the mind interprets it from both eyes, and if it doesn't make sense, scans again quickly and tries to fill in the information that does not compute.

It does this quickly and uses experience and memories of previous images as the comparison. If the images, such as the two concentric circles below, contain so many false clues, the brain just can not resolve it correctly. but keeps trying as you look at different areas.


Click the image for circle validation.








Here is another one:

It is an animatied .gif image of only two frames, alternating, but your
mind dearly wants it to be going around like a ferris wheel, because that's what makes sense. However it can't decide which way it is rotating. Look at the right and left edges:

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Patent search

A few years back I tried to look up patents on the internet and found you could not do it. I just found that they have changed that, and the U.S. Patent Office had a great searchable site.

I was successful in finding some patents by my old friend John Adams in Virginia, for instance #4524476


However, I also looked up an old patent number off a gadget for paint pinstriping I had shown to puzzlephotos for identification.

The number was clear and on the end of the bottle: US PAT 92,148. It seemed low - maybe old, I thought. Strangely enough, that number probably was bogus, since it refers to an old 1869 patent for a wagon wheel gage.

Bet there is a story behind that.

Anyhow, the Patent search site is amazing. There is a text only section that gives all the legal sounding description mumbo-jumbo, i.e. "Be it known that.. this abstract states . . . refer to figure #21. ." etc. But even better is the image section that shows the actual drawings and pages from the patent itself. I had to install a special advanced TIFF plugin to make it work, and it actually works BETTER in Firefox than IE!

Monday, March 21, 2005

k-e-double-l-o-double-g-s

I was browsing historical photos on the Connecticut state archive site, and just liked this old picture of a Kellogg's truck. Check out the corn flakes boxes on top. Ask for the WAXTITE package.

Saturday, March 05, 2005

Copyrights? © © © ©

© I was reading some material about copyrights on a government site after a discussion with some musicians about making copies of musical scores. Buried in small print, I discovered an interesting concept that I had not realized before, and I think most people have the same mistaken concept as I did.

© I thought that copyrights (and patents for that matter) were established to protect the rights of the original creator. I thought the goal was that he will be allowed the opportunity to profit from or at least control the use of the original material, and to prevent others from doing so.

© That seems very logical, and indeed is the effect, but believe it or not, it is not the base reason the copyright laws were created, and continue to exist. It is not about the individual, but the society.

© The real reason is to insure that the creative process is encouraged, not discouraged in our society. A system that stifles or slows down innovation would be bad for all. Copyright laws are just a means to that end, and may not be the only way to do it.

© The idea is that if people do not have a reasonable chance to profit from their work, they would not do it. That is a very capitalistic and intellectually sound concept, but not a universal truth. For instance, monks in the renaissance created beautifully crafted Biblical paintings and scrolls with neither copyright protection nor stimulation by the profit motive.

© As we re-think the laws, updating for the new technologies and the digital age, these concepts will come into play.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Eminent Domain Abuse

I have typically kept my governmental and political views out of this blog, but I feel a need to voice an opinion about an important constitutional issue here in Connecticut that has risen to the Supreme Court. The issue is eminent domain:

Typically we were taught that if an interstate was going through, or a new town hall was being built, and the government needed the land, a private owner was duty bound to sell at market price, yield to the public use and public good. Seems like a civilized thing. Even though there may be some losers, the society would gain.

U.S. Constitution:
Amendment V
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
Only mentions property taken for public use. It was just assumed that they can't take private property for other reasons.

But over the years, apparently the cities and courts have been pushing this public use clause limit, and have allowed cities to take land that the "public use" was not so clearly defined.

Now this test case is being argued. It is a classic example, not fuzzy at all. New London Connecticut has condemned and wants to kick homeowners off their own land, out of their own houses for: . . . . get this . . . a private business park and shops complex! Probably it will bring in much more revenue for the city! Not a city owned project, private. So New London thinks that if you pay your mortgage for 30 years like this one family did, play by the rules, own your own home in the working-class section, Fort Trumbull, near the harbor, the city can force you to sell it to somebody else because they will possibly pay more taxes (the public use angle)? American spirit, right?

To say this is outrageous seems to be an understatement. This was argued last week in front of the Supreme Court, and they will render the opinion in the next few months, I guess. If they don't rule this unconstitutional, It will be a shame.

If you want to read some more details about this, a place to start would be Jeff Jacoby's article here. Quoting Jacoby, here is the bottom line if not reversed:
"Anyone's property can be taken by eminent domain if the government believes another owner would use it to earn a higher profit. . . . . The question now is whether five Supreme Court justices will agree to kill off this piece of the Bill of Rights for good, or to bring it back to life. The fate of more than just seven Connecticut homeowners is riding on their decision."




Monday, February 14, 2005

Kuni - Kunihiko Makita

Fire up the way-back machine ~~~~~ Our family hosted an AFS exchange student from Japan when I was a junior in high school. Kuni was a friend and "brother" to us.

He went on to a career in the foreign service of Japan, and we followed him from a distance. I never knew how significant and important his roles were. I knew he was a "China Watcher " among other things. The first official post name I heard for him was "Director-General of Asian and Oceanic Affairs". He was ambassador to Singapore for two years, then in July 2004 became ambassador to Egypt. THE Japanese ambassador to Egypt. Here is the website of his embassy in Cairo.
Here are few pictures I googled of Kuni from the last four years.





1962?

Thursday, February 10, 2005

CT Tobacco Barns

Connecticut does have a Tobacco industry. It is just a sliver of what it used to be, though. Most of it is "shade tobacco" protected by net screens looking like so many square miles of spider web supported by scaffolding to make a sort of a greenhouse effect during critical times of the plant growth. This produces good tobacco for wrapping cigars, I am told. Local people my age remember having summer jobs in the tobacco fields, helping migrant and local workers with planting, screening, or hanging harvested leaves up to dry in the classic tobacco barns.

Well, the barns are my real interest. A Connecticut staple of country landscape are these large and blocky barns, with their weathered red, brown or silvery sides. They almost are invisible because of being so commonplace. You see old ones over-run by vegetation, roof caved in and boards stripped for somebody's rec room. You see them turned into all sorts of storage buildings, but mostly they stay in their unique original form. The planking on the sides is articulated so that every other board can open to vent, and so they are not air tight structures at all, as barns go. Sort of an imaginary architectural vision comes to me with one of these barns to live in, the outside being rustic and original, then the inside maybe a ultra modern house. The contrast would be stunning.

To illustrate, from my "vast archives" I draw these pictures Martha and I took(except the shade pic) over in South Windsor, down by the Connecticut River a couple of summers ago.




Wednesday, February 02, 2005

Jew's Harp Revisited

I was thinking that the fairly decent Jew's harp I have squirreled away in my drawer was a dying breed.

Even in the old days when Johnson-Smith was the my Jew's harp source; (see my archive blog) and when Froggie the Gremlin (another past blog) was twanging, or Gerald Mc Boing Boing was boinging, we in the Brooks family were strangely proud to know the difference between a toy or cheap Jew's harp and a quality one that would really bang (twang?) out a tone.

After sitting on or losing a favorite twanger, we would finally get Dad to take us in to Rochester to get a real nice one from a glass case in a music store. The stiffer yoke and the tuned blue-black steel tang would really talk to you . I saw a "Jaw harp" on a card at a store lately that was the awful pot metal toy that I'm sure would have had the weak airy sound that surely would kill off the species. I don't know what is worse, somebody buying that, thinking they would get the great sound, or using the P.C. name "Jaw Harp" that somehow implies that saying Jew's Harp is in some way objectionable or anti-Semitic or something. Dopey.

Anyhow, I had almost decided that quality Jew's harps were dying when I found this link that is just short of the Holy Grail if you are a Jew's Harp fan. Reviews and descriptions of scores of creative and wonderful harps. makers from around the world, pictures of them all. A strange and handmade site that shows the quality and variety seen for the humble musical tawanger.




Just one more reference to make this blog as rich as possible. Here is an audio clip from the grandaddy of all Jew's harps, I guess. It is a clip from "Ghenghis Blues" album with Paul Pena and Ondar from Tuva. (great story, should be the object of another blog) . The jacket reports it as a homus, a Tuvan instrument. Hearing these strange overtones, I can see why a lot of folks like me who like this sound also are fascinated by throat singing and similar overtone rich sounds like the Australian didgeridoo.
Here is the clip of Kongar-ol Ondar and the Tuvan homus Jew's harp.


Saturday, January 15, 2005

Spring Thing

This might seem very popular science weekend project-ish, but I have been enjoying the tools on puzzlephotos, so I have a few gadget related blogs in mind, including this one.

I have installed too many door closers in my time, most are finicky and either take too long to close the door, or don't really latch it right, or slam it anyway eventually as the hyraulics fade, or the screws loosen. Well, I found an elegant solution for our back door here the last time a closer croaked. Not for every door, but perfect for this one.

Just a simple spring mounted vertically to the jamb, positioned to stretch as the door is opened. It's gentle, does the job and is out of the way. The spring could be adjusted by changing the mounting point.
______

Back Door Spring - makes an elegant door closer.


Friday, January 07, 2005

Pogo Stick owners manual?

Our family was reminiscing about stilts and pogo sticks that we over-used as kids, but Martha, as expected, did us one better. Not only does she still have her pogo stick from the old days, but she has the spare parts envelope with instructions that came with it! My attitude would have been, if you can't figure out what to do with the cotter pin, or had to read instructions (for goodness sake) to use the Pogo, you were out of luck. No healthful exersise for you!

Monday, December 13, 2004

TubaChristmas

I had a new musical-social experience last week. TubaChristmas 2004. I was encouraged into it by a friend, who wouldn't let me use the excuse that I am not good enough, joking that nobody would know if I was off or not, among 200 other tubas! About 5 months ago, I got a used Baritone horn, or euphonium, which is sort of a baby tuba. I thought I could learn the fingerings fairly quickly, and it is in the same range and uses about the same mouthpiece and music as my trombone. It turned out to be tougher than I thought, and I got through the beginner stage fine, but really have a tough time when things get faster or more advanced. But I had gotten to the point that I can play the basic stuff, and I thought, "How hard can Christmas carols be?" Well they kept me jumping, that's for sure.

TubaChristmas is a national thing
, occurring in more cities every year, organized locally, usually one per state in December, and promoted as a free public concert. I know there was one in Rockefeller Center, NY the day after ours in Essex Connecticut,because I met someone who was in it. The participants all play some size or shape of the tuba family, from giant double basses, to Sousaphones, to baritones and more rare configurations like double-bell euphoniums (euphonia?) . Four part harmony starts at low and goes down. What a great sound, though. Well, it turned out there were only ~100 Tubas, but still a feast for the brass lover's ear.

Did I mention it was held in an unheated old railroad warehouse in the restored train complex in Essex? People who had come to ride the old trains heard the music and wandered in.
=======================================

Sunday, December 05, 2004

College age Sea Monkeys?

A posting on Fragments From FLoyd gives me another reason to doubt the flexibility, sense of humor or at least the appreciation of life of the next generation. Fred, professor of biology in Virginia (and so much more), did not describe this incident to disparage the students, but as a tongue-in-cheek failure of his stand-up comedy approach to a class lesson. However, I read more into it.

He enhanced his lessons about "brine shrimp" by relating some tales of the experience and folly that old fogeys like me remember well. These creatures were sold as "Sea Monkeys" in exaggerated ads in the back of comic books and magazines in the 60s and 70s. Great fun. Maybe we didn't really believe the hype, but in ordering these or planning to get them, we visualized the little faces and personalities of the mail order pets as depicted in the ads. Anyhow, Fred's college kids didn't get it, or they got it and were bored.

I don't know about you, but I lived breathed and cheered for professors with attitudes and stories like this when I was in college. Above and beyond the bland facts and figures. Maybe it was because Allegheny College was quite a strong and advanced liberal arts school, but I remember a lot of great teachers like that, seemingly bursting with enthusiasm for their subjects, especially my first two years (way back then). I loved it. I was sometimes a lousy student, but I loved it.

I still have a vivid image of Dr. Paul Cares (gee, I will have to look up his name to be sure) that I had for a History of the Far East. He was a large man, deep and powerful voice, heartily explaining the chapters we had supposedly read for that class.

In this particular lecture, he was illustrating that habits and cultural differences between nationalities could not be easily set aside, and are easily misunderstood. He told the story of a wealthy man in the US who had an Asian chef in his household serving him loyally for years. He knew the man prepared meat on the floor, in that typical baseball catcher-like crouch position, that looks so uncomfortable to most of us. So he decided to get him a large butcher block table as a gift -- hopefully to make his job easier. Of course the chef thanked him profusely for the new table, but when he used it, he hopped up on the block, crouched down and worked as usual. When he told that story, Cares was animated, eyes sparking with humor, arms waving, cheeks and jowls in motion, totally immersed in the story. I still remember it after about 40 years. Not boring, that's for sure.



Wednesday, December 01, 2004

CADD drawings show their age.

The year 1947. The task: an architect drew by hand with artistic stroke and tedious detail the plans - multiple pages 36" x 48" for the dam and associated buildings, occupied and controlled by the Army Corps of Engineers.
The Place: Buggs Island Lake - the huge reservoir on the N.C. - VA border that flooded untold acres and provided water for the region with watersports and vacation property a byproduct.

The year 1995: I was involved in training the army personnel to scan and convert those plans and others to images to be stored for archive on computer media. It sounds simple, but making the whole system work, from the hardware interface, with wide scanners, plotters, and PCs, plus the the software control and image format options made it quite a complicated process.

I squirreled away and somehow still have a couple of the images of a cross section of the main dam, with the power turbines, dam construction, and main headquarters building. There is much more to see on the complete drawings, with the great handwork, but here are a couple of clips that are interesting. They show some of the engineering but also a bit of social history common in 1947 Virginia. Check out the separate facilities on the third clip.


Title Block area for the Powerhouse section.


Cross section of the dam and turbines.


I was in this building in 1995, and I don't remember the rooms being marked this way.

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Wayne Green

In the first few years of the Microcomputer revolution, 1980's, I had the honor and curiosity of being hired by Wayne Green of New Hampshire. I was in Virginia, and through an ad and a trip to N.H. I got a job selling software (Instant Software) and publications (80Micro, etc.) to the first computer stores in the mid Atlantic area. I got to meet and talk with Wayne Green, who was a bigger-than-life professorial man, who told us stories of how he had met with"the Steves" (Wozniak and Jobs) in their garage before they made it big, and how he had started Byte Magazine from scratch, only to have his wife and his lawyer run off together and through a maneuver stole the entire operation from him. He took it in stride and started up a whole new empire, including magazines and specialty software. He was a true innovator and entrepreneur , and thought BIG and smart (mensa). I was part of his first outbound sales force, that lasted a little more than a year. Exciting time, back when the computers available, mainly for pioneers and nerds, were Exidy Sorcerer, TRS80, Apple II, Timex Sinclair, Atari400, Comodore Pet, Altair, etc. Wayne Green was always a controversial figure, first nationally notable with his 73 Magazine, his Ham radio magazine in which his editorials were the most fun, informative and clever platform, forcing new ideas on a traditional bunch of CQ-ers. For instance he reasoned (argued) that the Morse code requirement for new licenses should be dumped, since nobody used it anymore, and new users were diminishing. The old timers were mad and resisted because, "If I had to learn it, the new guys will too."

Over the years, Wayne Green hung in there, sprouting new ventures and selling them later to other publishing outfits, writing and traveling, doing anything his heart desired, it seems. As his scientific and opinion editorials were sought out in the early years, and his intellect brought followers all along the way.

He developed a more controversial philosophy in his more recent years, some would put it in the conspiracy theory arena. There were mystical ideas,mixed with longevity hints, very far out predictions and explanations of things in the world with much more depth and information than the average person can handle. When I read a piece he wrote 5 years ago, I was shocked, because it seemed that he grasped and believed every wacky thing I had ever seen anywhere. He has predictably been a frequent guest of the Art Bell, George Noore (sp?) overnight conspiracy radio crowd, putting an unfortunate triviality to this man who has had an extraordinarily interesting and productive life.
I noticed on his website a listing of "Things I have done" that is worth a scan. Many people would find it a full life to have a few lines of this list in their memories.
  • piloted a nuclear attack submarine 800 feet under the Pacific ocean.
  • piloted an Air Force C5B (it's bigger than a 747).
  • climbed the Great Wall of China
  • visited the Chinese terra cotta army in Xian.
  • operated a ham station from the famed American Embassy in Tehran.
  • operated from the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
  • operated for two weeks from King's Hussein's palace in Amman, Jordan.
  • visited the lost city of Petra in Jordan.
  • scuba dived in the Red Sea.
  • visited 133 countries (so far).
  • helped new technologies such as cellular telephones. personal computers, and compact discs to grow into major industries.
  • represented the US at an international communications conference.
  • represented New Hampshire for Governor Sununu at a governor's conference in Halifax.
  • served on the New Hampshire Economic Development Commission.
  • been a president of the Peterborough NH Chamber of Commerce.
  • been on the board of directors of billion dollar IDG corporation.
  • been a professional psychologist.
  • had over 1,000 (long) editorials published - so far.
  • started first digital communications magazine in 1951, (Amateur Radio Frontiers).
  • started the first microcomputer magazine (Byte). )
  • started the first computer magazine devoted to a single computer (80 Micro - for the TRS-80)
  • started the first Apple magazine (InCider).
  • started the first Commodore magazine (Run).
  • started the first laptop computer magazine (Pico).
  • started one of the first personal computer software companies (Instant Software).
  • opened computer software stores - eventually sold a national chain of 58 stores.
  • while in college started a broadcasting station (WRPI) which is now the largest student activity.
  • served on the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Board of Overseers and RPI Council.
  • served as the First Executive in Residence at RPI.
  • served as a consultant for the RPI Business Incubator - which won the 1996 prize as the best in the country.
  • been a licensed amateur radio operator as W2NSD since 1940.
  • pioneered amateur radio repeaters since 1969, starting with WRLAAB on Mt. Monadnock NH.
  • established amater radio in Jordan in 1970 and wrote their rules and regulations.
  • supplied and installed the first repeater in Jordan, J-Y73, in 1973.
  • helped radio amateurs pioneer FM, radio Teletype, single sideband, and slow scan TV.
  • bounced amateur radio signals off the Moon from the big dish at the Arecibo Observatory, PR.
  • been editing and publishing amateur radio magazines for 47 years.
  • a state-of-the-art digital recording studio.
  • four record labels and produced over 150 CDs.
  • helped re-popularize ragtime music and personally knows all of the top ragtime performers.
  • started 25 successful publications in the radio, computer and music fields.
  • published over 100 books.
  • wrote one of the first books on digital communications.
  • been on an African hunting safari.
  • visited the ruins of Ba'albek in Lebanon, the Queen of Sheba's water catchments in Aden.
  • visited the Pyramids, the Sphynx. the ruins in Athens, the Taj Mahal and Katmandu.
  • visited the head-hunter longhouses in Sarawak.
  • helped organize and lead trade groups of around 250 people to yearly electronic shows in Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong.
  • given keynote addresses to radio, educational, computer, and music conferences.
  • helped invent a new kind of loud speaker - borrowed $1,000 on my car to start a manufacturing company and within two and a half years it became the largest speaker manufacturer in the country with seven factories.
  • performed in The Mikado and Pirates of Penzance in high school
  • served as president of radio clubs in high school and college.
  • served in Navy 1942-1946 in WWII - electronic technician on USS Drum SS-228 (which is on display at Mobile, Alabama) for five war patrols.
  • been a radio engineer and announcer in North Carolina, Florida and Virginia.
  • been chief cameraman at WPIX-TV (11) in NYC.
  • produced and directed network TV shows in Dallas and Cleveland.
  • a reputation as a gourmet cook.
  • served as president of Porsche Club of America.
  • raced my Porsche on the Nurburgring and Solitude race tracks in Germany.
  • both driven and navigated in many national SCCA car rallies.
  • served as a founder and first secretary of American Mensa.
  • a Ph.D. in Entrepreneurial Science.
  • lectured on entrepreneurialism at Yale, Boston University, Case Western, Babson College, RPL and many other colleges.
  • been on the first commercial airline flight between Philadelphia and New York in 1927.
  • flown with father since 1922.
  • served on the FCC's National Industry Advisory Committee (NIAC).
  • served on the FCC's Long Range Planning Committee (LRPC).
  • testified before a Congressional hearing on the music industry.
  • had the usual toys: airplane, Porsche, yacht, Jaguar, Mercedes 600 Pullman limosine.
  • worked on a Guggenheim grant on a color organ for the Guggenheim Museum on 5th Avenue.
  • graduated Bliss Electrical SchooL Tacoma Padc MD.
  • attended Radio Materiel School on Treasure Island, San Francisco and graduated as ETM2/c.
  • served for five war patrols on SS-228 USS Dnun, made ETMI/c.
  • taught electronics at Submarine School, New London CT.
  • organized and run successful mail order Elm Stamp Company at age 12.
  • sung in St. Pauls Church choir as boy soprano.
  • sung in Philharmonic Choir of Brooklyn.
  • sung in Erasmus High School Choral Club.
  • pioneered the 6-meter ham band as the first New York City station on that band.
  • run a 6-meter beacon station for several years in cooperation with the Radio Amateur Scientific Observations (RASO) program.
  • for years had a VHF/UHF station on Mt. Monadnock NH; regularly heard for over 600 miles.
  • been Excutive Secretary of the Music Research Foundation, Madison Avenue, N.Y.
  • worked for GE as a test engineer on Army radio equipment.
  • been an engineer at Airborne Instrument Laboratories in Mineola NY developing radar equip.
  • tried marijuana in 1948 to see what it was like.
  • tried LSD in 1960 to see what that was like.
  • drunk with shipmates on liberty while in the Navy. Have seldom drunk since.
  • tried smoking as a teenager, thought it was stupid. Ignored peer pressure.
  • know the real dope on Amelia Earhart's last trip.
  • been convinced that NASA had to have faked all of the moon landings.
  • driven from Brooklyn NY to Peterborough NH (250 miles), averaging 100 mph one night - including a gas stop.
  • interesting friends such as Barry Goldwater, King Hussein, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and Rod McKuen.
  • been convinced that with proper nutrition and avoiding poisons we ran dependably live to over 100.
  • ridden Starlit Night, the Ringling Brothers top show horse.
  • a professorship of horsemanship and taught riding instructors.
  • a Hubbard Dianetic Auditor certificate and has processed over 100 patients, with some remarkable successes.
  • swum the three mile length of Coney Island many times.
  • investigated crop circles and a UFO hovering over a house in nearby Francistown NH.
  • Other than all that I've been taking it easy and having a great time.

Isn't that amazing? rgb

Monday, November 22, 2004

Sporting spirit?

I am not a regular sports fan, but I probably am like a huge block of people in the country, the fall baseball fans, taking interest in the playoffs and the series only, even though they have a casual favorite or interest in the regular season. I cherry pick from the sports smorgasbord, (to mix my metaphors). Basketball is even less on my radar screen, mainly because it has become such a physical game, relying on slam dunks and push push push hubris based contest of monster players. I sincerely hope and believe it is not a racial thing going on with me, but the dominance of the game by these huge muscular monster players does not make it more attractive to watch. It just is not interesting to me. For instance since I moved to Connecticut, I have loved watching and following women's college bball, with a national champ team up here. The girls are athletic but otherwise regular people, you feel that you might meet on the street. Great fun and rivalries, and skill levels more like I remember from high school. I know it's not fair to compare them to NBA players, but it is a big difference. It's a totally different sport.


This current NBA brawl controversy shines a spotlight on the issue that I think really is at the heart of this. These athletes have been plucked in many cases (not all) from a very crude and low point of culture which values fighting for your imagined honor, defending your manhood no matter what. Charles Barkley was interviewed about this. He has proven he will say his mind without fear of holding back. But probably reflects what others would say and think, but hesitate to say. He said that a player who has been hit or thrown at, or whatever by a fan has a right to "beat the hell out of them" no matter what "to defend his manhood.". He has NO concept of a gentlemanly, lofty alternative position of civilized men who rise above things by turning away from something like this, in everyday life let alone in a player/fan situation. (How a drunk fan throwing a drink, or a punch, or a cuss threatens someone's manhood, It's not clear).


This ghetto/macho "I'm gonna be badder than you, mf" mentality is embedded in these offending players probably because of their upbringing and background. Just because they are plucked out and paid three million a year to be stars doesn't change their mindsets overnight. Who knows, maybe it is this macho drive that makes their success in such a physically driven sport possible. In any case, it should not be tolerated, and our society should make a statement that it will not be tolerated.

It looks like NBA has done this with suspensions, very responsible actions, but the silly defenders of the players are coming out of the woodwork. They range from players, to announcers to pundits. Oh, they say first that the players were wrong and all that, then they launch into a defense, saying the fans started it, and they should be accountable too, and you can't blame these guys (even thought they made a mistake) for being worked up, etc. Baloney! Yes, if a fan crossed the line they should be ejected, fined, arrested or whatever if appropriate. But not by the players! What nonsense. And it's not just that the fans are paying millions to see these players, just because it is the civilized thing to do. The fans must be dealt with by security or whatever, geesh! Even if it can't be quickly done. The players should turn the other cheek, run from it, rise above it, take it like a man, not defend it like a pseudo macho man. Period.





Friday, November 05, 2004

Community Band

Here are a couple of shots of our Farmington Valley Band. It is sometimes a little bigger group than this, but is always quite the archetype spirited band. Sam, the director has saved hundreds of old arrangements from the old bands, some sounding like the old two step band 78's I have heard. I only wish I were a stronger player. There are many in the group with extraordinary ability. I love the band for this and other reasons, since I always have to stretch and play at the top end of my ability to keep up. I am not expert at all, but I am proud and glad that I can play most of the stuff along with, and say %90 of, for instance, a guy who was in a military band for 20 years, playing daily, now in several bands, some for pay, and plays daily.

The stories of the players in groups I have been in are interesting, and would be a subject for a book. (note to self) A couple of examples:

Chester plays the Euphonium. He is in his 80's and is quite deaf, and can see better now since his cataract fix last year. But what a fantastic sound on the horn! Three years ago I witnessed him get spontaneous applause after a soaring solo in a rehearsal of a 50 piece band - from the musicians! His tone and singing-like sound is truly a mystical thing. Unfortunately in that short period from then to now, he has slipped a bit, but still better than most. He was a butcher years ago, then continued his musical activities and played in most every band and some orchestras in the area for fourty years, actually making a living from music at some point. Now he is in the Farmington Valley Band.

Mark plays the clarinet. Mark can also play whatever instrument you would hand him - and very well, not just a tune or two. He also has a resonating wonderfully deep operatic quality speaking or singing voice that can get the attention of a hall without a microphone. I know he was a music major, studied voice and instruments, and I don't know why he didn't go professional. I plan to talk to him some time. I do know that it is perhaps harder for anyone to make a living in music today than ever before, especially classical. Mark can play a flurry from a classic, then switch and play a screaming jazzy solo from Woody Herman with class. Now he is in the Farmington Valley Band.

However, the band is a community band. It has had teens in the band, retirees, mediocre players, hobbyists as well as the superstars because it is designed to be for and of the public. As long as you can keep up, it seems to be ok. But this band has a reputation of an attitude and style of above average stuff. I'm lucky to be able to keep up so far.


Our concert at the Thomaston Opera House. What a great performance! We seem to rise to the occasion and play at our best on stage.


Dave and John, in front, are playing 1st (man are they good), I play 2nd, Ken and Alex are on 3rd trombone. Here I'm playing my same silver King Trombone that Dad bought for me in Jr. High!

Thursday, November 04, 2004

anticryptography

Anticryptography is a new word for me, but it refers to those many times stupid iconographic signs that are supposed to tell us something where at first blush, a word or two would do. The idea of anticryptography is to assume no prior knowledge in communication, which means independent of ability to have language skill. (and some say a lack of common sense)
On the other hand, I guess I can see that Jane Doe would be more likely to understand (then ignore) this than a lengthy notice on the back of a Wall-Mart cart:



One of the first of these that I made fun of was when the on-off switches on computers started using | O for on and off - I guess digital for 1 and zero, but to me that takes more interpretation. Imagine, say a third world peasant would not know what "on-off" meant on his wireless computer (right), but he immediately might recognize the anticryptographic sign | O .


To take this one step further, the first Pioneer spacecraft that left the solar system had a plaque attached to an antenna as a message to . . . . well it had a message to be read by who or what-ever.
If you want to see what the imagery is supposed to mean to the aliens, check here..


This happened quite a few years ago, and today there would not be unreasonable criticism of things, or course ¦;¬), but at the time, some feminists complained that only the hand of the man was raised and not that of the woman. In response to this criticism, a similar image included on the Voyager Golden Record showed the woman with her hand raised.

Thursday, October 28, 2004

O IM A GOOD OLD REBEL

The Civil War was not back that far. I am reminded that the Beebe house I live in was built in the 1830's. This Connecticut mill town here was going strong thirty years after that,during the Civil War, putting out woolen fabric for the Yankees, no doubt.

Elsewhere, just after the war, there were some gloomy ex-rebels who clung to the old southern cause that they fought so hard for. I scanned a reprint that I got from a Virginia friend, it is a true folk song that was sung by a weary rebel just after the war, not too happy about the USA.