Pigs, Tigers and Doughboys

The upper Midwest is still in the grips of heavy flooding from the Mississippi river. Twenty levees have been overrun this week according to the Army Corps of Engineers. Two levees broke in Illinois today, flooding the town of Meyer. The flood waters have receded in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Behind them is a millions of dollars of damage to 10 square miles of the city.

Quincy, Illinois and Hannibal, Missouri, are two culturally significant towns in the area. Both are threatened by rising waters. I have experience in that area during the the Great Flood of 1993. During the summer that year, I volunteered to may sand bags to reinforce the levees. I urge anyone who reads this and lives near the area, please do what you can to help if you are not in the area affected.


Tiger Woods was able to secure victory at the US Open on Monday. He played 91 holes total to achieve this feat against Rocco Mediate, a 45-year-old golfer who has never won a major and hasn't won a tournament in six years. Prior to the tournament, Tiger Woods had undergone his third surgery on his left knee. He has overstressed his left knee over the years. When he wants more power, i.e. torque, he "snaps" his left knee to make his hips turn faster. This has enabled him to make those stunning drives that he his known for, particularly off the tee.


After the Herculean effort to win the 2008 US Open, which many were comparing to Francis Ouimet's 1913 win US Open (though this comparison was more apt for Rocco Mediate), Woods was found to have torn his ACL and incurred two stress fractures. This makes all those grimaces witnessed during Monday's initial 18 holes telling: Tiger was beating himself up.

Woods is likely going to be out for the remainder of the season. With a tear to the ACL it may be career ending. Love him, hate him or just apathetic, Woods affect on Golf is similar to Ouimet's. In fact, it is likely that Woods would never have played golf if not for that win 95 years ago in Massachusetts. Woods brought many spectators into golf's arena. The interest may linger but some see this as the end of golf's recent renaissance. I'm not willing to declare this. I think interest may continue past any career-ending injury.

But if this is the end, I have to thank Tiger Woods for being a champion in mind, body and spirit. And for bringing the sport to the level of popularity it currently enjoys. Thank You!

(But I think you'll be back)

The President of the United States honored the last living US born WWI veteran today. Frank Woodruff Buckles was born February 1, 1901 in Missouri. When the US entered the war in 1917, Buckles was only 16. He was rejected by the Marines for his weight. So, he signed up for the army and lied about his age claiming he was 21. He served as an ambulance driver in France and after Armistice, he escorted German POWs home. He was discharged in 1920.

After living from 1936 till 1938 in Germany, and seeing the beginnings of Shoa (Holocaust), he relocated to the Philippines. There, during World War II, he was captured by the Japanese and was a prisoner for three years.

His portrait will hang in the US World War I museum as a reminder of our last living link to the Great War. He was awarded the légion d'honneur from then President of France Jacque Chirac in 2003. He has also been after many requests, been accorded the honor of being buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

At the end of ABC's news at 5:30, they had the brains enough to show footage of a rainbow that had just happened during the broadcast. I have to say that is awesome! In the tough times we are going through with everything, it is nice to see something so beautiful. It reminds us all that the simplest things can be some of the most beautiful (not to mention, free). I also may not bea religious, but rainbows are symbolic of hope and remind us to do just that.

Sir Prince William!

Oddly enough, there's lots of news. For a Tuesday.

Hamas and Israel agree to a cease fire according to the Beeb. CNN reports that a truce is near completion and would go into affect in as little as three days. The article on the BBC notes that Israel is still "looking to see if this is serious".

Hamas came to power after elections in January 2006 displacing Fatah. In June of the same year, Corporal Galid Shalit. a dual French-Israeli citizen, was abducted. After this, Israel threatened the Palestinians by saying that the "sky will fall" if he was harmed. Many negotiations have been made over the past two years. Even the Catholic Church of Gaza and former U.S. President Jimmy Carter have tried to negotiate for Shalit's release.

Since the rise of Hamas and the kidnapping Shalit, Israel has restricted supplies of gasoline, diesel and electricity to Gaza, limited the amount of food and other goods entering the strip and made it virtually impossible for manufacturers and farmers in Gaza to export anything to the outside world.

Israeli officials have said these measures are intended to pressure Hamas to stop its members and other factions from firing mortars and rockets into Israel.

Prince William has been made a member of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. His official title will be Royal Knight Companion. The Order was established in 1348 by King Edward III. The numbers of the Order are limited. There are only 24 Companions.

William is in the midst of completing two months of intense Naval training. Next Week he will begin to serve on the HMS Iron Duke in its patrols of the Carribean.

The President of France, Nikolas Sarkozy, has announced that France will rejoin the Command of Nato. Then President Charles de Gaulle pulled France out of the Command structure in 1966 in a bid for independence from the US dominated Western treaty. With this announcement comes also the news that 50,000 defense jobs will be cut and the Intelligence community will be boosted.

Special Effects master Stan Winston died yesterday. He had struggled with Mulitple Myeloma for the past seven years. He recently worked on Iron Man and was also contributing to projects such as GI Joe, Avatar, and a forth coming chapter in the Terminator series of films. Stan Winston was known for intergrating practical effects (sometimes known as in-camera effects) with the the more recently developed Computer Generated Images, or CGI. He has been awarded four Academy Awards for his efforts in such projects as Aliens, Terminator 2: Judgement Day and Jurassic Park.

This looks like a job for Superman!!

There plenty of things to discuss. I have taken a great deal of time away from this blog due to things that are beyond my control. Needless to say, I'm glad to back blogging. I will not be posting me World War II blogs in their entirety here. I will also be starting a new blog about Internet Radio.

Recently, I switched from Windows Vista which is a ghastly excuse for an OS to Linux. Specifically, I went running to Ubuntu. I am happy to be rid of Windows at the moment but time will tell if Ubuntu is the right OS for me. There are compliance issues to resolve.

So, to move on and keep this short. It should not be news to anyone that Hillary is out of the race. Now we can get down to ripping Obama and McCain to shreds. May the last man standing be worthy of the office! It seems that things are getting considerably worse everyday. This is why I'm not really blogging. What do I have to blog about? There are more crises going in this country then I have blogs for! And I don't think I can add anything to the vitriol that is already stewing.

Since I'm not going to add to it, I'm going to just make a not of something. Seventy years ago (technically in April), something different popped onto the pop culture landscape. Was it a bird? Was it a plane? no, it was Superman!
Boy could we use you now!

The man in the red, yellow and blue kick started a new genre of storytelling and solidified a medium. There have been many superheroes since Superman that are as diverse as the writers who dream them up. But Superman was the quintessential superhero and many are variations on the theme.


I also want to note that from 1938 until some time into World War II saw the United States at the height of its pop art. Music, Film, Illustration and even photography, had some its finest hours during these years. Some might theorize that hard times make us hope for a better tomorrow but since we still have to live with the pain of today, a little escapism couldn't hurt.

Yeshiva Shooting

Very confusing information coming from Jerusalem. According to witnesses, one, possibly two, infiltrators entered the dining hall in a Yeshiva at around dinner time Israeli time and opened fire. At this time, the numbers of deceased is misleading with the number listed at different sources anywhere from 4 to 7. There are unconfirmed reports that one of the gunmen (if there were two) was wearing some form of explosive. This happened around 1.45 Eastern time. According to Jerusalem Post, the school in question is the Merkaz Harav Yeshiva located in the Kiryat Moshe neighborhood, a very religious neighborhood with many yeshivas.. The article also states that approximately 40 people are wounded and that the two gunmen are dead. CNN is reporting that there is celebration in Gaza over the attack. It has been a relatively long time since Jerusalem has witnessed incidents of this magnitude.

Though Palestinians are celebrating the crime, with intense gunfire near the Prime Minister's home, it is unknown who the gunmen were or whether this was politically motivated. Israel had launched forces in Gaza last week but withdrew them on Tuesday. There has also been no claim of responsibility. Though it may appear to be clear that is a retaliatory strike against Israel, it may not be. It may be a school shooting like the ones we have suffered through here in the US as well as in other nations of the world.

Links: Ynet, Jpost

Earlier today, here in the United States in Times Square, New York, there was an explosion at an Army recruiting office. Some believe a cyclist is was recorded passing by the office not long before the blast may be involved if not the bomber. The explosion happened at 3.39 Eastern time this morning. No one was injured.

Israeli Army Radio with the Ambulence service backing it up have increased the number of dead to 8. CNN has also just reported that two bombs went off within moments of each other in Baghdad.

臺兒莊會戰

The Battle of Tai'erzhuang began today March 24th. It was part of the larger Battle for Xuzhou that would see its climax in May. This was mostly the Japanese underestimating the fighting spirit of the common rural farmer.

Two Generals Li Zongren and Bai Chongxi had plans to encircle the Japanese forces at
Tai'erzhuang. The Japanese were over confident and overlooked flaws in their plans.

Another Round: Primary & Cartoons










What's Next?

I started listening to different music today. Well, its not altogether different. I've heard it all my life. And to say I'm listening to different music is really an understatement. I listen to anything. But I was listening to the music of my parents. The reason is complex.

Unlike most of my peers, I grew up with heavy doses of
Simon and Garfunkel, the Beatles, Johnny Rivers, the Delfonics, the Beach Boys, the Four Tops and Frank Sinatra. I listened to everything from Doris Day and Bing Crosby, to the early days of Rock like Bill Haley and Buddy Holly to the Everly Brothers and Chuck Berry and beyond to CCR, Hendrix, the Mamas and the Papas and Jefferson Airplane.

My parents songs were the soundtrack of my life before I became more passionate about my own generation's music, namely alternative like Stone Temple Pilots, Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Alice in Chains and Soundgarden, just to name a few that were played on REV 105. Funny, when everyone started getting into the Doors at my school (usually the same kids who dug Charles Manson), I
really wasn't that impressed. I'd been hearing the Doors for a long time. Still, to this day, I can watch one of those stupid informercials for gazillion cds and I know EVERY song like I lived in the era myself. I hadn't listened to them lately. The oldies station around here started playing more 80's stuff which frankly, I'm kind of sick of. They only have like 200 80's songs and I could sing all of them perfectly while being hung upside down with the mzzle of a gun in my mouth. And I might even prefer that than listening to Come on Eileen!!!! Lately, I've actually been into big band and World War II music.

I said the reason was more complex and it is. I go through genres of music in cycles of obsession. This means I obsess about one style or era of music until I can pee it. Then I move on. But its abrupt. First, I begin to listen to old staples. I keep staples lists on my mp3 player for such occasions. Then I might think of something while listening to a staple or something enters my head randomly. Some thing like that happened but again, its more complex. I'll tell ya the song later.

First, I have to admit, I'm gratified by the increase in political participation this election. It's about time. And I have to admit, if they wasn't a distasteful war, then we wouldn't be so fired up. But I sometimes wonder what direction are we headed? It seems that we are getting more divided as things progress. The last time this many people were fired about politics, politicians died.


So, this brings me to the fear that even with all our hope for change and so much involvement, I just can't think that the upheaval in this country will end. In fact, I believe that we are on the precipice of the worst of it all. Yeah, I'm telling you getting George W. Bush out of the White House is only the start. There are more problems in this country. The uninsured, illegal immigration, corporatism.... the inequities our forbears have given us is now inadequate. The world they built for us is now outdated.

I'm not saying there's going to be a civil war. There may be fighting in the streets. If there are any National Guardsmen to call up, they'll be brought in to restore order. Bottom line: Things are gonna get worse before they get better. And its kind of predictable. Generations are cyclical. Some would consider me a Generation X. If that is so, it may explain why I, until a year ago, was incensed by the reluctance of kids to get involved in the political struggle. It seemed so many were unwilling to turn of the iPods and interact with other people. And those that were active were so intolerant of other points of view that they irrelevant.

I found a website that explains a bit about the cycles of generations. In a way, everything really does keep turning. There are 4 type of generations: Prophets, Nomads, Heroes and Artists. It should come as no surprise that the Generation that fought the Nazis was Heroes. The following generation after was the Silent Generation. It explains that there are two major events during these cycles: a spiritual one and a secular one. After the secular one (WWII) there is an euphoria. After this euphoria there is a Spiritual event. The generation of my parents was the Baby Boomer. The spiritual event they went through was the 60's. I come close to falling into the succeeding generation: Generation X. I find myself falling more increasingly into the Heroic cycle that my younger brother is in. This may be that I emotionally matured slower than my peers.

Supposedly, there is a large secular event that should arrive somewhere between 2010 and 2020. With this thought in mind, I assert that things will get worse before they get better. My nephews will likely be a part of the next Artistic generation which will likely be silent. My niece is almost through high school which places her firmly in the Heroic cycle. I guess this idea of generational cycles really places us as actors within eras with little control of how we act or think. But I think it is less exacting.

The reason I'm bringing all this up is because we repeat history but are we even sure what history we are repeating? We are headed toward a cycle not unlike that facing the GIs who fought World War II. They endured an economic depression and then pulled themselves together to fight a terrible and destructive war. We are facing similar dilemmas. Is World War III soon?

So we are headed toward something terrible but have no control over it. Hopefully we will be able to confront it. The song I was listening to that got me thinking about this was "What a Wonderful
World" which always conjures up images of Vietnam...sans psychedelia. It doesn't hurt that I'm listening the The Who's "Won't get fooled again", all 8 minutes and 30 glorious seconds of it!!!!

Anyways, if any of that made sense they yay!! But I think I rambled a fair bit.

This is the site that outlines the generational cycles were are unwitting participants in.

This site is for an online radio station called Radio Vietnam which plays songs from the Vietnam Era.