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30 of our most Recent Postings:
- Legacy Journal: Current
- Legacy Journal: Friday: Family First
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Two Step: Fire Alarm or Frozen by Fear
- Legacy Journal: Monday, the First Day of Fall
- Legacy Journal: The Sunday Sermon: Economist Moral Hazard
- Legacy Journal:Laidback Saturday
- Legacy Journal: Friday Final
- Legacy Journal: Friday Fish Wrap.
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Time for Truth Telling: 9/11, the Magazine, and the True Myth Makers.
- Legacy Journal: Wednesday Time to Weed out the Word Wars.
- Legacy Journal: Tuesday Tipoff
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Surprises
- Legacy Journal: Saturday Samplings
- Legacy Journal: Friday Fifth: Change, Cultural Divide, B&B, Google Chrome, and Arctic Drilling
- Legacy Journal: Wicked Wednesday
- Legacy Journal:Trifecta: Olympic Games, Democratic Convention, Quad State visit
- Legacy Journal: Olympic Swimming Prep
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal: B&B on the Erie Canal
- Legacy Journal: Summer Swing
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Thoughts: Twitter, Triathlons for Horses, and Obama One on Tour
- Legacy Journal: High Finance, Bad Loans, and Banking Reform
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Chatter x 3: ABC, NBC, and CBS
- Legacy Journal: Monroe County: Politics, the Carousel, and the Onterio Beach
- Legacy Journal: 50th Malin High School Reunion
- Legacy Journal: 2008 mid-point
- Legacy Journal: Walking with Religion---Walking with Nature
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Supplement
- Legacy Journal: Would you believe that ----?
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[ Tuesday, August 12, 2008 12:30 ]
Legacy Journal: Olympic Swimming Prep
Section:
Parks & Recreation
Summary:
The Rochester, NY Parks and Recreation Dept has a citywide summer swimming progress that includes lessons for kids at the Genesee Valley Aquatic Center.
Main:
Emma and Tessa Little are getting an early start on the Olympic Games of 2028.
More:
Footnotes:
Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Tuesday: • Family: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Swimming: • Swimming Olympics: • Training: • Young at Heart: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Thursday, July 24, 2008 10:13 ]
Legacy Journal: Thursday Thoughts: Twitter, Triathlons for Horses, and Obama One on Tour
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
“Winning may not be everything, but losing has little to recommend itself” D. Cal. Senator, Dianne Feinstein.
* Twitter seems to be a kind of miniblog for quick social networking for device packing mobile professionals who expect instant access to ....?
** Eventing at venues like the recent Stewart Equestrian Trials in western upstate New York, on the other hand, is basic athletic competition. Dressage, Cross Country, and Stadium Jumping are the three classic events spread over three days. That level of horse and rider interaction is the real deal. Animated mustang cartoon fantasy fiction like Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron out of Dream Works by Hollywood, is at best misleading, at worst, childish. The stock characterization of pure wild mustangs, pristine noble natives, and profoundly evil wranglers, cavalrymen and railroad builders is standard drivel.
*** Stock characterization and standardized drivel has been the story of the early U.S. national campaign to date. The pace will quicken after the party conventions.
Main:
The Obama camp may use Twitter, but do not expect to see the campaign abandon the jet, O one , for time on horse back any time soon. Meanwhile, the candidate is taking a quickie course in geopolitics , international security, and global trade. Attempts to correct and clarify misstatements ( “poor choice of words) on Jerusalem, the recent success of the U.S. military in Iraq, and an over simplification of American interests in the Middle East are not reassuring to those who have long worked these and other issues.
More:
Footnotes:
Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Thursday: • Changing Course: • Conventional Wisdom: • Culture Clash: • Fast Facts: • Where?: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Language: • Spin: • New York: • Hamlets: • Really? A Reality Check: • Talking Points: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Tuesday, June 03, 2008 07:20 ]
Legacy Journal: Water: the Wilds of Wyoming and Beijing, China---A western perspective.
Section:
Sports
Summary:
What do the sparse wastelands of Wyoming and the Olympic architecture of urban Bejing, China have in common?
Main:
Well, to some folks based in and writing for publication from New York City, both places are foreign, exotic, strange, and not easy to understand, a visit not withstanding.
* Take the current report about a spring of wet weather in Wyoming. The nytimes finds that newsworthy and a bit unusual. So, now it is now possible for trees to grow, meadow larks to sing, prong horn antelope and cattle to graze. Meanwhile, there may even be a hay crop from down by the creek. No wonder Jackie Kennedy wanted her son to get out of town for the summer and get some seasoning and common sense experience on a friend’s working Wyoming cattle ranch.
* And then there is the story of the National Aquatics Center, “The Water Cube” in Bejing the site of the 42 swimming events over two week during the 2008 Olympic Games. The place cost over $100 million in contributed funds from non mainland Chinese sources, was designed by an Australian firm, seats 17,000 and has a light weight, semi-translucent, petroleum based ,Teflon like ceiling. So, what is not to like about that?. A writer for the current New Yorker magazine finds much to comment on including the Chinese way of doing urban planning and residential relocation.
Apparently, some writers need to take a lesson from Frederick West Lander and get out of town and into the field of battle more often.
BTW: Frederick West Lander was an eastern engineer who went went west with the Army and later surveyed for the railroads as they snaked their way across the county’s arrid and hostile trans Mississippi frontier in a series of fits and starts.
Ball’s Bluff ( The Battle of Ball’s Bluff during the Civil War on the Potomic River near Washington.)
(by Frederick West Lander)
Aye, deem us proud, for we are more
Than proud of all our mighty dead;
Proud of the bleak and rock-bound shore,
A crowned oppressor cannot tread.
Proud of each rock, and wood, and glen;
Of every river, lake and plain;
Proud of the calm and earnest men
Who claim the right and the will to reign.
Proud of the men who gave us birth,
Who battled with the stormy wave
To sweep the red man from the earth,
And build their homes upon their grave.
Proud of the holy summer morn
They traced in blood upon its sod;
The rights of freemen yet unborn;
Proud of their language and their God.
Proud that beneath our proudest dome
And round the cottage-cradled hearth
There is a welcome and a home
For every stricken race on earth.
Proud that yon slowly sinking sun
Saw drowning lips grow white in prayer,
O’er such brief acts of duty done,
As honor gathers from despair.
Pride, it is our watchword; “clear the boats”
“Holmes, Putnam, Bartlett, Peirson-Here”
And while this crazy wherry floats
“Let’s save our wounded”, cries Revere.
Old State—some souls are rudely sped --
This record for thy Twentieth Corps --
Imprisoned, wounded, dying, dead,
It only asks, “Has Sparta more?”
More:
Footnotes:
Amazing: • Boot Camp: • Business and Trade: • Calendar: • Tuesday: • Climate: • Global Warming: • Culture Clash: • Popular Culture: • Earth Sciences:: • Energy: • Oil: • Environment: • Water: • Frontiersmen, Cowboys and Indians: • Going Green: • Heartland: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Media Watch: • Print Journalism: • Nature: • New York: • Cities: • News: • Good News: • Sign of the Times: • Swimming: • Swimming Olympics: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Monday, June 02, 2008 13:13 ]
Legacy Journal: Neurosurgery-- A Short Memoire
Section:
Almanac
Summary:
The Neurosurgery performed today by Dr. Allan H. Friedman at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina on 76 year old Senator Edward Kennedy is yet reminder of the speed of progress in technology and the medical science. The Kennedy also demonstrated that not all medical skill, knowledge and talent is located in Boston and New York City. The public and the press appears to be amazed that the Kennedy brain tumor surgery was carried out with the patient in a wakeful and aware state in the operating room. To the best of our knowledge, no video cameras for Utube clips were in the OR..
In the 60’s Nefzinger was the master of neurosurgery in San Francisco, and John Raaf, MD, PhD of Idaho, Stanford, University of Rochester, the Mayo Clinic and Portland were still Olympian oracles and pioneers in the Pacific Coast region.
Main:
Raaf was a fit sportsman: a boxer, rower, river fisherman, and a formidable squash player who died at the age of 94 in 2000. The psychosurgical procedure of prefrontal lobotomy had long been performed by Raaf and others at the State Hospital near Salem. That is the same procedure performed on one of Kennedy’s sisters in Boston.
Neuro procedures were once to tests of bladder capacity and fortitude. Carotid angiograms were done the residents and burr holes by the residents and tongs for traction were placed by the student clerks.
Iron filing CNS AV malformation thrombosis, patients with cortical atrophy from chronic glue sniffing and a 3d year clinical clerk seizing at night on the Pediatric Service because of an undiagnosed glioma of the brain were part of an eventful year rotating at UCLA Harbor General Hospital.
Yes, progress has been from the good enough to the vastly superior.
More:
Footnotes:
Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Monday: • Fresh Look: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • LaserFocus: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Tuesday, May 13, 2008 11:36 ]
Legacy Journal: Haying in the upper John Day River Valley
Section:
Environment
Summary:
Main:
For the Fisks and the Forrests mid-July in the fifies was a time for three generations to gather and Go Green.
On working cattle ranches in the upper John Day Valley of eastern Oregon, haying season was and is serious business and a heck of a lot of fun.
The Forrest ranch is 4,000 acre spread located just up river to the east of the pioneer village of Prairie City. In its “hayday” “the ranch” was a cow and calf operation that shipped 1200 lb, lean and meaty 2year old grass fat steers to the Portland market or to a buyer from Safeway markets. The deal was usually make on a handshake,
One square mile of the ranch was green irrigated wild natural meadow grass that was mowed, sun dryed, winnow raked into rows, bucked up in bunches, and piled into loose two story high mounds using an overshot stacker. It was kind of a 2 weeks blitzkrieg that was hopefully free of thundershowers. The harvest result became winter fodder and the only feed for the herd of carefully bred Herefords. Home grown, individually selected, broad beamed cows, their gestating calves to be, range bulls imported from Red Bluff, CA, this year’s weaners, and last year’s yearlings were all the beneficiaries of open field winter feedings that were hand pitched daily from a low-rider hay wagon. It was a cycle that was self sustaining, season driven and largely powered by machines that had replaced the preWWII one, two, and four horse powered teams hitched to primitive iron wheeled implements.
Now, rubber shod Ford tractors were fitted with mowing machines and blades that were carefully sharped daily, a canvas canopied WWII jeep pulled the winnow rack, and the power hay bucks, pickup victims of road kill that were rescued, repaired and given new life in the winter shop. darted about the field like hounds fetching rabbits. A big green stationary John Deere diesel was outfitted with a long ponderosa pine fork received the catch for overshot loose hay stacking in the field
The machine operators were mostly family high schoolers who gathered from around the state to bunk out at Uncle Orrin’s ranch, help in the kitchen, feast and put on weight around Auntie Christina’s huge table, man the equipment, and shoot some spirited pool in the basement after the evening chores were finished. My red haired teen age cousin John was an only child, so he particularly benefited from the youthful annual gathering of the youthful hay crew.
One memorable summer, Jimmy Howard , a Prairie City townie, and I were the designated power hay buck jockeys. We had a spirited racing competition. Our cockpit perches were open air, the wind was in our unprotected faces, the bugs between out teeth , and our saddle-like seats were unbelted. The game was to see who could deliver the most hay to the stacker from soggy and slippery ditch banks and from the far fences bordering the fields. The hazards included the ignomy of getting stuck in the mud or running a fork down a gopher hole. The competition continued after dinner around the green felt pool table in ranch house basement with Uncle Orrin quietly and approvingly looking on.
.
His ancient fiddle and his player piano was by that time mute and unused upstairs in the parlor where Strawberry Mountain to the south was framed in a picture window.
The times, they do change. The ranch was a major part of my uncle’s life. He had passed on college to inherit the property from Grandpa Clyde. That was the verbal bargain they made made many years prior and he had no regrets. However, were he alive today, he would be saddened, if not despirited, by recent news. The ranch has been sold by the third generation to the Consolidated Indian Tribes of the Warms Springs out of Madris on the Deschutes River near Billy Chinook Resevoir. The tribe is now the largest private land owners in the state.
More:
Footnotes:
Backgrounder: • Biography: • Black and White: • Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Tuesday: • Chronicles: • Climate: • Northern Exposure: • Culture Clash: • Energy: • Alternative Sources: • Environment: • Water: • Expressions: • Western: • Family: • Features: • Graphic: • Photo: • Video Link: • Fitness: • Food: • Harvest: • Have a Good Day!: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Keystone Concepts: • Memory Lane: • Mile Post: • Oregon: • Perpetual Green: • Show and Tell: • Tall Tales: • Traditions: • Transitions: • Values: • Voice: • Original: • Warriors: • Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Saturday, April 19, 2008 07:57 ]
Legacy Journal: Saturday West timeline, first Native American “fossil” and Tracktown.
Section:
None
Summary:
* Fossils: A Fecal Trail in the Oregon Desert near Paisley Caves and Summer Lake . Cressman and the UofO Museum of Culture and Natural History.
Rock Hounds in the Great Basin.
** A 1840-50 Western time line.
*** Duel track meet in Eugene, Oregon, Track town USA
Main:
: To quote Larry McMurty on poet Janet Lewis after the death of her husband: “she did go back to the desert, to the places of the pueblo peoples, the Hopi and Navajo, peoples who appear to live in harmony with the eternal simplicities: sun, stone, sky. She ponders a fossil:”
In quiet dark transformed to stone,
Cell after cell to crystal grown,
The pattern stays, the substance gone….
::
::: If it is a Saturday in the spring in Eugene, it is time for a classic retro duel track meet between the men of UCLA and the Tiger Ducks of the UofO
More:
Footnotes:
Amazing: • Backgrounder: • Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Saturday: • Chronicles: • Culture Clash: • Popular Culture: • Earth Sciences:: • Expressions: • Western: • Features: • Jokes: • Quotes: • Frontiersmen, Cowboys and Indians: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Memory Lane: • Nature: • News: • Retrospect: • The Source: • Timeline: • Voice: • Poetry: • Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Wednesday, April 16, 2008 11:50 ]
Legacy Journal: Klamath in Triplicate-- 1846 Carson, Fremont and Gillespie
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
Early May, 1846 the Pathfinder, his scout, and their swashbuckling band of Americanos crossed overland from Mexican Alta California and the Sacramento River Valley into the Oregon Territory. There a hundred years of HBC authority was being challenged by American trappers, mappers, traders, missionaries and Yankee settlers of many stripes.
Main:
More:
Footnotes:
Backgrounder: • Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Wednesday: • Cascade Effect: • Chronicles: • Executive Summary: • Fast Facts: • How Many?: • How?: • When?: • Where?: • Who?: • Why?: • Features: • Graphic: • Illustration: • PDF Doc: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Tall Tales: • Exaggerations: • Timeline: • Wilderness: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
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