BYLINE: Content that consistently informs with clarity, class, context, credibility and character.
MOTTOS: Faster, Better, Easier, and Cheaper. Arete, Fait Lux, Meliora
GOALS: To play with ideas, trends, people, events, products and places that are fun, interesting, and perhaps even important.
Try a keyword site search using "Obama" .
- * Listing of Entries Archived by Category using a extensive, sql alphabetized, Grouping. Be patient, the listing is long.
- ** Listing of Entries Archived by Date A real-time desc sql sort by Date is used.
Archives of Journal Entries: Organized by * Category and by ** Date.
- * Listing of Entries Archived by Category using a extensive, sql alphabetized, Grouping. Be patient, the listing is long.
- ** Listing of Entries Archived by Date A real-time desc sql sort by Date is used.
30 of our most Recent Postings:
- Legacy Journal
- 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 ----?
- Legacy Journal: Tiger Woods: Mental Toughness, Physical Fitness, and Winner with Warriors.
- Legacy Journal: Defending the First Amendment
- Legacy Journal: Food for Thought and Summer Snow
- Legacy Journal: Toxic Planet or Better Living thru Chemistry?
- Legacy Journal: The Toughest Job in America
- Legacy Journal: Controlling Carbon: You Go First
- Legacy Journal: The U.S. Senate: Paying Attention to the Details with Dianne Feinstein.
- Legacy Journal: More Music from Rochester and the Village of Fairport
- Legacy Journal: Water: the Wilds of Wyoming and Beijing, China---A western perspective.
- Legacy Journal: Neurosurgery-- A Short Memoire
- Legacy Journal: Pops Music at the Eastman in Rochester
LogRoller® : Keyword searching our LegacyJournal postings begins here.
[ 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:
[ Thursday, April 03, 2008 06:44 ]
Legacy Journal: Rochester Rites of Spring: Squash, Squash, and more Squash
Section:
Opinion
Summary:
“All human actions have one or more of these seven causes: chance, nature, compulsion, habit, reason, passion, and desire.” ----- Aristotle
* The University of Rochester and the local Squash Racquet community is hosting a “Satellite” Pro event. Erika and Jon Little of Brighton are hosting Armando Olguin , a teaching and touring Pro from the San Francisco Bay area.
** As the ground unfreezes, it near time to plant what the Seneca Indians call the “Three Sisters”—corn, beans and squash.
*** It is also time to squash a few delusions and predictions : the pending American Hurricane Season, the Future of the American Democrat Party, the state of the American Economy, the failure of American Public Education, the degenerate state of the New American Generation, the Coming Collapse of the Global Climate System, ---- etc.
Main:
: The game of Squash seems to be having a mini surge of popularity. Young kids are being signed up by their parents for lessons in Manhattan, NY to Marin Country, CA. Elitist and expensive, it is seen as a way to starting networking toward the Ivy League and Wall Street. In 2003 Forbes magazine rated the game as the # one fitness sport. Impact injuries are rare. Cardio-aerobics are rated at at 800 - 1,000 kcal/hr among top Pros. Upper, core, and lower body muscle strength and speed are required. Endurance, mental toughness, consistency, and practice discipline complete the competition package.
Clearly, the game has gone global with roots in the British Empire and Commonwealth. Youngsters of 23-26 are top ranked. English is the universal language of the sport. The top players come from Egypt, Scotland, Pakistan. Mexico, Colombia and Canada contribute their share of young, mobile talent. College recruits in upstate NY come from Japan, the Ukraine, and even Pennsylvania. Senors also play the game
:: Prof Jared Diamond of Guns, Germs and Steel fame and fortune, continues, as he has for 10 years now, to remind us from his video reruns that geography, geology, climate, and the accidents of migration have much to do with food production, animal domestication, surplus, technology , social organizations and the sustainability( or not) of primitive cultures. The recently the DNA story, grave site
Aztec archeology in Peru, and Native American finding in Oregon have all added complexity and new time lines to the more simple Diamond narrative and interpretation.
::: Experts from Colorado fearlessly continue to make their embarrassingly bad annual predictions. The 2008 Hurricane season edition in now out. A related inconvenient embarrassment is the $6 per bushel of corn and the $4 per gallon price of diesel full. What happened to all the environmental happy talk about how using corn alcohol and stopping oil exploration and drilling was key to controlling global fever.
Today’s temperature bullseye is Yuma, Arizona where the all time low of 13 degrees was recorded within the past 5 years. The another bullseye is the international hot spot , Venezuela, where General Chavez has announced his intent to nationalize the cement industry. Cemex of Mexico is the major external investor
In addition, the Wigley article from the NCAR on the assumptions of the IOCC on carbon emissions rates and published the early April edition of Nature, the weekly international science journal, is yet another wakeup call at the credibility of some of the IOCC Climate Commission’s claims. From nytimes., science writer, Andrew C. Revkin does a partial journalistic mea culpa on his previous “ robins in Inuit land” reporting. To his credit, Revkin does acknowledge that the error was reported by the climatologist Patrick J. Michaels on a blog site at World Climate Report..
Meanwhile, the good new is that the baseball and local lake and stream trout season is underway.
More:
Footnotes:
Basics: • Calendar: • Thursday: • Data: • Numbers: • Dollars and Cents: • Follow the Money: • Environment: • Advocacy: • Features: • Quotes: • Fitness: • Harvest: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Leading Indicators: • Authentic: • Memory Lane: • New York: • Towns: • News: • Sports: • Political Watch: • Race: • Score Card: • Tenure: • Vital Signs: • Voice: • Poetry: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Wednesday, March 19, 2008 05:22 ]
Legacy Journal: Race, Coals to Newcastte, and Wednesday Technology
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
* Race Matters: At a recent URMC New York Society of Cardiology CO-hosted lectureship on the state of genomic research and technology in health, disease and in the retail consumer market, one was able to witness a race based concern. “Why are there not more African-Americans in the studies?” was the question from the only black practitioner in the audience. “ Why are some of the studies not coming from Africa?” No satisfying answer was forthcoming from the expert from California. While the largest private employer in Rochester NY is URMC, ironically, it is dependent on the black community to staff and operate its facilities 24 x 7 x 365. The residents living in the home of Fredrick Douglass has heard and seen it all. The black church, failing inner city public schools, crime in the neighborhoods, limited job opportunities in a street environment rife with petty and organized crime, substance abuse, abandoned property. High taxes, political patronage, and union restrictions are long standing facts of life that colors much of the black perspective.
** Coal:
*** RIT CMIS : Manufacturing technology institute funded by the Federal Government, the state of New York, and private industry.
Main:
: A new black Superintendent of Public Schools, a new black Governor, and a new black President will not qwell “prophetic” rhetoric from the pulpit, balance the state budget, or eliminate a 200 year old backlog of white guilt. Barak Obama may be perfect poetic fusion messenger to the new generation of American voters, but he can not govern well or effectively , if he is viewed as pandering to the rapidly fading black leadership elites and their supporters-- and they know who they are.
:: Coal production and export report from the nytimes..
::: CIMS is the Center for Integrated Manufacturing Studies on the RIT campus in Rochester, NY.
Today a OLLI tour group got a dose of sustainability, a lesson in manufacturing, and a perspective on a post Kodak western upstate NY economy. Locally, part of
the manufacturing view of green sustainability is part rehabilitation and waste management. Quality control , systems management of the product cycle, and energy efficiency is part of the package. One demonstration bay had a half million dollar articulated arm laser surface scanner for image input for product design.
Most of the projects are small simulations and tests of critical mechanical parts like aircraft hydolic systems and gearboxes.
More:
Footnotes:
Backgrounder: • Basics: • Business and Trade: • Calendar: • Wednesday: • Common Ground: • Community Service: • Culture Clash: • Popular Culture: • Data: • Dollars and Cents: • Follow the Money: • Diversity: • Energy: • Alternative Sources: • Coal: • Features: • Permalinks: • Going Green: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Justice: • Leap of Faith: • Life Lines: • New York: • Cities: • News: • Hot Spot: • OLLI (Osher): • Politically Potent: • Race: • Salt and Pepper: • Signs of the Times: • Voice: • Poetry: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
AKA: webscribe2. Our current CMS tool is Expression Engine 1.6.4, build 20080829