Month: January 2010

  • http://www.redcross.org/portal/site/en/menuitem.94aae335470e233f6cf911df43181aa0/?vgnextoid=15c0c5a210826210VgnVCM10000089f0870aRCRD

    American Red Cross

    American Red Cross Pledges Initial $1 Million to Haiti Relief

    Send a $10 Donation by Texting ‘Haiti’ to 90999

    Editorial note: You can make a donation by calling 1-800-REDCROSS or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish) or click on the Donate Now button.

    National Headquarters
    2025 E Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20006
    www.redcross.org

    Contact: Public Affairs Desk
    FOR MEDIA ONLY
    media@usa.redcross.org
    Phone: (202) 303-5551

    WASHINGTON, Wednesday, January 13, 2010

    The American Red Cross is sending money, supplies and staff to Haiti to support relief efforts there after yesterday’s earthquake, which caused catastrophic damage and loss of life.

    According to reports, as many as three million people may have been affected by the quake, which collapsed government buildings and caused major damage to hospitals in the area. 

    The Red Cross is contributing an initial $1 million from the International Response Fund to support the relief operation, and has opened its warehouse in Panama to provide tarps, mosquito nets and cooking sets for approximately 5,000 families.

    In addition to Red Cross staff already in Haiti, six disaster management specialists are being deployed to the disaster zone to help coordinate relief efforts. At this time, the American Red Cross is only deploying volunteers specially trained to manage international emergency operations.

    There has been an outpouring of support from the public. To help, people can make an unrestricted donation to the International Response Fund at www.redcross.org or by calling 1-800-REDCROSS (1-800-733-2767). The public can also help by texting “Haiti” to 90999 to send a $10 donation to the Red Cross, through an effort backed by the U.S. State Department. Funds will go to support American Red Cross relief efforts in Haiti.     

    Debris and collapsed bridges are making access to many areas extremely difficult. Telephone service and electricity are out in many places. Haitian Red Cross staff worked throughout the night to rescue people still trapped in their homes and provide first aid. The priority remains to provide food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support.  

    The American Red Cross already had fifteen staff in Haiti providing ongoing HIV/AIDS prevention and disaster preparedness programs. All are reported to be safe and responding to the disaster.

    To date, there have been no requests for blood products from the government of Haiti. However, some patients at an affected facility in Haiti have been moved to a Guantanamo Bay hospital, and the Armed Services Blood Program has asked both the Red Cross and Florida Blood Services for support for those patients. In addition, the American Red Cross will be sending a shipment of blood products to the United Nations Mission in Haiti.

    While communication with those in Haiti is still difficult, people should contact the U.S. Department of State, Office of Overseas Citizens Services at 1-888-407-4747 if trying to reach a U.S. citizen living or traveling in Haiti. If trying to reach a Haitian citizen, callers should continue to call or contact other family members who live nearby.

    While donations are coming in for Haiti relief, the initial American Red Cross response is made possible in part by contributions from members of the Red Cross Annual Disaster Giving Program (ADGP). The following partners designate a portion of their ADGP commitment to the International Response Fund: American Express, John Deere Foundation, Kimberly-Clark Corporation, Morgan Stanley and State Street Foundation.

    How to Help
    • We are not accepting volunteers to travel to Haiti. If you would like to volunteer for the American Red Cross, please contact your local chapter.
    • For inquiries about relatives living and who have citizenship in Haiti, please be patient and call repeatedly until the lines clear or contact other family members who live nearby. Telephone, Internet and other communication lines are often disrupted in times of disaster.
    • People trying to locate U.S. citizens living or traveling in Haiti should contact the U.S. Department of State, Office of Overseas Citizens Services, at 1-888-407-4747 or (202) 647-5225.
    Photo: American Red Cross
    Photo: Matthew Marek, American Red Cross

    About the American Red Cross:
    The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies nearly half of the nation's blood; teaches lifesaving skills; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a charitable organization — not a government agency — and depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit www.redcross.org or join our blog at http://blog.redcross.org.


  •  

    haiti relief 1

    Haiti Relief: How You Can Help Immediately.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/12/haiti-earthquake-relief-h_n_421014.html

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    How to help relief efforts for Haiti

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    UNICEF is seeking donations to the ongoing emergency relief efforts in Haiti and the Caribbean region through www.unicefusa.org/haitiquake or call 1-800-4UNICEF.

    Operation Helping Hands, a joint community project of The Miami Herald and United Way-Miami, will be collecting donations to support the relief effort in Haiti.

    To make a contribution, go to www.iwant2help.org

    Checking on relatives in Haiti:

    Mercy Corps established a Haiti Earthquake Fund, PO Box 2669,Portland, OR 97208, www.mercycorps.org, 1-888-256-1900

    The Archdiocese of Miami is accepting financial donations to assist with recovery efforts for the earthquake victims in Haiti. People may send their donations to Catholic Charities, 1505 NE 26th St. Wilton Manors, FL 33305, Attention Earthquake Victims.

    The Pan American Development Foundation (PADF) -- the natural disaster relief arm of the OAS -- was asking people who want to donate to visit its special relief website called www.PanAmericanRelief.org.

    Also, U.S. citizens wondering about family in Haiti can ring the U.S. State Department's American Citizen Services line at 1-888-407-4747.

     

  •   "When the going gets tough, the tough get going!"

    --Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr.

    a knute 2 joseph p. kennedy sr

      The Daily News

    1   I was WAY buzzed all day yesterday!

    2   I have been working me arse off for three weeks in anticipation of this semester grade deadline. I put over 26 hours in during Christmas, and kept working like a madman. 

    3   I worked out like a madman as well, keeping visits to the gym at an astonishing 85% of the days in the week. I finally had to lag a bit in the past week due to the deadlines, but dude, I'm addicted!

    4   In both cases, I hit a few roadblocks. For one, no matter HOW many hours I spent reading, grading, calculating, and all the rest, I kept falling behind.

    5   I called my Dad yesterday telling him that even though I've been working my arse off, I still can't seem to turn the corner on this massive workload.

    6   His response?  "When the going gets tough, the tough get going!"

    7    Ha! We laughed, and then pondered who first laid out that piece of chiasmus (look it up lolZ!). To my knowledge, it was Joseph Kennedy, but some claim the great foooooobowl coach Knute Rockne originated it. I go with Kennedy, even though it seems more of a foooooobowl quote. Nope. It's Joseph Kennedy, to be sure. There are some who insist it was originally written by Billy Ocean. They sent me this as proof:

    a knute 3 billy ocean

    8    Well, it clearly wasn't originated by Ocean. I told my Dad that the quote used to hang in the locker room of our gym when I was but a bright lad, and that it made me want to kick ass for the rest of my life.

    9    Dad said, "Well, that's how you became the person you have become." Always calm and wise.

    10  He mighta been blowing smoke, but I don't think so. He KNOWS that I go to the ends of the Earth working hard, and he KNOWS that he and Mom are the reason I do.

    11  Man, the guy is my hero, in every sense of the word.

    12  AnywayZ, I was SO excited yesterday morning because all of my grading, organizing, and stressing suddenly started to turn the corner, and the grading started taking care of itself.

    13   I ALSO had returned to the gym for two straight days, and was pumped and ready to keep working until I finally feel that my health and life outlook would light up others.

    14   That didn't QUITE happen yesterday, because I had to work at the school for odd hours, but the almost euphoria from the past two days turned my entire world into a positive go.

    15   So all morning I became a tad giddy. Naturally, anytime one gets too filled with absolute Truth and joy, something comes by to blindside it.

    16   My cell phone did that to me yesterday.

    17   I thought that Dad would LOVE a random call during my lunch break, so I was SO enthused that I shot a status shot out to me peeps on FB.

    18   Translation:  I commented on my Facebook status that I was pretty darned happy, which was WAY true!  ;  )  <---------cool sideways winky dude.

    19   Shortly thereafter, I tried calling Dad. My cell phone kept blacking out, even though I was sitting what I call the "sweet spot", right in the middle of my classroom and facing the immortal Mt. Hamilton and the wonderful hills of Sannozay.

    20   Unfortunately, Dad kept fading out, and the phone kept going dead.

    21   Such is life.

    22   I finally went home, skipping a trip to the gym but knowing I had to call Dad before 6 (he has a tendency to delay dinner when someone is going to call, and his blood sugar goes haywire), and finally caught him around 5:30.

    23    LOVED the conversation, and the rest of the night improved, especially once the Sharks did their thing!

    24    So that's about it. Sorry I spent an entire DN on explaining some random FB quote, but every now and again, someone SHOULD explain their random thoughts. It always puzzles me when people say, "Saw a shooting next door yesterday!" followed by a million inquiries, and no real closure. I wonder if everything is okay, or what happened. I think too much, fella. And I worry too much.  

    25   AnywayZ, I was able to get a half class graded last night, which ALWAYS makes my semester, and it looks like the work is gonna pay off. Today should really move fast, I hope. I have one class, and then I'm free to finish my work.

    26   Can't wait to jump in tomorrow and take this entire semester to task! I hope to be done by Thursday at around five, and I'm on a massively perfect pace to hit that deadline.

    27    I'll keep ya posted.

    28    Meanwhile, I have a nice roast in the oven, and I'm gonna go attack it right this minute!

    29    To you, it's time for coffee and mellowness, but enjoy that too!

    30    And finally a VERY special bon voyage to me great friend and confidante Thuy Ann Le, who heads for D.C. today, and then on to South Africa, Vietnam, and Brazeel, not necessarily in that order, but I'm so proud of her I can't even tellya. She'll be doing research for a program at UCSD. I'm guessing she'll be helping a lot of people along the way.

    31    Godspeed TA! You are the world's gain.

    32    To everyone else, Peace.

    ~H~

    a cool guy 1

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

     

     



     

  •  a check 1 newsboy a coffee 2 mug The Daily News

    1   I don't really know why, but yesterday was one of the best days so far this year.

    2   Sometimes when you've been stressing, a day with NO stress you cherish.

    3   I have SO much goin' on with getting semester grades done that I've taken to random bouts of insomnia, disorientation, and eating random things, like pickles.

    4   Last night I had still more things to get done, couldn't find some important docs, and decided really to stop the world for a while and chill. Do nothing. Go to the gym and read some Roald Dahl, but his short stories, not his children's books.

    5   At the gym, I re-read his immortal short story Lamb to the Slaughter, about a woman who uses a frozen leg of lamb to murder her cheating husband! She then throws it in the oven, and later feeds it to the cops investigating the crime. They spend the entire afternoon and evening trying to put the crime together, but can't find the murder weapon, get hungry, and wind up eating it for supper. Classic Dahl.

    6   Oh! I didn't read it in the pool! I was having a GREAT day, and just wanted to get home a little earlier, so I got home, and then went to the gym by my house, and worked out on the elliptical, which I always want to call the ellipsoidal, which is a type of theatre light.

    7   Lol. I don't know why I do that, but I find myself saying "lol" when I write these days.

    8    Funny, because absolutely nobody really SAYS "lol" but everybody seems to write it. It's a way of taking out the awkwardness in comments. If you wanna be cute, you say, "LOLZ". Haha.

    9    Haha is another of my nervous things. I never say, "haha" to people's faces, just when I try electronically to communicate. Because emails, twitters, aims, facebook comments, etc. are not human, face-to-face expressions, they can always be interpreted weirdly, so things like "lol" "LOLZ", "haha" etc. make me a lot more comfortable with modern communications.

    10  Ah, yeesh.

    11  The only thing I'm actually at home with in this age of one-sec/once a week communication is emails. I don't even hyphenate the things anymore. I know it's now considered wrong to write an email over 25 words, but I disdain that because I really think that someone out there wants us not to talk to one another anymore.

    12  Conspiracy theory number 947. If we no longer carry on wonderful conversations, we can be controlled by "The Man" a lot easier.

    13  Well, I enjoy conversations, communications, talking for hours on end with friends and family, and spending lots of quality time with people I love. I think we're losing that in this Age of Twitter (which I don't do, and will NEVER do!).

    14  Years ago when IM-ing was taking hold, I thought it was the coolest thing EVER.

    15   ...until I IM-ed someone, but was talking to so many people at once that I sent the message to another person, whose IM popped up before I could stop.

    16   Younger people can do that. I'm old school, and really can't even fathom talking to twenty people at a time. It's like giving everyone you know short shrift. Not to my liking, sorry to say. I prefer intelligent conversations with people I'm close to. I cherish that, and always will. Sue me for being one of the last holdouts.

    17   Ah, insomnia. It's around 4 a.m. as I compose this gibberish. Fell asleep early last night, but only because I had SUCH a great day!

    18   Listened to the Costas/McGwire interview in the late afternoon. Yeesh. The second I heard Costas was going to interview McGwire, I knew McGwire's ass was grass. Bob Costas is one of the best sports journalists in history, and Mark McGwire is way too vulnerable and too much easy meat for that. Costas chewed him up and spit out the bones, and I'm guessing McGwire is probably just starting to get that right now.

    19   It was TOO easy. And McGwire started CRYING during the interview.

    20   Dude.

    21   There's no crying in baseball.

    22    I thought of going off on how utterly stupid McGwire's answers were, when I figured, "Everybody is going to do that." I tried like heck to see his side of things. Really couldn't, except that I could understand that the guy kept stuff bottled up for years, and just wanted to rid himself of some demons, which we all have.

    23   On that, I actually understood the tears.

    24   Also, I taught American Lit last year, and came to realize just how hypocritical and judgemental Americans are. We tend to find someone who has screwed up, and then throw lots of stones at them, to the point that we somehow feel that we are somehow moral crusaders who never do anything stupid.

    25  We do that consistently with all sorts of celebrities, and even sometimes people in our own lives. I won't go deep, but if you ever read The Scarlet Letter, you know the darkness that is at the root of our national souls. We want to put a scarlet letter on anyone who makes human mistakes, and as a nation we have done it since the Puritans.

    26   So as easy as it is to throw rocks at a guy like McGwire, it's much better to take a moment to pause and look into our own souls first. I'm the first to admit that seeing someone put on public display and so clearly lying and believing his own boushit is open season, but I also look back on things that I have done that are equally ridiculous.

    27   I really think we all do. So I'm gonna move off this one. Don't know why, because I've done years of vilifying public figures. I just thought that McGwire was SUCH easy fodder that it was almost pathetic.

    28   Where do we draw the line? Is Michael Vick a nice guy? How about Tyson? Lindsay Lohan?

    29   Yeesh.

    30   How about ourselves?

    31   Goin' deep, yo.

    32   Fear not. I'll still clobber national idiots. But McGwire was simply TOO stupid, and went before the leonine Costas completely unprepared, and Costas ripped him to pieces, which is what a good journalist should do. The sad thing was that during the ripping, I truly don't think McGwire knew just how astoundingly idiotic he sounded. I think he was genuinely trying to put a lousy past behind him, and was truly emotional.

    33   I should really stay away from Camp Anytown.

    34   Lol.   ;  )  <--------cool winky guy

    35   Whew.

    36    Got outta that one before 4 a.m.

    37    Ha!

    38    Have a grand Tuesday, if that's not an oxymoron.

    39    Love youse.

    40    Peace.

    ~H~

    a cool guy 1

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

     

     

     

  •  

    a aerial warfare 6 kevin and winnie

     

    Remembering TheWonder Years 

    The Daily News
    1   Are ya lovin' stuff? Sure hope so!

    2   Love the amount of boushit that comes down the pike each day.

    3   To me, it was all about F000000BOWL!

    4    If you're at best a marginal fan, you had to love the Cards/Packers game yesterday.

    5    LOVED it. I'm not exactly an Arizona fan, but I DO love watching games in which everyone competed, and fought it all with everything they got. Haha, defensive battle, right? Aerial warfare.

                                         a aerial warfare 1



    6   In my youthful days, foooooobowl was everything.

    7   We played street, and howwwwwrd! <fb translation: hard>.

    8    Welp, at one time I played a defensive back in our neighborhood games, which is truly a swift-footed fool whose job was to shut down a power-packed receiver.

    9    Well, it was many and many a year's ago...

    10   Haha!

    11   Actually, it was a neighborhood game that pitted the guys who lived up the hill against the guys who lived down the hill. It was an annual mudnblood game, always held on Thanksgiving. My greatest game was this one that happened in my Junior year in high school.

    12   I hadda guard this guy who was a track star, all speed, and athletic beyond me own personal realm, but I rode his jock, the entire game!

    13    He could do nothing, and I LOVED it, especially since the girl I crushed on for three years earlier was his babe.

    14    At the end of the game, I blocked one last pass, and swatted it away with a resounding vigor, and WE won the game as a result!

    15   Greatest defensive play of my life, and to this day I love it. He completely lost his cool-guy composure, right in front of her, and chirped ridiculously into my face that it was a bad hit. I maintain to this moment that it was clean, no interference, and he was just pissed that he got outplayed. I looked over at her and gave a smile, and stayed cool. Great Kevin Arnold moment. If you're a Wonder Year's fan, Kevin was the protagonist.

    16   I have NO idea why I'm reporting this except that I thought many of youse are athletic, and would appreciate the story. Wonder Year's, by the way, was inspired by the immortal Jean Shepherd, whose anecdotal book In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash and his short story Wanda Hickey's Night of Golden Memories inspired the classic Christmas film, The Christmas Story. The title The Wonder Years came to us from an old television commercial for Wonder Bread, a commercial that started with these words: "These are the Wonder years, the growth years..." in an attempt to sell the public of the health benefits of white bread.

    17    My Dad worked for Wonder Bread way back when, so it was particularly personal to me. We also used to get Hostess products for free, which made me one of the most popular guys in the neighborhood. I loved it.

    a aerial warfare 4 wonder breada aerial warfare 4 wonder breada aerial warfare 4 wonder breada aerial warfare 4 wonder breada aerial warfare 4 wonder bread

    18   Moving on, Part the First:  Wow. So much stuff! Dad is cool and marinating. I've had some amazing moments with people who are awesome!

    19   I haven't had a chance to talk with him about that game, but I'm going to call later today. We are at crunch time, first semester grades are due this week, so I've been getting little sleep for the past week, which always turns me into an exhausted mess.

    20   Anyway, rested comfortably yesterday, and after having missed a few gym days, got back on it over the weekend.

    21   And blah, blah, blah. Sounds like a blahg, doesn't it?

    22   One thing the DN isn't is a blog. Blogs are ripoffs of the classic DN's in my book lol.  <--------laughing out loud, or to some, lots of love in the RIDICULOUS world of texting, twittering, blogging, aiming, and anything else that lacks real talking and communicating.

    23   But don't get me goin'.

    24   Well, amazing what a great game of foooooobowl could do for the soul. Brought back some fond memories, and I was able to bring one small episode to share. Wanda Hickey's Night of Golden Memories, by the way, is a GREAT short story about a guy going through the teenage ritual of asking a girl to the prom, getting fitted, completely blowing it, and his subsequent thoughts about the rituals we go through in life. One of the great short stories of all time.

    25   I haven't watched The Wonder Years for a few years now. Last time I did, it held up quite well. We went on a binge two years ago in Tahoe.

    26   I may start up again. It's probably a great thing to have on as a lamp while grading papers.

    27    Gottago.

    28     Have the sweetest Monday ever.

    29     Peace.



    ~H~

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

     

     






     

  •  

     

    a gnarly 1

     

    a gnarly 2

     The Daily News

    1   I've been finding out HARRIBLE things about AOL lately!  Reports are coming in from the global four winds that AOL is messing up emails, fonts, and much other stuffs.

    2   "Much other stuffs". Haha, me students have a huge grammar test today, and I'm rollin' around launchin' such piffle as "Much other stuffs"!

    3    Who knows why the grass grows?  ; )  <-----sideways cool winky dude

    4    Uh...

    5    Dude. <pronounced in the surfer vernacular, "dould", rhymes with "should" and "hood"> "  Remember this? "Are you Jamaican? 'Cuz Jamaican me crazy!"

    6    That was intended to be pop-deep.

    7    Incidentally, I always loved the word "pop". Traditionally, it has implied "mainstream", yet is SUCH a cooler word!

    8    AnywayZ...

    9    My instincts are pretty poison, lemme tellya. I was raised with three wimminz, and am still in a house with three wimminz. My life has perpetually been, The View!

    10   So my throwing AOL under the bus has with it a modicum of Truth. AOL has been spamming emails, cutting people off group mailings, and not knowing WHAT its current colors or logos are. It's like a person who has suddenly gone wonky. It turns pink some days, and has shamrocks at Christmastide. That's not technically a modicum of Truth, when you get right down to it. It's simply Truth, pure and simple.

    11   Not Absolute Truth, mind you, which was secured in a jar in my own personal senior year in high school, but the venerable newTruth, that somehow manages to work its true magic to the truly aware in the illustrious world of <twennyten>. Ah, goin' deep!  When I was in high school, my Humanities class had a jar of Absolute Truth sitting in a little room with pillows and incense. Quite Delphic.

    12   Moving on, Part the First:  Isn't it gnarly how Californians sort of measure and weigh earthquakes, and usually decide that they need to ride it out like a gnarly wave, and then get back to work?

    13   Dude.

    14   That's what we do.

    15    Californians are pretty Zen about earthquakes. And yesterday's was truthfully akin to a cosmic fart, only without the smoke and air stuff.

    16    We got right back to the bizznisssss of livin' within seconds.

    17     Moving on, Part the Second: Dad goes in for some strange boushit today that will somehow enlighten all of us to what is really going on.

    18     On the other hand, I talked with him the other day, and we looked to some realities, and then talked some baseball, football, and walkin to church.

    19    Dad has an appointment with the VA today at around 11:30 a.m. The bottom line is that he has to go through a buncha tests to see what the heck is going on with this stange happening.

    20   I'm guessin' there will be pretty much NO answers as of this day, but I sure as heck loved having him near me, and talking about everything and nothing the other day.

    21   So today he goes through a plethera of tests, and of pokes, jokes, and artichokes.

    22   Sidebar: "artichokes" was clearly an attempt at establishing a cheap rhyme in the amazingly poetic world of the DN.

    23   Well, all this rambling is making me have a headache.

    24    "Making me have a headache" is immediately my daughter Caitlin's childhood complaint regarding anything even somewhat confusing. She would declare, in a firm and constructive active voice, "This makes me have a headache!"

    25    Good ol' Caitlin!

    26    You rock, pretty girl!

    27    Meanwhile... Grades are due next Friday. I've been working on all my papers, which are, as an English teacher, a ha-YUGE project. I teach some amazingly talented students, and unfortunately, they ALL do their homework lol!

    28    Fookin' lol. When did we ever come to this? Nobody talks anymore. It's all texting, messaging, emailing, twittering, and ignoring.

    29    Hooked up with me old friend and confidante Thuy Ann yesterday, and we actually held an intelligent conversation for hours. This very subject came up, and it was amazing actually looking at someone and conversing. She's off to Washington D.C., Brazil, Africa, and Vietnam to do some research, and won't have any means of communicating electronically with people. That's a suggestion by the people who run the program she's in.

    30   So we talked about how all the amazing electronic communications' sources have in many ways alienated many of us, even though we seem to think that we are all somehow closer.

    31   What was cool about it was that we concluded this through a few short hours of real communication, talking, laughing, and enjoying a true friendship.

    32   Funny how rarely we are able to do that these days, and how truly important it is to do in order to enjoy friendships that are real.

    33   Lovely night, and I want to send her birthday wishes and a huge bon voyage. She'll be on a four-month tour of duty, and I thought I'd like publicly to wish her a great trip. We laughed last night about actually communicating through the traditional snail mail.

    34   Awesome idea.

    35   AnywayZ...good luck to TA; you are an inspiration to all of us.

    36   Moving on, Part the Third: So I'm back to trying to see if AOL will once again launch the DN to me email folks. Evelyn stepped up yesterday and sent me a list of the DN folk, so here's hoping. And I SURE as heck hope that AOL doesn't spam it! TA told me that my emails were in her spam. AOL, lemme tellya.

    37    So here's hoping we get the DN back up to speed today.

    38    Well, gottago, Friday you know!

    39    Have a grand weekend!

    40    Peace.

    ~H~

    a cool guy 1

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

     

     

     

     

     

  •  

     

     Cheshire Moon 1  
    The Daily News

    1  Didn't have time to get this out there yesterday, but suddenly AOL has stepped in and taken a pair of scissors, arbitrarily cutting the entire second part of my DN constituents out. So you know: if you officially were a member of my AOL DN subscription panel, chances are that you were chosen special, if you even HAD an email.
     
    2   And yes, some others never quite got into that circle, but there were always reasons.
     
    3   Meanwhile, AOL decided to cut my recipients randomly in half.
     
    4   These are many pplz who have enjoyed the DN for years.
     
    5    I've been in a frantic search to see who was responsible for this very irresponsible act, but so far, anyone who REMOTELY knows about AOL has kept mum.
     
    6    Fine, sez I, but MEANWHILE, about 50% of my DN peeps have been cut off, and I am pretty upset by that.
     
    7    I can't even go to OLD DN's and copy/paste the DN recipients.
     
    8     Anyway, if you ARE on the second half of the DN mailing list, send me yer latest email and I'll try to divide the recipients into two mailings. Good ol' AOL. Moving from okay to mediocre at an astoundingly rapid pace.
     
    9    Ah vell. Can't do much about it right now.
     
    10   Moving On, Part the First: Called my Dad yesterday, and he's doing great, all things considered. He was bright, laughing, and enjoying a nice long conversation about walking to church on Sundays, Niner football, Giants baseball, and we wound up going through each player on each team, noting similarities. We talked of the Niners of yore, and just laughed into the late afternoon.
     
    11   He has a bone scan scheduled for tomorrow, so they could find more stuff out. No pain, and that was good, and a WHOLE lot of optimism and laughter, which was awesome.
     
    12    Whooops!  Something just flicked like this was all going to be erased again. Yeesh.
     
    13    This is my SECOND DN today. I got overzealous yesterday and worked quite a lot on that poem for my Dad, but the my hand hit something that erased everything. Just happened now as well! Unusual stuff since I'm clearly experienced at this time.
     
    14   Whatevvvvvvuhhhhh....^^^^^^^
     
    15    Well, THIS is me second time trying to understand just what is going on.
     
    16    As far as I know, we're all good for now.
     
    17    Moving on, Part the Second: Well, it appears we're okay, although I just looked at the teeeeeveeee and they have a theory about the missing sea lions in SF. Looks like those chubby buddies have migrated down to Monterey. Yeesh!  Wheredja go, boys?
     
    18    Moving on, Part the Third: I'm convinced that my cat used to be a plumber in his previous life. He is always climbing into the toilet for a drink, or maybe a look at the pipes. This morning I walked in there and he looked like Alice in Wonderland looking into the hole. Or maybe more apropos, perhaps the Cheshire Cat? There's a Cheshire moon in today's sky, speaking of the CC.
    D  <-----feeble attempt at making a capital "D" resemble a Cheshire Cat smile.
     
    19   Moving on, Part the Fourth: I know it's going to be a grand day. Pulled two matching socks out of the dryer first thing in the morning. When has that EVER happened?  = )  <-----sideways smiley dude.
     
    20   LOLZ.
     
    21    Well it looks to be an optimistic, beautiful day, and since the year is so young, it just could be the best day of the year. Let's all find it in our heart to make each day the best day of the year. Ol' Emerson would paint the sky with a Cheshire smile.
     
    22    Go out make someone's day.
     
    23     Peace.
     
                                                                               
     
                                                                            ~H~
     
                                                                             a cool guy 1
     
                                                           bharrington@yahoo.com
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

  • a dn 1 a disney bitches 3 mickey fantasia a FB 2 a drama 1 chick in hat and cane 2 a drama 1 masks top hat 2

    Arrrrrgh!!!

    The Daily News

    1  This is my third attempt at writing this morning's DN.

    2   The first attempt had this poem all about me Dad, who is currently dealing with bone cancer, and all that includes.

    3   I originally had found this fun poem I wrote about walking down the neighborhood block with my Dad when I was about ten.

    4    It was Sunday, and we walked down Helen Drive headed for church. We used to walk to church a lot.

    5    Welp, I searched and searched and found this great poem I wrote about how much those days meant to me, but for whatever reason, it kept not saving, and fonts changed on me, so that really, it would have taken perhaps the entire evening to bring the poem to y'all. The trouble is, I just had a hard copy only, and the words were placed in various areas, sort of like some e. e. cummings sort of fanfare. I tried recreating it exactly on Xanga, but the letters kept jumping all over the place.

    6     Trust me, I tried. It is a great poem, but as of this THIRD attempt at the DN, it is now 11:17, and I simply had to back down and rewrite at least something so we could all be regaled.

    7     I imagine just me going through a buncha boushit is entertaining, but really? We lost a great poem and a salute to me Dad.

    8      I even SAVED as I worked on it, but hit some button or other, and not one, but TWO DN's disappeard from the Earth, for watever it all means.

    9      Dude, I'm exhausted, and a bit out of sorts. Worried a lot about my Dad, grades, and all the other natural shocks just caught up with me last night.

    10    It took me about two hours to shape the poem and to put it out there for the Xanga crowd, but alas!

    11   One stupid button and the entire DN shifted.

    12    AnywayZ...

    13    This is the DN that is simply an apolgy for the one that you never got.

    14     Make sense?

    15     It's all mebad, and yet...

    16     Ah, nevermind.

    17     I need sleep, and that's about it. Too much grading; too much stress. I'm actually fine now that I've accepted the fact that we won't have the poem, not for a while anyway.

    18     It's nice I found it though. Always look at the bright side. I enjoyed reading it, because it was just about me and Dad walking to church on a lovely Sunday morning when I was ten.

    19    Just telling what it is about makes me smile, and puts everything right. Hope it makes you smile too, 'cuz it was a nice day, and always was a nice day. Me, Dad, the bluebirds, and God. That's a smile!

    20    Quality time with Dad, one of my favorite things.

    21     We are no worse for that wear and tear.

    22     You have a lovely day!  = )  <---sideways smiley dude

    23     Peace.

    ~H~

    a cool guy 1

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  •  

    a fg 1 lighthouse reminiscence

     The Daily News

    1    Hi y'all!

    2    We're back.

    3    Yesterday was foggy. I ALMOST said "foogy" but caught meself.

    4     First day back after all the holidays and stuff.

    5     First thing I asked my students was this: "How many of your walked around in a fog this morning?"

    6     <gratuitous show of hands>

    7     Now since it WAS physically foggy, even the most somnolent of students shot up a hand. It was remarkable how many hands shot up. Still, it was a lazy showing.

    8     I then asked, "How many of you walked around in a MENTAL fog this morning?"

    9     I must have awakened some kids who were clinically dead. I had an almost 90% buy-in to the question.

    10    Instant results!

    11    I THEN asked, "How many of you couldn't SLEEP last night?"

    12    Thousands.

    13    It's sort of that Monday thing, only multiplied times thousands.

    14    Ah, returning to battle.

    15    Amazingly, I rose to the entire day, having prepped the night before so I had readied myself for what I always refer to as "re-entry".

    16    It worked as well as it could work.

    17    I was glad that I had done over 25 hours of grading and prep for the return to the classroom. Sometimes giving up a bit of vacation for the students pays immense dividends.

    18   The TRUE sign of art happens on Tuesday though. Today will be the trick.

    19    Not sure that I'm so prepared for a Tuesday, but we've been through all of that in some of the more classic DN's over the years.

    20    To those new to the mix, I'm fundamentally against Tuesday as a day of the week.

    21     Ah, yeesh.

    22     I hate repeating it, but the logic follows thus: Mondays are already by definition lost days. A LOT of people absolutely dread Mondays. My feeling is this: EVERYBODY drags and lags a bit on Mondays, so it's pretty easy to fly low and get yourself greased for Tuesdays, which most people figure are easy.

    23    Well, they're not. Once you've drawn your swords to smote Monday, Tuesday comes at you like a dragon. If you are not armed for a Tuesday, you will get chewed up and spit out within seconds.

    24    My feeling always was that we should simply remove Tuesday as a day of the week, and people would more than likely become more productive as the week winds down.

    25    Okay, so it's a pretty tepid cause, but one of those little ones that actually makes sense.

    26    People born on Tuesdays have a bit of trouble with it, but other than that, I have had a lot of people agree. Tuesday is a day that tortures people who don't know to prepare for it.

    27   If you fly low on Monday, eliminate Tuesday, then your real week begins on Wednesday, which has somehow been vilified with the rather tacky epithet "Hump Day".

    28   Yeesh. I imagine. You get "over the hump". Uhhhh...yeah.

    29   Still, I always wish my idea of eliminating Tuesday would catch on. In this day of furloughs and all, it might make a bit more sense.

    30   Welp, I'm in the middle of doing lesson plans, paper grading, and lots of other things that enjoy eating up all of me time, so I think I'll just bow out. Had another DN written about this show that glowed in the living room tonight, the Conveyer Belt of Love or something stupid, but it was SO stupid that I will need to save it for perhaps another day.

    31   Think I'll go on Facebook and see who has cut their nails, and then slip into a pleasant slumber.

    32    Don't walk around in a fog.

    33    Love you all, drop me a line, willya?

    34    Oh, and thanks Jenny and Fina, for making my day yesterday.

    35     Peace, y'all.

    ~H~

    a cool guy 1

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     

     

     

     

     

  • a dn 8 the stooges

    a dn 6 expulsion

    Just flew in from Paradise, and boy...

     

    a check 1 newsboy
     
     a biplane 1 two of 'em
     
    a coffee 2 mug

    The Daily News
    Haha jk lmfao lolZ and all that other fancy razmattaz!!!

    1  Und a Happy New Year to all of y'all.

    2   See, I never really flew in from Paradise.

    3   That was just a RUSE.

    4    I just thought it would be a kick to take a look at the Expulsion from Paradise, because REALLY? Some of those old religious paintings give me the HEEBZ!

    5    When I was a kid, I cried in dire fear each time my Mom took me to go visit Santa Claus. I know that it had SOME connection with those fierce depictions of God in the classic paintings.

    6    Look at God in that painting man.

    7    Scary.

    8    And check out Adam. He's all buff, but the little cherub holding up the cloud has WAY more confidence.

    9    And get a load of Eve. She KNOWS she f..ed up. She's MISERABLE.

    10  Then we have the whole thing goin' on with the Indifferent Goat, and the Serpent slithering off over on the left side of the painting.

    11   And that little chorus of cherubic faces gives the whole thing an air of absolute creepiness.

    12    And someone HAS kindly to explain the fig leaves...

    13    Moving on: Didn't expect to get an art lesson first day back, now did you?

    14    That painting was done with oils and copper in 1740 by this artist named Charles Joseph Natoire, who was a pretty boy and quite the snappy dresser. Here's his portrait:

    15  Hey, I even know the guy who painted the portrait. He was some bloke name a Gustaf Lundberg.
     
    16  For the life of me I have no idea why this headed in such a goofy direction, except that it was late when I was doing this brand spankin' new DN, and I thought I'd get all of us off to a rocky start.
     
    17  Moving on, Part the Second: I got the idea of flying in from Paradise last week when I actually went to a little town called Paradise for some New Year's partyin'. My idea of a party is to grade a billion papers, quit a minute before midnight, and then slam a glass of water, followed by a Stooges marathon.
     
    18   Hey, you may laugh, but at least I was able to awaken the on New Year's Day and not groggily open one eye at 7 a.m. and say, "Oooooh thasss right..." Fella, that was going to be the BEST you were gonna feel all day. I got work done, had a nice glass of clean water, and laughed into the night.
     
    19   Ah, it pays to get older.
     
    20   I've actually been youthening. Still hitting the gym (I did miss four days, Christmas, New Year's Eve, New Years, and one day when I went to my alternate gym and all the machines were taken. I hadda be somewhere, so I lost that one too.). Still, been keeping a pretty hearty pace, 54 times in 63 days, and only four days on machines. It's been all swimming the entire way.
     
    21   Sorry, it's past one a.m. and I just had to throw that in.
     
    22   School begins again today, so I expect to get a WHOLE bunch done. A whole buncha people go back to school and work today, so dudes, here's the deal:
     
    23    It's just another Monday. Fly low.
     
    24    Y'all have a GREAT day.
     
    25    And make someone happy today.
     
    26     Here's looking at you,kid.
     
    27     Peace.
     
     

     
     
    ~H~

    www.xanga.com/bharrington

     
     

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