Month: April 2010




  • SHARKS!!!!

    1   Pavelski for Mayor!!!!

    2   Ya gotta love it!!!

    3   San Jo, baby!!!!!

    4   Ah, is there anything more fun than sports?

    5   Ahhhhh...dude. Live a little. The Sharks don't always win a first game, and yeah, it's only a first game against a fierce opponent. But dude.

    6   What a FUN game for our town.

    7   Sometimes man, I swear to you.

    8   What a game, and what a moment for San Jose.

    9   Civic pride?

    10  Well yeah!

    11   Sorry for all of those who thought other things were important. We all respect that and everything else.  But dude! Our boys did it!

    12    Oh, Lordy!

    13   There is much to appreciate this fine morn. I walked outside and heard a rooster. That's cool. He cock-a-doodled twice. It was sweet, distant, and early morning.

    14    It ain't just sports. It's mornings. And the hills. And the flowers.



    15    It's San Jose.

    16    And in my sitch, it's EASTSIDE, YOU KNO!!!!!

    17    Sorry.

    18    I'm so "ghetto".

    19    This town has some nice things. It has some horrid things. But it is home. It is a common denominator for many of us. Sometimes the place drives me mad; other times I hear a rooster in the distance. I can ride my bike past farms. I can enjoy free music downtown. I can be with family; I can be with friends.

    20    If you are from San Jose, then you just know.

    21    I know.

    22    And so do you.

    23    Sorry, but there's a LOT to be said for civic pride.

    24    We all have the same background, and it's SanJo, our home, our heart, and our pride. Something about last night made me smile a lot.

    25    Sing it.

    26    Moving on, Part the First: As mundane as this sounds, my students applauded Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet. I think it was really special because for the first time, I didn't have them finish reading it, nor did I tell them the ending. I had asked earlier when we went into this massive unit if they knew anything about Shakespeare, or Romeo and Juliet. The vast majority knew little to nothing. So watching their faces when Juliet tries to kiss the poison off Romeo's lips, only to pull away and cry out, "Thy lips are warm..." was a moment.

    27    Shakespeare brought it. They all got it.

    28    What a day.

    29    And now we move to the sunny weekend with nothing but hope for tomorrow.

    30    Well, at least ONE guy is there.

    31    Who else is "down?"

    32     I love that.

    33     "Hey dude! You down?"

    34     So cool.

    35     You almost can't be not cool if you say, "Dude. I'm down."

    36     Intriguing.

    37     Anyway, I'm down for this weekend.

    38     Anyone else?

    39     ; )  <----sideways happy, winky dude.

    40     I'm down.

    41     In the distance, a rooster just crowed again. Sheer poetry.

    42     Live life.

    43     Love life.

    44     Have a beautiful weekend!

    45     Peace.

    ~H~



    www.xanga.com/bharrington























  • The Daily News
    1   I like Glee.

    2   And I don't think it's because EVERYBODY seems to like Glee.

    3   It just makes me smile.

    4   I don't watch too much teevee; I see teevee as a lava lamp, and a sort of aural comfort food.

    5   Great cast, okay writing, and lovely acting.

    6   Oh.

    7   And FUN music, every single time. GREAT listening.

    8   I could understand why some people wouldn't like it. Same reason people don't like musicals: sort of dumb story lines, coupled with the fact that people don't really break into song in everyday life. Where's the piano come from? Where'd they learn suddenly to choreograph so perfectly? How is it that in the gym scenes, all microphones work immediately, ESPECIALLY at a high school?

    9   Real life.

    10  Never happens.

    11  Musicals.

    12  Never happens.

    13  The idea is what Coleridge called, "the willing suspension of disbelief".

    14   Who cares where the piano is, or that the mic works every time?

    15   It's about the music.

    16    Anyway, it's a rare blend of humor, intelligence, great acting, and some amazing work that is Broadway inspired.

    17    I'll travel with it, see where it heads.

    18    Moving on, Part the First: This past week pretty much knocked me out. We had grades due yesterday, a deadline that I beat by almost two days for the first time in my life, but it was grueling. I've likened the grade deadline to the massive midterms and finals that college students have to endure, and I believe it is a pretty accurate comparison.

    19   For the past week, I've actually been getting tons of sleep. This is directly related to the exhaustion involved, especially with this odd weather.

    20   I feel almost ghostly at times, as though I were a wraith drifting through windows, walls, and trees.

    21   It's not a complaint, by the way. Just a reality.

    22   We had meetings yesterday, on top of all of this. I find meetings mildly helpful, but unbearably tedious, no matter how interesting. Our meeting yesterday had teachers telling other teachers how they teach, and it was great. But it also went right to about 3:15, classic down time, at least for me.

    23   By around 3 p.m., my biorhythms hit a dredging low, and meetings bring on a commanding sleepiness and need for boost. Add grading and poor weather, and I'm liable to fall asleep for the night at around 4 p.m.



    24   Sound familiar?

    25   I'm thoroughly convinced that "they" are putting something in our coffee.

    26   I don't remember being this tired all the time when I was younger, and I honestly don't think it's just age, because EVERYBODY I know seems to hit this wall of non-reality every day.

    27   I'm not gonna worry too much about it, because lately I've been getting LOTS of sleep.

    28   Moving on, Part the Second: I never got the DN off to Facebook yesterday because when I tried to launch it, the computer wouldn't let me. I was a bit late running yesterday morning because early in the morning I had to haul a television to the school during the driving rain. I got it therer okay, all working, but it was just a day where I hit the ground running.

    29   I'm proud that I have met most DN deadlines over the years, but missed the FB one. The emails went out, but it never made it to FB, so all apologies FB peeps.

    30   By the time I HAD time, it seemed a bit too late, so you could still check it out by going to www.xanga.com/bharrington. Just navigate a bit. It was a nice, gentle piece.

    31   Moving on, Part the Second: Soooo...Sharks fans. Time for the big boys to get in there and score. I've heard SO much negative about the Sharks lately that I'm really hoping they go in there and kick some major booty. Remember that Beach Boys' song, "Wouldn't it be Nice"? It could be a nice chorus to have going through your head tonight. It has nothing to do with hockey, of course, but it does repeat a nice mesage. Wouldn't it? Just once? Pretty please?

    32   Moving on, Part the Third: It's almost 2 a.m. I've already had four or five hours of sleep as I tack away, but I fully intend to get sleep the rest of the night. It's felt great, and it really gets me through to 3 p.m. in a lively and amazing fashion.

    33   So I'll catch you all on the reebz.

    34   Live life.

    35   Love life.

    36    Peace.

    ~H~


    www.xanga.com/bharrington

  • rain and sun 1
    The Daily News

    1   WE HAVE MIRACULOUSLY REACHED WED-NEZ-DAY!!!

    2   :p

    3   Longest week evuh!

    4   Ah, whatevuh!

    5   Well, let's get down to biznisss.

    6   I FINALLY sent my grades to that great river that decides peoples' fates.  Like most teachers, I want ALL my students not only to succeed, but to realize how many dreams they could potentially realize.

    7   Is that corny?

    8    I don't think so.

    9    I always go beyond high school, which really simply exists as a memory machine.

    10  All apologies, but when push comes to shove, EVERYBODY remembers high school. So our job as teachers is not only to introduce intelligence, standards, and all of that, but for students to realize that life is a learning process.

    11  That includes not only academics, but self-definition.

    12   There are not only standards and college, and careers to address, but there are also the non-standards: the love of family, the love of friends, the pursuit of dreams...

    13   It should always be limitless.

    14   I've lost too many people in the past few years to think anything otherwise.

    15   At the risk of being overly repetitive, I turn to the immortal John Lennon, who passed this message on to his son Sean, but really, to the world: "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." Again, corny? I don't think so.

    16   Live life.

    17   Love life.

    18   It is ever so short.

    19   Wednesdays are ever so short as well, given the right attitude.

    20   We have rain, and then we have sun.

    21   I look forward to both.

    22   See you soon.

    23   Peace.

    ~H~


    www.xanga.com/bharrington


  • The Daily News


    1   Dayum. It's only Tuesday!

    2   Yesterday I had the Mondays. I swear to you. The Mondays.

    3   Okay, don't get all over me, but I actually had a not-so-good Monday.

    4   Nothin' big, but I had worked my tail off all weekend on grading my students' papers, 'cuz I actually do READ them, and by the end of the night, I felt exhausted.

    5   The trouble with teaching is that when you actually care what your students are saying and writing, you must sacrifice a good day's lesson because you have put all your work into reading their papers.

    6   What that does is it causes a teacher to do is to put all effort into the students, and almost none into the day's lesson!

    7   I'll smoke a cigar and allow you time to catch up.

    8   Okay.

    9   You breathing?

    10  Ah vell. I forgot what the heck I started to say.

    11  Ahhhhhh senility!!!!

    12  Young people have NO idea how wonderful it is to be a fine ol' wine.

    13   Okay, okay, so I'm not THAT old.

    14   It's sorta like when I look in the mirror and say, "GAWD I'm UGLY!!!!"

    15   Inevitably anyone within earshot will respond, "You're not THAT ugly!"

    16   Isn't that sort of like saying, "You're ugly. But you're not THAT ugly!" Hey, thanks for the compliment.

    17   Moving on, Part the First:  My entire family thinks that the Giants' Eugenio Velez looks like a black Abraham Lincoln.

    18   You be the judge:



    19   Hey, I've told ALL of you for years that Lincoln was a GREAT President, but he was also the scariest! It's no coincidence that this item is number 19.

    20   Whew, hooo, that is weird.

    21    Ah, it's all good.

    22    Got ya goin', that's fo sho! But come on. Admit it. Lincoln was the eeriest President in history. GREAT President, but eerie.

    23   I'm just sayin'.

    24   Moving on, Part the Second: Sad news in from San Francisco: I guess it would ordinarily be "So...Kevin Restani walks into a bar..."



    25   Kevin was a great USF star back-in-the-day, and went on to play for the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Milwaukee Bucks, the Kansas City Kings, and the San Antonio Spurs.

    26   He was also my Mom's cousin's son. He was still playing for an Olympic Club team, and had just completed a Grand Masters tournament in Milwaukee. After he returned to the Bay Area he experienced a heart attack, and passed away yesterday.

    27   Sad news. I heard it this morning on KGO.

    28   Moving on, Part the Third: I think I keep coming back to how astounding it is that it is only Tuesday. I really felt that I worked almost an extra week over the weekend. I also had a hectic Monday, but it was all good.

    29   In many ways, it's good still to be walkin' around.

    30   It's funny when someone passes on, or gets really ill, that you really want to do SO much more. At least I do. It isn't a bucket list or anything, just so many things.

    31   I'm going to compile a list of things that I would REALLY like to do. I think it might be fun! Not impossible things, but really doable things, like learning archery, or traveling to Pinole.

    32   Well, get an umbrella...or some sunscreen...it's gonna be a rainy/sunny Tuesday.

    33   I think.

    34   Meanwhile, live life, love life.

    35   Peace.

    ~H~



    www.xanga.com/bharrington


  •   

    a franklin 1 mieuli
    Franklin Mieuli, 1920-2010

     

    The Daily News
     
    1   So...Franklin Mieuli walks into  a bar...
     
    2    Bay Area sports legend.
     
    3    Owned the Warriors, partially owned the Niners, did broadcasting,and so much more. Beloved figure, so sad to hear.
     
    4    Rest easy, good soul.
     
    5    Moving on, Part the First: Dude!  It's Monday! Y'all needs tuh REEEELAX mang. Do you have the MONDAYS? You know what that is don't you? It's when everything is pretty much a blurrrrrrrrrrr. But dude.

    2   Everything is cool, especially if you live in California.

    3   There's this unwritten rule.

    4    Haha!

    5    So don't trip, chocolate chip!

    6    Mondays are ever so easy, once you've been attacked by most everything life could throw you.

    7   Fortunately for ALL of us who live in Cali, Monday is an invisible day.

    8   Y'all just fly low, and cure those hangovers from the weekend.

    9    If I may: Don't mistake "hangovers" with drinking. Indeed, there IS a connection, but really? Hangovers are ANYTHING you HAD to get done by Monday. I'm pretty certain that the American Heritage Dictionary backs me on this.

    10  Actually, it doesn't.

    11  Yeesh.

    12   Moving on, Part the Second: I finally broke down and bought this like 46" ha-UGE flat screen. I couldn't even tellya the brand, 'cuz I exchanged about thirty of 'em.

    13   They weren't up to my standards, which when translated, means my wallet.

    14   AnywayZ, we got some sorta Iron Man flick flickering royally HUGE on the darned thing, and I can't really concentrate on life right now.

    15   Allow me to qualify that. I'm a comix fiend since birth, so I naturally LOVE Iron Man. It's just that I JUST now finished grading 80% of my classes, and am trying to relax a bit.

    16   It's fun, but almost TOO much stimulation for a gentle fellow such as meself.

    17   Hopefully, NONE of you bought that.

    18   AnywayZ, I think I'm gonna hit the deadline for grades pretty easily this time.

    19   If I may remind: grades are to a teacher what midterms and finals  are to college folk.

    20   We literally have no lives, nor anything beyond blurry vision for around two weeks going into deadline, which is Wednesday at 4.

    21   I'm pleased to share that I am almost done!

    22   Whew.

    23   Don't get me wrong. I LOVE teaching, and clearly will evermore.

    24   But chasin' papers? Well, we HAVE to assign them, so we HAVE to grade them.

    25   Dayum.

    26   A librarian libraries, a McDonald's worker McNuggs, Doctors doc, and Teachers drown in papers. It's what we do, mang.

    27   I'm getting carpal here.

    28   We had a skit about all of that years ago.

    29   AnywayZ, I'm pretty tuckered dudes!

    30   If you don't mind, I'm gonna get me some sleeeeeep!!!!

    31   Remember the mantra? "sleeeeeep!"

    32   You guys have a rockin' Monday. This is where ya make yer moves!

    32   With that, I'll depart.

    33   No news, they say...

    34   Have a wonderfully lovely day!

    35   Peace.
     
                                                                         

                                                    a a mieuli 1 lodgings

                                                                         

         ~H~
     

           www.xanga.com/bharrington
     
     
     
     
     
    a bear 1

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     




  • The Daily News

    1   SHARKS!!!!!!!!!

    2   Nabby rocks, and so does SAN JOSE!!!!! And ROOKIES!!!!

    3   Awesome stuff. Get into sports dude.

    4   Last night's game is EVERYTHING that sports are abooooooT!

    5   YEEEEEEEEE!!!!

    6   Amazing. Can we do it?

    7   Party time for youse, SJ! We homies!!!!

    8   Totally cool!

    9    Moving on, Part the First: I see stuff like that, and I know why I follow sports.

    10  People, listen: There's no place like home.

    11  It's been SO tough being Bay Area sports' fans, but last night sent a message to ALL of us.

    12   And then BOTH the Niners and the Raiders made intelligent picks in the NFL draft!!! The Niners got two offensive-line beefsteaks, Rutger's Anthony Davis, and Idaho's Mike Iupati. They passed several chances at getting Notre Dame's QB Jimmy Clausen, who was hot and cold in my eyes, but would be a STRONG candidate to have beaten out Alex Smith, who remains abysmal, at least in my eyes.

    13  I'd LOVE to see them grab Stanford's Toby Gerhart.

    14  The Raiders, meanwhile, did a mystical swirl, and brought in Alabama's amazing inside linebacker Rolando McClain, prompting the Merc News' Monte Poole to comment, "Can sanity in Oakland make a comeback?"

    15   I worked for the Raiders and the A's, and let me tellya: there never WAS sanity in Oakland.

    16  AnywayZ...

    17  Moving on, Part the First: Challenges I never had at YB: For the past few days, my  LCD projector light has faded. The lamp has used only sixteen per cent of it's life, and I went through the entire menu adjusting this and that, but the bottom line is that I finally got my students understanding the language of Shakespeare, and the could barely see the images.

    18  It was unbearable, because I take them through the language, give tons of vocabulary, read most of the story with them, point things out, and THEN let the film take over, like giving them wings to fly on their own. It ALWAYS works.

    19   Except yesterday. They were tuckered from too much testing, but that wouldn't have mattered if the screen were bright and colorful.

    20  Anyway, I ran to Best Buy yesterday afternoon and got a GREAT deal on a brand new, off-brand LCD flat screen teevee. It was bright, and just what I needed for a bridge "between teevees". I had been saving up for a really nice one anyway, but didn't touch that money.

    21  After several hours of questions and negotiations, I got as good a deal as anyone could hope for, with a full guarantee. I flew home, pulled a few cords out of my other teevee, put this one in and...no signal.

    22  I spent the next few hours testing this, turning that, cursing that my glasses would fall off, or that my fingers couldn't turn the right connections, and wanting to rip the back off the small cart that inevitably gets in the way when you are working with video.

    23  Sound familiar?

    24  Well, I couldn't get the job done, so this morning I have to haul or old, clunky teevee (which was originally a back-up anyway!) down to the school. It's heavy, burdensome, but I have to make it happen for my students. I'll be leaving early this morning. I was probably going to do that anyway, because the new teevee should stay home.

    25   I'm guessing that I have to take a little time and then work on the newer teevee tonight, but in the meantime...I may be complaining later of a broken back.

    26   Ah, vell.

    27   I just went outside; the birdies sang, the air felt right, and I look forward to a wonderful Friday. If a bum teevee is my only problem, then I got no problems.

    28   I seldom use the word "problem" anyway. I much prefer "challenge".

    29   So I did all that for my students, and to have a good, first-round pick at teevee until I could draft a rockstar teevee, and so far, it hasn't quite done it. I just hope it isn't an Alex Smith, or a JaMarcus Russell.

    30   AnywayZ it's nice out, and I gotta get outta here.

    31   You have a sweet weekend. I hope you get everything you want out of life this weekend. Go for it.

    32   See ya later.

    33   Peace.

    ~H~


    www.xanga.com/bharrington


  • Happy Earth Day!!!

    Here are 50 things you can do to go green!!!

    The Daily News

    from

    http://www.50waystohelp.com/


    PLANT A NOTION
    "Going green" doesn't have to be a daunting task that means sweeping life changes. Simple things can make a difference.

    The contents of this list might not be new, but they bear repeating. Sometimes it takes a few reminders for things take root.

     

    01

    1. CHANGE YOUR LIGHT
    If every household in the United State replaced one regular lightbulb with one of those new compact fluorescent bulbs, the pollution reduction would be equivalent to removing one million cars from the road.

    Don't like the color of light? Use these bulbs for closets, laundry rooms and other places where it won't irk you as much.

    Moon

    2. TURN OFF COMPUTERS AT NIGHT
    By turning off your computer instead of leaving it in sleep mode, you can save 40 watt-hours per day. That adds up to 4 cents a day, or $14 per year. If you don't want to wait for your computer to start up, set it to turn on automatically a few minutes before you get to work, or boot up while you're pouring your morning cup 'o joe.

     

     

    02

    3. DON'T RINSE
    Skip rinsing dishes before using your dishwasher and save up to 20 gallons of water each load. Plus, you're saving time and the energy used to heat the additional water.

    02

    4. DO NOT PRE-HEAT THE OVEN
    Unless you are making bread or pastries of some sort, don't pre-heat the oven. Just turn it on when you put the dish in. Also, when checking on your food, look through the oven window instead of opening the door.

    02

    5. RECYCLE GLASS
    Recycled glass reduces related air pollution by 20 percent and related water pollution by 50 percent. If it isn't recycled it can take a million years to decompose.

    diaper pin

    6. DIAPER WITH A CONSCIENCE
    By the time a child is toilet trained, a parent will change between 5,000 and 8,000 diapers, adding up to approximately 3.5 million tons of waste in U.S. landfills each year. Whether you choose cloth or a more environmentally-friendly disposable, you're making a choice that has a much gentler impact on our planet.

    clothespin

    7. HANG DRY
    Get a clothesline or rack to dry your clothes by the air. Your wardrobe will maintain color and fit, and you'll save money.

    Your favorite t-shirt will last longer too.

    Star!

    8. GO VEGETARIAN ONCE A WEEK
    One less meat-based meal a week helps the planet and your diet. For example: It requires 2,500 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef. You will also also save some trees. For each hamburger that originated from animals raised on rainforest land, approximately 55 square feet of forest have been destroyed.

    Fork and knife

    9. WASH IN COLD OR WARM
    If all the households in the U.S. switched from hot-hot cycle to warm-cold, we could save the energy comparable to 100,000 barrels of oil a day.

    Only launder when you have a full load.

    Napkin

    10. USE ONE LESS PAPER NAPKIN
    During an average year, an American uses approximately 2,200 napkins—around six each day. If everyone in the U.S. used one less napkin a day, more than a billion pounds of napkins could be saved from landfills each year.

    Paper

    11. USE BOTH SIDES OF PAPER
    American businesses throw away 21 million tons of paper every year, equal to 175 pounds per office worker. For a quick and easy way to halve this, set your printer's default option to print double-sided (duplex printing). And when you're finished with your documents, don't forget to take them to the recycling bin.

    Newspaper

    12. RECYCLE NEWSPAPER
    There are 63 million newspapers printed each day in the U.S. Of these, 44 million, or about 69%, of them will be thrown away. Recycling just the Sunday papers would save more than half a million trees every week.

    Gift

    13. WRAP CREATIVELY
    You can reuse gift bags, bows and event paper, but you can also make something unique by using old maps, cloth or even newspaper. Flip a paper grocery bag inside out and give your child stamps or markers to create their own wrapping paper that's environmentally friendly and extra special for the recipient.

    More ideas: HGTV, Martha, DIY Network

    Water

    14. RETHINK BOTTLED WATER
    Nearly 90% of plastic water bottles are not recycled, instead taking thousands of years to decompose. Buy a reusable container and fill it with tap water, a great choice for the environment, your wallet, and possibly your health. The EPA's standards for tap water are more stringent than the FDA's standards for bottled water.

    Shower!

    15. BAN BATHTIME!
    Have a no-bath week, and take showers instead. Baths require almost twice as much water. Not only will you reduce water consumption, but the energy costs associated with heating the water.

    brush

    16. BRUSH WITHOUT RUNNING
    You've heard this one before, but maybe you still do it. You'll conserve up to five gallons per day if you stop. Daily savings in the U.S. alone could add up to 1.5 billion gallons--more water than folks use in the Big Apple.

    Shower

    17. SHOWER WITH YOUR PARTNER
    Sneak in a shower with your loved one to start the day with some zest that doesn't come in a bar. Not only have you made a wise choice for the environment, but you may notice some other added...um...benefits.

    Shorten

    18. TAKE A SHORTER SHOWER
    Every two minutes you save on your shower can conserve more than ten gallons of water. If everyone in the country saved just one gallon from their daily shower, over the course of the year it would equal twice the amount of freshwater withdrawn from the Great Lakes every day.

    Tree

    19. PLANT A TREE
    It's good for the air, the land, can shade your house and save on cooling (plant on the west side of your home), and they can also improve the value of your property.

    Make it meaningful for the whole family and plant a tree every year for each member.

    Vvvvrrrooooom

    20. USE YOUR CRUISE CONTROL
    You paid for those extra buttons in your car, so put them to work! When using cruise control your vehicle could get up to 15% better mileage. Considering today's gasoline prices, this is a boon not only for the environment but your budget as well.

    Weee

    21. SECOND-HAND DOESN'T MEAN SECOND-BEST
    Consider buying items from a second-hand store. Toys, bicycles, roller blades, and other age and size-specific items are quickly outgrown. Second hand stores often sell these items in excellent condition since they are used for such a short period of time, and will generally buy them back when you no longer need them.

    Globey

    22. BUY LOCAL
    Consider the amount of pollution created to get your food from the farm to your table. Whenever possible, buy from local farmers or farmers' markets, supporting your local economy and reducing the amount of greenhouse gas created when products are flown or trucked in.

    This is a thermometer

    23. ADJUST YOUR THERMOSTAT
    Adjust your thermostat one degree higher in the summer and one degree cooler in the winter. Each degree celsius less will save about 10% on your energy use! In addition, invest in a programmable thermostat which allows you to regulate temperature based on the times you are at home or away.

    MMmmmmm, coffee

    24. INVEST IN YOUR OWN COFFEE CUP
    If you start every morning with a steamy cup, a quick tabulation can show you that the waste is piling up. Invest in a reusable cup, which not only cuts down on waste, but keeps your beverage hot for a much longer time. Most coffee shops will happily fill your own cup, and many even offer you a discount in exchange!

    Thre and back

    25. BATCH ERRANDS
    Feel like you spend your whole week trying to catch up with the errands? Take a few moments once a week to make a list of all the errands that need to get done, and see if you can batch them into one trip. Not only will you be saving gasoline, but you might find yourself with much better time-management skills.

    switch

    26. TURN OFF LIGHTS
    Always turn off incandescent bulbs when you leave a room. Fluorescent bulbs are more affected by the number of times it is switched on and off, so turn them off when you leave a room for 15 minutes or more. You'll save energy on the bulb itself, but also on cooling costs, as lights contribute heat to a room.

    Mow

    27. GREENER LAWN CARE
    If you must water your lawn, do it early in the morning before any moisture is lost to evaporation. Have a few weeds? Spot treat them with vinegar. Not sure if you should rake? Normal clippings act as a natural fertilizer, let them be. If you've waited too long, rake by hand — it's excellent exercise.

    Basket

    28. PICNIC WITH A MARKER
    Some time in between the artichoke dip and the coleslaw, you lost track of your cup, and now there are a sea of matching cups on the table, one of which might be yours. The next time you picnic, set out permanent marker next to disposable dinnerware so guests can mark their cup and everyone will only use one.

    Celly

    29. RECYCLE OLD CELL PHONES
    The average cell phone lasts around 18 months, which means 130 million phones will be retired each year. If they go into landfills, the phones and their batteries introduce toxic substances into our environment. There are plenty of reputable programs where you can recycle your phone, many which benefit noble causes.

    Wrenching

    30. MAINTAIN YOUR VEHICLE
    Not only are you extending the life of your vehicle, but you are creating less pollution and saving gas. A properly maintained vehicle, clean air filters, and inflated tires can greatly improve your vehicle's performance. And it might not hurt to clean out the trunk—all that extra weight could be costing you at the pump.

    No Mommy!

    31. RECYCLE UNWANTED WIRE HANGERS
    Wire hangers are generally made of steel, which is often not accepted by some recycling programs. So what do you do with them? Most dry cleaners will accept them back to reuse or recycle. (Cue Joan Crawford.)

    Chug

    32. RECYCLE ALUMINUM AND GLASS
    Twenty recycled aluminium cans can be made with the energy it takes to manufacture one brand new one.

    Every ton of glass recycled saves the equivalent of nine gallons of fuel oil needed to make glass from virgin materials.

    Homeward bound

    33. TELECOMMUTE
    See if you can work out an arrangement with your employer that you work from home for some portion of the week. Not only will you save money and gasoline, and you get to work in your pajamas!

    Eternal flame

    34. KEEP YOUR FIREPLACE DAMPER CLOSED
    Keeping the damper open (when you're not using your fireplace) is like keeping a 48-inch window wide open during the winter; it allows warm air to go right up the chimney. This can add up to hundreds of dollars each winter in energy loss.

    junk

    35. CUT DOWN ON JUNK MAIL
    Feel like you need to lose a few pounds? It might be your junk mail that's weighing you down. The average American receives 40 pounds of junk mail each year, destroying 100 millions trees. There are many services that can help reduce the clutter in your mailbox, saving trees and the precious space on your countertops.

    Light a candle light a match step down step down watch your heel crush crush

    36. CHOOSE MATCHES OVER LIGHTERS
    Most lighters are made out of plastic and filled with butane fuel, both petroleum products. Since most lighters are considered "disposable," over 1.5 billion end up in landfills each year. When choosing matches, pick cardboard over wood. Wood matches come from trees, whereas most cardboard matches are made from recycled paper.

    Yellow pages

    37. LET YOUR FINGERS DO THE WALKING—ONLINE
    Consider if you really need a paper phone book. If not, call to stop phone book delivery and use an online directory instead. Some estimate that telephone books make up almost ten percent of waste at dump sites. And if you still receive the book, don't forget to recycle your old volumes.

    give

    38. GIVE IT AWAY
    Before you throw something away, think about if someone else might need it. Either donate to a charitable organization or post it on a web site designed to connect people and things, such as Freecycle.org.

    Wash

    39. GO TO A CAR WASH
    Professional car washes are often more efficient with water consumption. If everyone in the U.S. who washes their car themselves took just one visit to the car wash we could save nearly 8.7 billion gallons of water.

    02

    40. PLASTIC BAGS SUCK
    Each year the U.S. uses 84 billion plastic bags, a significant portion of the 500 billion used worldwide. They are not biodegradable, and are making their way into our oceans, and subsequently, the food chain. Stronger, reusable bags are an inexpensive and readily available option.

    Fly

    41. FLY WITH AN E-TICKET
    The cost of processing a paper ticket is approximately $10, while processing an e-ticket costs only $1. In the near future, e-tickets will be the only option, saving the airline industry $3 billion a year. In addition to financial savings, the sheer amount of paper eliminated by this process is commendable.

    Click

    42. DOWNLOAD YOUR SOFTWARE
    Most software comes on a compact disc, and more than thirty billion compact discs of all types are sold annually. That's a huge amount of waste, not to mention the associated packaging. Another bonus to downloading your software is that it's often available for download at a later date when you upgrade to a new computer or are attempting to recover from a crash.

    Who uses answering machines?

    43. STOP YOUR ANSWERING MACHINE
    Answering machines use energy 24 hours a day, seven days a week. And when they break, they're just one more thing that goes into the landfill. If all answering machines in U.S. homes were eventually replaced by voice mail services, the annual energy savings would total nearly two billion kilowatt-hours.

    I like my sugar with coffee and cream

    44. SKIP THE COFFEE STIRRER
    Each year, Americans throw away 138 billion straws and stirrers. But skipping the stirrer doesn't mean drinking your coffee black. Simply put your sugar and cream in first, and then pour in the coffee, and it should be well mixed.

    Determined to stir? Break off a piece of pasta from the cupboard. You can nibble after using it, compost, or throw away with less guilt.

    Woof

    45. FIND A BETTER WAY TO BREAK THE ICE
    When a big winter storm heads our way, most of us use some sort of ice melter to treat steps and sidewalks. While this makes the sidewalks safer for people, it may pose a hazard for pets who might ingest these products. Rock salt and salt-based ice-melting products can cause health problems as well as contaminate wells and drinking water. Look for a pet-safe deicer, readily available in many stores.

    Swab

    46. USE COTTON SWABS WITH A PAPERBOARD SPINDLE
    Some brands of cotton swabs have a paperboard spindle while others are made of plastic. If 10% of U.S. households switched to a paperboard spindle, the petroleum energy saved per year would be equivalent to over 150,000 gallons of gasoline.

    Compute

    47. PAY BILLS ONLINE
    By some estimates, if all households in the U.S. paid their bills online and received electronic statements instead of paper, we'd save 18.5 million trees every year, 2.2 billion tons of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, and 1.7 billion pounds of solid waste.

    Stop me oh oh oh stop me

    48. STOP PAPER BANK STATEMENTS
    Some banks will pay you a dollar or donate money on your behalf when you cancel the monthly paper statements you get in the mail. If every household took advantage of online bank statements, the money saved could send more than seventeen thousand recent high school graduates to a public university for a year.

    Battery

    49. USE RECHARGABLE BATTERIES
    Each year 15 billion batteries produced and sold and most of them are disposable alkaline batteries. Only a fraction of those are recycled. Buy a charger and a few sets of rechargeable batteries. Although it requires an upfront investment, it is one that should pay off in no time. And on Christmas morning when all the stores are closed? You'll be fully stocked.

    Shout it out

    50. SHARE!
    Take what you've learned, and pass the knowledge on to others. If every person you know could take one small step toward being greener, the collective effort could be phenomenal.

    ShareThis

    Download a DESKTOP WALLPAPER for your computer or image to share on your weblog!

    Get the shirt

    TAKE IT WITH YOU
    Get the shirt! We've got designs for every member of the family.
    Wire & Twine

    Get the shirt

     

    Back to the top of the page.

    Sources: 41pounds.org, Arbor Day Foundation, Californians Against Waste, EarthEasy.com, EERE Consumer Guide, The Green Guide, Cell Phones, The Green Book, Treehugger: Reasons to ditch bottled water, How to Green Your Car, ...Your Pet, ...Your Electronics, ...Your Kitchen, Paper Tickets Are Flying Away For Good

    Artwork © WIRE & TWINE. Questions? Comments? Contact us!

    And NOW...The News

      

    1   Wow, quick week! Happy Earth Day!!! I hope you liked the top part of today's DN!

    2   Well, we had STAR testing all week, which is REALLY torture for the students.

    3   I guess it's a necessary evil. My students tend to be pretty good at it, but it is an annual ritual that is just mean to kids with lesser skills, or who are in Special Education, or are Limited English Proficient.

    4   To me, it has been a breeze so far. My class has been amazingly quiet and mannerly throughout the ordeal. I have had four hours of almost free-time two days in a row. I can easily stand in front of the room, monitor the test, and do a little grading while it is happening. My room has been quiet, comfortable, and a perfect testing room.

    5   Not all teachers have that. We have some rooms that are overcrowded, some conditions that are nearly impossible for both teachers and students, and some teachers who simply don't know how to administer a test, letting kids out ten minutes early, and not paying as careful attention to the importance of maintaining as good of testing situations as is possible.

    6  To me, it's been a piece of cake. I prepared for it, and so far <fingers crossed> the students have been really cooperative.

    7   Moving on, Part One: My it is hard being a Giants' fan these days. It's too early in the season to be watching a young team press the way they are. Their bats have died. I knew early on that they were playing WAY over their heads. A couple of weeks ago their team batting average was in the .290's. For those of you who don't know, that's EXTREMELY high, especially for a team that couldn't hit too much higher than .230 last year. And they can't seem to win in San Diego.

    8   Ah, vell.

    9   The A's lost last night too. At one point this year, I think I wrote that the Giants and A's were a combined 12-3. Not anymore...

    10  And the Sharks absolutely LOVE suddenly having no offense. I think it was Mark Purdy of the Merc News who said words to the affect that why is it the Sharks seem to make every goalie look like a superstar?

    11  And is Patrick Marleau still on the team?

    12   I hope I spelled his name correctly!

    13  Moving on, Part the Second: Ah, enough of Bay Area Sports. I don't feel like ranting and raving about everything that annoys me; I'd go on for days. And I'd LOVE to complain about the weather, but it doesn't bother me that we are getting rain. We've had a few years of NEEDING rain, so I could abide a few more April showers. It beats sweltering heat, in my eyes.

    14  Well it's looking like I'm getting ahead on my grading. That is ALWAYS trying. The grades are due next Wednesday, and I have one small stack of papers left to grade. Grading is to teachers what midterms and finals are to college students. Last year at this time I was in the midst of completing twelve of fifteen college units in order to get my CLAD certificate and a substantial increase in salary. The classes were REALLY hard, at least they were to me, because I wanted straight A's, which I got.

    15  I did grading AND the classes AND looking in on several family members who had ill health. Looking back, I've no idea how I did all that. I do recall being unable even to talk to friends, or email people. It was unbelievable.

    16  I was even able to put on some Sloggers and muck around in the yard the other day. It had looked like the proverbial science project, so I slopped around and prepared to do some Spring gardening. The rains drenched everything, but made for some nice weed-pulling.

    17   It's a darned good morning when all I can offer in the DN is the mundane. No news is generally good news, a truer word was never said.

    18   I've also been dozing off at around 9 p.m. these days. The trouble is, I awaken at around 3 a.m. and finish this nonsense.

    19   I read what I wrote last night and didn't like it, so that's why today's news might seem a bit bland, or maybe even yesterday's news as of around 6 p.m. The world mighta blown up and I wouldn't know about it.

    20   I think it's the rain, and the Giants' no-offense. Snore. Dudes. Really. Basics.

    21   That's about it on this drenched Thursday. In so many ways, it's actually a blessing. Some day I'll wish I had this drenched Thursday back. I appreciate the little things in life, and feel that often they become grandiose in the scheme of things.

    22  The rain. A teevee blaring in the other room. Pets. A nice job. Food. Family.  Nice friends. Hot soup, and warm laundry.

    23   Sorry. I was having a Thornton Wilder moment there. The thing is, sometimes we don't appreciate things that are right in front of us.

    24   I just smiled.

    25   It's gonna be a good day.

    26   Look around you; there's a lot of good.

    27   You smile too.

    28    Peace.

    ~H~

    a cool guy 1

    Save the Earth.


  •  
    The Daily News

    1   Ah, Wednesday!

    2   Got a feed from AOL yesterday that the Donner Party might NOT have engaged in cannibalism.

    3   As a loyal Sannozayin, I'm not troubled by that at all. In fact, it's sorta nice, in so many ways.

    4   Many members of the Donner Party are buried at Oak Hill Cemetery.

    5   How strange though.

    6   One of my best college profs, George Keithley, wrote and published an award-winning epic poem about the Donner Party. It's called quite simply, The Donner Party. I was in a class of eight or nine when I took his course, so I worked for six months directly with an award-winning poet. The Donner Party was subsequently turned into a musical, strangely enough.



    7   Here's a piece about one of my best teacher's ever:

    http://www.newsreview.com/chico/content?oid=681626

    8   From what I can see, George is still writing and contributing his art to the world of poetry. I thought he was awesome.

    9    I'm quite sure he wouldn't remember me, because as a poet, I wasn't up there at the time, even though our class size ratio was eight to one. I'm pretty sure we had only eight. I've gotten better, and have a whole backlog of poetry that I re-visit and edit to this minute. It's on my bucket list to get it published, but it isn't hugely important.

    10  AnywayZ...I wonder what George is thinking tonight.

    11  Moving on, Part 1:  I kept trying to keep my Bose playing Grateful Dead music last night as I cooked dinner, watched the Giants/Pads, and listened to the Sharks, who were blasting off a teevee in the other room. I would occasionally go down the hall to watch. A LOT of back and forth, what with Sanchez's one-hitter going on as well.

    12   Too much, too much.

    13  At one point, I switched stations on the radio and the Grateful Dead's classic tune Truckin' was playing on the Bose AND on the radio, one piggy-backing on the other. Of course it worked!

    14  Too much stimulation, but the chaos made it absolutely engaging.

    15   Having an overload on technology works well with ideas, and the DN.

    16   I laughed at the stimulus overload.

    17   And in the sunroom, American Idol blasted loudly, creating a virtual wall of sound throughout the house.

    18   Too much, too much. Just like the Elvis song, I swear to you.

    19   This edition of the DN actually began somewhere around 6 p.m. last night.

    20    This happens frequently these days. I work, if time, hit the gym, get exhausted, go home, cook, do papers, and then throw in the first few verses of the DN.

    21    By 8:30 or 9:00, I'm usually collapsing, knowing that if I get five hours under me belt, that I could safely wake up at around 3 a.m. refreshed and ready to finish up the DN.

    22  It's actually sorta cool, because I still get in another hour or so of sleep, which works perfectly. It's fun to work outside the box.

    23  Plus I know that there are other insomniacs who are amazing friends, and who sorta "get it".

    24   Last night, for example, I waited out the Giants' game (which they LOST! How do you LOSE a one-hitter???), fell asleep, awakened to screams about the Sharks, watched Pavelski work a miracle, and conked out again.

    25   I then fell asleep for around four hours, and awakened to a gentle rainfall.

    26   To be honest, I was almost TOO tired to resume this DN, but shook it off, and started right in.

    27   I glanced at the clock, and it was 2:13 a.m.

    28   A large part of me almost enjoys my insomnia now, since I get a decent idea of the 24-hour day. I'm rarely as exhausted as one might think, because I'm still getting five to six hours of sleep each night, which to me is enough. Any less will often result in depression. But five works, and six works amazingly well.

    29   I would wake up in the middle of the night anyway, because I've been doing that for years. Just worry, and life, you know. And a dog who barks every morning at 4:20. Regardless, I always realized, however, that one can't solve life's challenges in the middle of the night, not through worry.

    30   Sometimes I could ponder ideas to take care of challenges, but really? I stopped trying to solve them a long time ago. Instead, I now write the second half of DN's, finishing them up in the morning early.

    31   Once done, I have a mantra. A mantra is a word that one can repeat and repeat until one reaches a second stage of consciousness. I learned this years ago, and it has always worked. The word "Om", for example, is a mainstream mantra.

    32   My mantra is this: "sleeeeeep". When something that really bothers me enters my head in the middle of the night, I combat it with the word, "sleeeeeep". I make it powerful, and it hits life's challenges out of the ballpark.

    33   I usually say a quick prayer, lie in a meditating postion, say the prayer, think of people who need good thoughts, and then move to a sort of transcendental state. Every once in a while I get frisky and astral project.

    34   <finger snaps>

    35   Well, it works for me. If anything attacks me once I'm there, I think, "sleeeeeep". It's an offshoot of a few world religions and philosophies, and for me, it works well. I first started messing with it in my early Hesseian days of Siddhartha and Demian.

    36   Anyway, I just tacked away about fifteen minutes, so I think I'm going to put this edition of the DN to bed, along with myself. Remember, even though this is written about yesterday, it is still being written at all different hours. Pretty slick, huh?
      ; )<----------sideways winky guy

    37   Pretty easy day today, pretty productive day yesterday. Yesterday afternoon at 4:20 I mowed my grass, and with a vengeance took down my weeds. Does that count as smoking weeds?

    38   Yeah, I'd better get out while the gettin's good.

    39   If you're bored studying working today, you might try using my mantra. Just be sure you train yourself to sleep when no one's around.

    40   I haven't been able to work that one yet, but it is definitely in its infant stage.

    41   Aight then.

    42   You have an awesome day.

    43   Peace.

    ~H~



    www.xanga.com/bharrington




  •   

      



    The Daily News


    1   Did you make it safely through Monday?

    2    I sure did.

    3    I wondered something last night.

    4    I'll be darned if I can remember what the heck I wondered, but that's sort of pandemic, if you ask me.

    5    Ah, who knows?

    6    It'll come to me, I swear to you.

    7    Oh yeah!

    8    I wondered how people who forget things somehow REMEMBER things in the middle of the night.

    9    Well, I forgot that early at least. There is still the rest of the night to forget things, I think. I can't remember.

    10   Moving on, Part the First: Are any of you as annoyed by weather guys as am I? Like the Merc News tells me it's gonna be dry for a coupla days, and then the radio news tells me otherwise, THEN the skies open up in Biblical proportions and dump buckets of water on us.

    11    So these days I load up the TOOOOOONDRA with beach chairs and sunscreen, and then bring in a coat and an umbrella just in case I hit bad weather.

    12   Hey!

    13   Dude.

    14   It's reasonably late April.

    15   It's ALMOST Earth Day, which is like one of those occasions that everybody knows should be much more relevant than it is, but it still almost is. Today is "4/20" dude.

    16   I'll bet WAY more people know about "4/20" than they do Earth Day.

    17   The only challenge is, they ALSO forget that today is "4/20".

    18   Whatever THAT is.

    19    Oh yeah.

    20    It's like, "SMOKE POT DAY".

    21    I KNEW that, but I don't smoke pot, so really, it's idiotic. I've hit an age where I feel perpetually forgetful and stupid all the time anyway. No need. I'd rather do active things, like giving to good causes, or watching the grass grow.

    22   I just can't remember which causes I support. Or where my lawn is.

    23   My pleasant senility keeps me from wanting to go anywhere NEAR pot.

    24   I mean, why buy a cow when the milk's free, right?  ; ) <-----sideways cool winky guy.

    25   OHHHHHHHHHHHHH LORD.

    26   Dear God.

    27   That's the newest.

    28   Dear God.  That's the newest hip thing to say so you sound like you're cool, but sorta in disbelief about something. Dear God.

    29    Dear God. Shouldn't that be followed by a letter? I would, in my head, except by the time I'd start writing, I'd have forgotten why I said it.

    29    Moving on, Part the Second:  A little bird told me that Kelsey Grammer and a buncha other "patriots" are launching a new teeeveeee network called RightNetwork.

    30   The idea is to have a reality network about "patriots", involving angry white people and lots of red, white, and blue colors and flying flags.

    31    So the Repubz might get their own network. That's fair. I think it's going to be called "The Jingoists". Just kidding. They already have their own network anyway. It's called "Fox". Hmmm. I wonder if they're going to have their own reality show?

    32    I imagine the opening credits being shot from the helicopter of Sarah Palin, who will be hanging on a ladder shooting moose from 12,000 feet, and her big, stupid smile looking up and cheesing at the camera. The background music could be Comin' to America. Kelsey Grammer could be the pilot. It's enough to make one shudder.

    33   Dear God.

    34    How does any God-fearing American even BEGIN to put up with something THAT stupid: a political party having its own reality show.


    35    Well, I guess they're just concerned that ordinary democrats are "liberals" and "Socialists", or borderline Communists just because they happen to disagree politically. This'll take care of them. It's a turkey shoot.

    36    Dear, dear God.

    37   I'm so proud to have been born in San Francisco, and raised by liberal Kennedy democrats that I get annoyed by stuff like that. I'd feel the same way if the Democrats decided to have a reality network. And don't tell me they have CNN. Uh, no? That's planted, like so many other things. Rupert Murdoch controls most everything. He is chairman and CEO of News Corporation. Google him if you could stand to look at him. He's a high-powered conservative and wants America to think a certain way. It's downright scary the things News Corporation controls. Here is the link:


    38   I'm also proud that I took the time to trace the history of American politics, and discovered that there is really no such things as Democrats OR Republicans.

    39   There are only the filthy rich, who killed JFK and took over, and still own us to this very minute. It was a simple political coup. It's not rocket science.

    40   <whisperwhisper he's a madman whisper whisper> lol! <----Laughing Out Loud, or Lawdy, O Lawdy!


    41   Haha, well, I really do believe that we are run and totally controlled by rich kajillionaires who keep us busy with their "Democrats" and "Republicans" boushit just so people will think we actually live in a democracy.

    42   The only people who subscribe to that are the people who listen to extreme propaganda from both the left and the right. Amazingly, they are both pretty close to the real Truth.

    43    The closer we come to the Truth, the more crazy we seem, whether we are left or right. But make no mistake. Our inability to think has been measured. Is there anybody past the age of 40 who DOESN'T see the massive drop in intelligence? If you're even slightly a democrat, you are a Socialist? Since when? Not when I was a kid.

    44    Truly, we are ALL left out, dude.

    45    But SOMEBODY is into our lives, our freedom and our wallets.

    46    And while we sit and argue about the "liberals" or the "patriots", the guys REALLY running this place are counting our coins and grinning at our stupidity.

    47   Tea parties. I mean, REALLY.

    48   We should all smoke joints today and then go home, spending nothing, you say you want a revolution.

    49    Google anything having to do with the Bohemian Club. Google the Bush family's ties secret societies, Skull and Bones, and with Nazi's. Study what these bastardoS have been doing for years, and you'll start to get the true meaning of "patriotism". But please. Stop the blind belief that one way or the other is the right way. The only "right" way is to educate yourself. I'd begin with the Bush family history. I'd begin with Prescott Bush, and some of the slimy associates he consorted with. Begin there, and read all sides of issues. The truth will be immediately in your face.

    50    Whew.

    52    That's about enough from this Mad Hatter.

    53    Believe in educating yourself, and READING, but reading all sides, and trusting sources that are at least beyond sound bytes and Tweets, or anything remotely associated with Murdoch. It'll be hard to find, but if it looks wacko, walk away. Educate yourself. Dear God.

    54    Okay, this rant is over.

    55    Use your intelligence, and make intelligent decisions. Look at both sides to issues, and THEN go on your rants. I of course, know darned well that I'm educated and studied, and have seen the change happen in America. We are now a nation of chowderheads.

    56    Well, happy 4/20.

    57    Yeesh.

    58    And THAT, my friends, is Tuesday.

    59   The fighter still remains.

    59    Peace.

    ~H~



    www.xanga.com/bharrington

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