Some recent thoughts and sites I've come up with and across. Everything on 11/26/04 and before was all entered on 11/26/04 from ClipCache Plus from XRayz Software.
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Recent Revolution Research
Wanted...Dead or Alive
"Anytime, baby" was on the shoulder patch of the Grumman trained pilots of the F-14 Tomcat's the Shah of Iran ordered (80 [of 100?] delivered according to an F-14 test pilot Tom Gwynne, vice president of the "Cradle of Aviation Museum" on Long Island, NY the other day in Newsday) for defense of Iran back in the late 1970's before "Top Gun" and the revolt, I believe over the impunity of Savak, the Shah's secret police, that operated here in the U.S. collecting info on students here in American schools. There was a striped orange tiger tabby cat in a boxing ring with gloves on standing at one of the corners on it.
Back in the early 70s there was also a wanted poster too, of Jesus Christ, "Wanted Dead or Alive" maybe part of the crusade we seem to be involved in. Apparently, Pontius Pilate may have been involved in the assassination death of Emperor Tiberius, however the story of the cobbler "wandering jew" who drags his body out of a lake every year, is a fictional account partly from Texan frontier pharmacist, an O. Henry story (after Ohio Penitentiary they they think in Austin).
Posted by georgejmyers at 3:10 PM : May 30, 2006Note: the Iranian student problem was noted in the film "See No Evil, Hear No Evil" where a demonstration is included in the film I seem to rememeber which may date the script or lend an historical telling to the tale, of the two "witnesses" to a murder played by Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor.
Monday, May 29, 2006
Heavy water rumour...
I worked on the U.S. EPA National Priority Superfund cleanup in Cold Spring, NY on the Hudson River, in Foundry Cove, next to Constitution Island, where a great chain had been stretched across the river to the river-edge of what is now the West Point Academy to then stop the British Navy, with a series of them along the river, to prevent a "divide and conquer" of the Northern and Southern colonies, by commanding the river. We worked in the remains of the edge of the "West Point Foundry" which patented a rifled cannon, the Parrott "rifle" (New Hampshire brothers) used in the US Civil War to great advantage. As a part of an archaeology team, as required by law, some things were known and some not. After some remote sensing, the or a prototype of the "Swamp Angel" gun platform was partially recovered, used in 1863 bombardment of Charleston, South Carolina. In the history of the property, it was rumored that a Canadian company had been there producing "heavy water", where they had last made bridges and steel work until its "Bridge Shop" burned down in 1913. It was also recently the site of a chlorine storage fire that was fought by 700 firemen for 24 hours reported by the press, so not much of the foundry exists, piles of brick on the water tunnels, which had the first labor action in a U.S. Federal facility, it's also written. The "lead" said don't worry about heavy water production it doesn't present a hazard as much as the nickel and cadmium in the Foundry Cove and Constitution Marsh, spilled from the production of batteries for the NIKE missile defense systems, once used around the world. I wonder, did this site, whose "workers" were once smuggled under aliases from Great Britain to work on the cannon founding, make the heavy water for Great Britain sent to Israel as reported?
Friday, May 26, 2006
Croatia apologizes to Tesla for not recognizing his talent (Update)
Monday, May 22, 2006
Give 550,000 Americans in D.C. a voting voice
Sunday, May 21, 2006
"The Kurds"
The author thought the Kurds more secular Sunni's than the Iraqi Shi'ite, who are ruled from Friday services from the mosque, and the country may go the way of Czechoslovakia (now separate republics) and partition off into three separate areas of defense, though the Turkish government may not allow it to happen, as recent bloody fighting has been going on there with "their" Kurds. My anthropology education has been one study, then a war, after another starting with East Timor, which nations that could have stopped but allowed an invasion to go on, right after the Vietnam debacle, said to be over off-shore oil there too. It looks like a book the leadership should be reading.
Saturday, May 20, 2006
Don't Pillory Hillary, hickory dickory dock.
Thursday, May 18, 2006
Ruler, ruler on the wall, who are you to decide?
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation
Monday, May 15, 2006
Zenger zinger
I have no formal journalism training, though social anthropology is a good place to look for the story behind the news. Horace Greeley told us to go west and grow up with the country, which might still be good advice from his couch in NYC's City Hall Park where he watches the passersby, on-top of the First Almshouse cemetery I've had to dig in. Nathan Hale's statue, who regretted having one life to lose, was moved to the front of it, across the street from Benjamin Franklin who also had a small press in New York once and almost stopped the bloody revolution at the Conference House at the tip of Staten Island, but alas a compromise was not to be had, and the attendees went on arguing whether the windows should be open or closed. Not far from Horace Greeley, Ethan Allen was tortured by a British Major Cunningham in a "hole blacker than any black hole of Calcutta" according to the NY Times in 1903. A small monument to Joseph Pulitzer too, is in the park, within "earshot" of Mr. Greeley's effigy both alongside the infamously costly, "Tweed Courthouse" finished by Mayor Fernando Wood. Journalists and publications, like John Peter Zenger, a monument to his arrival, a "swivel gun" on the southern end of Governors Island, need protection by the public and by the government, as the exhibit at St. Paul's church, where the contested vote was cast, is kept to inform our "freedom of the press".
Culture History
My cousin, Dr. Nick, D.O., died suddenly
Sunday, May 14, 2006
Secret Subway
>Geoff Carver >someone on a german-language list had a question about whether there had been any archaeological investigations of any remains of alfred ely beach's pneumatic subway in NYC anyone heard/seen anything about it? The story I heard that the pneumatic tube subway was constructed in "secret" and as far as I know, I have not heard of it turning up in any archaeology though I think there was some offhand report about it possibly turning up in a construction or utility excavation not too long ago. At the end of last year I was monitoring the new subway tunnel through Battery Park, once, where before Ellis Island, Castle Clinton (Castle Williams across the harbor on Governors Island, another multi-gunport circular structure) on the "Swing Shift" (3:300pm to 12:00am) and many pneumatic tubes kept turning up, where before they ran from the former immigration center (Castle Clinton) to the nearby U.S. Customs House, now also part of the Smithsonian Museum of the American Indian. Other pipes were not very well mapped, i.e., water to the various facilities, and had to be repaired and reconnected as the work went on down to bedrock between the I-beams and wooden platforms for heavy equipment used in the "cut and cover" tunnel construction used elsewhere too. The current subway connects to the Staten Island Ferry Terminal on a track of a short radii curvature from earlier railcar specs., so current passengers have to depart from the first four modern cars, where the platform for them exists, the rest of the train in the tunnel approach to the station. The new construction will alleviate that problem with a new station, at the former Whitehall wharf. A lot of modern excavation and techniques are/were being used creating combinations of concrete pilings and walls in bedrock. An eternal flame and the "Sphere" sculpture from the World Trade Center plaza is in the Battery Park, "adjoining" the new tunnel construction. The National Parks Service runs the ferries to the world's first electrically lit lighthouse, the Statue of Liberty on Bedloe's Island from the park, where my Scottish grandma once worked as a nanny for the caretaker. The new National Lighthouse Museum is supposed to open at St. George on Staten Island. The pneumatic tubes in the park were used for paperwork between the facility I think and the pre-Ellis Island immigrant processing. We lost one dirt profile in the loose consolidated fill to a water pipe fracture. The current Battery Park was built by prison labor according to the fiscal report in the 1850's of the NYC Parks Dept. to the city I read in Special Collections at Stony Brook University many years ago. Once Castle Clinton was an island, like Ellis Island, with a causeway out to it (and Rikers Island, the prison, though household coal trash filled-out by 1903 (NY Times), the causeway came with the automobile, boats from the Bronx serviced it before, connected to Queens today, cases from it are still heard by juries in the Bronx). There were also cable car systems like San Francisco around the area and perhaps, and steam locomotive elevated trains (and surface), whose constructions may have impacted the experimental pneumatic subway. Sure would be fun to find.
"Secret Subway" and "The Beach Pneumatic Transit Co." study by Joseph Brennon. Alfred Ely Beach was one of the founders of "Scientific American" magazine and his father owned the newspaper "The Sun" my father worked at as a young boy, his father a real estate reporter for the "New York Record" I think it was. New York's "The Sun" has recently been "reborn", beginning first on the Internet! Only $0.25 (once a penny). "The Sun" building was recently added to New York City's Landmarks.
Saturday, May 13, 2006
CBS News: Blog Public Eye
What Happened to My Country?
Danke for letting me be myself again...
Misunderstandings: "Gross" Is a German Word, Too - International - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Found letter says Yale club has Geronimo skull
The Apache were misunderstood to be local groups but had extended kinship groups across large landscapes according to Morris Opler, 1930's, U of Chicago, Ph.D, who also wrote three briefs on the rights of Americans in internment camps in the 1940's, two which were heard by the Supreme Court. People of Japanese (our word) ancestry were also taken forcibly out of 17 other countries in Central and South America and brought to camps in the U.S. They never were recompensed for it as U.S. citizens were to some extent in the Reagan administration.
Morris Opler's brother, Marvin K. Opler, Ph.D. an "honorary Navaho", his wife had a Masters of Biology, was also a fairly well-known psychological anthropologist. When I studied with him, (1974) he had been asked to evaluate some of the "Mid-Manhattan Project" results, a $10 million NIMH study that used a battery of available psychological tests to evaluate a square block in NYC for the statistical incidence of mental problems in the US. It was compared to the previous results used to evaluate "fitness for service" based on a cross-section of the state of Minnesota's mostly rural population begun in the late 1930's: the M.M.P.I. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Either rural America is more adaptable to "neuroses" or the general incidence of "neuroses" has gone up, then an initial conclusion. His son is a psychiatrist in the Bronx, NY.
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Motown's Eddie Kendrix, "There's a skeleton in your closet."
EDITORIAL: Military veterans and lawyers
Whaling in New York (cont'd)
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
Whaling in New York
POGO: Project On Government Oversight
Comment of a good review of "Eyes Wide Shut"
Saturday, May 06, 2006
Friday, May 05, 2006
"This Property Is Condemned" 1966
"Tennessee" Williams was from Columbus, Mississippi, where I lived for awhile in 1979, then wettest year on record, and a hurricane fizzled out in New Orleans, in early August. They built the Tombigbee Barge Canal (now Waterway) connecting the waters of the Tennessee River with the Gulf of Mexico, in Mobile, Alabama using that Tombigbee River, chosen over an "Energy Island" for New York City by the U.S. Congress. Sometimes I wonder, having finally seen this film, how much it may have been about an old sow of a proposal for the canal and how much of it was just a story. Republicans manned the phones then and registered as many as they could (and maybe jammed the Democrats on election day, after all it's where the Choctaw Reservation is, and the money to do so for New Hampshire came from in 2002, defeating the incumbent woman governor) to vote, making them the new Big House. I might've given it three stars, because of the direction and story erudition, they earned it.