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.
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Back on-line
Saturday, August 25, 2007
Dynamites Found at Fort Edward Dredging Site
My "Dutch" uncle
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Newsvine - Pigeons' Toll on Minn. Bridge Documented
I was on the Mianus River I-95 bridge (near Greenwich Connecticut) three times the afternoon before it collapsed in the early morning resulting in deaths. One of the results was to build a weigh station abutting singer/entertainer Diana Ross's place. I have often gone past it a number of times, it's on the western side closer to the traffic leaving the "New York" side and have often seen it empty. It appears to me that it probably should have been on the other side to get the traffic coming toward NYC than the traffic leaving, but I have not seen the traffic volume studies.
Inspection is a problem on those types and one unique solution I've seen on-line was employed by the California DOT. They have a rotary engine powered ducted-fan on a umbilical control tether with video to inspect under their overpasses. Like the Mazda RX-4 I once owned, the rotary engine, credited to Wankel, has also been used in personal planes, burning regular instead of aviation fuel at the same rate and power output. NASA, I read worked on the seals that contain the combustion and resulting gas passed as power and exhaust on the 3 apexes of the triangular "piston," an engine with less moving parts to service and repair though the seals could wear out.
When one of the smaller wire cables stretching from the large suspension cables to the roadway holding the Brooklyn Bridge out over the East River, between the two towers which my great-grandfather helped build as a mason (Panama Canal too), broke, there was an investigation into the cause. One of the problems that can happen with metal is what the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, NY looked for, called "hydrogen migration" which occurs from the exposure to hydrogen gas, which it's said causes a brittleness of iron as it "migrates" through the interstitial spaces between the ferrous molecules. It's thought to be a problem in the storage of hydrogen as an alternative fuel to petroleum based products. As I recall it was found not to be the cause and the pigeon's excrement exposure, and the wire "rope" continually under tension, was what caused it to snap, in a process as described in this article.
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Was That My Pet Goat In A Jar?
Yesterday my companion came home and asked me if I knew about all the goings on outside. I had sort of turned outside off after moving the cars for alternate side street sweeping when a car alarm went on sounding like some recording of dripping water through a Marshall amplifier on volume "11". I went outside and the street was closed at both ends by police cars, a police services car was a few doors down in the street, a large Medical Examiner van was on the block and the street closed off at both ends by police cars. There were a number of camera crews (NBC, CBS, Cablevision 12) and most of the neighbors were out behind crime scene flagging. Gee just a block or two from where Regis Philbin grew up in the Van Nest/Morris Park section of the Bronx reported by the various television journalists as Pelham Parkway (see Forgotten NY for the Regis 'hood and other interesting New York City areas).
At first I heard the tenants had complained that the heat or hot water wasn't working and the Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) had sent someone to look at the boiler and they had found a human skull and they called the medical examiner who was investigating the scene from about 2:00 p.m. until about 10:00 p.m. Still that car alarm, now boxed in by cars and the large van continued to beep beep beep like a dripping faucet.
It was reported this morning that the house had belonged to a convicted child molester and bottles of animal parts were found, one was being examined to see if it was a human fetus. The building owner was convicted after younger male teens he took cave exploring Upstate New York testified to his molestation at his sleep-away camp. I'd only passed him a few times enough to say hello or hi. Lifelong residents at the time (2000) were quite surprised, he was such a usually pleasant guy.
I went to the edge of the crime tape and saw a Newfield High School alumnus I had attended "Junior" and "Senior" high with Louis Young the investigative television journalist whom I hadn't seen since I once had lunch with him and the injured police officer who was once assigned the duty of guarding the former Mayor's ex-wife, a journalist and actor herself, Donna Hanover. I waved called hey Lou and he recognized me. I never saw him "on the job" missing him once when Eyewitness News was following presidential hopeful Rev. Jesse Jackson's speaking tour on Long Island at Stony Brook University as it was canceled due to Rev. Jackson having a fever, which wearing an orange watch-cap on a break from working in East Patchogue, was a good thing the crowd was kind of hostile.
I had been with a small crew in the woods on the Roe Blvd. site, who requested we go see him speak. Mr. Roe was one of George Washington's spies who owned a tavern in Setauket nearby the university, where he and others gathered information at their peril and delivered it to Washington often through New York City to Connecticut. The Roe House in Selden was pulverized by British Army musket fire because of it but he wasn't home and he would later make cherry-wood furniture on Mud Creek in today's East Patchogue, a small ponded mill there in the 19th century. Upon setting off after George Washington stayed the night in the Roe Tavern, now on the south side of North Country Road, on George Washington's triumphal tour of Long Island after the success at Yorktown, Virginia, his cinch slipped and he fell from his horse and broke his leg and had to stay behind. George Washington was returning in part to where he had been to after the French and Indian War on a doctor's recommendation that he visit to the goings on in Boston, the Bay Colony and had traveled there via the Greenport passage, and perhaps also had visited family ties, as evidenced by some of its more recent residents, particular the hardware store on the old entry of the Sag Harbor Turnpike once toll road in Bridgehampton, NY where Captain Hulbert a noted "East End" patriot in the defense of Montauk Point from the British Navy grew up in his father's cobbler's house. He and a number of men marched up the hills there within the hungry sight of the British Navy offshore, reversed their coats and marched down another side of the hill convincing those off shore of their great number thus protecting the livestock kept there. Washington's diary is interesting in regard to some places on Long Island, always the surveyor he started out as. The Nature Conservancy owns some of the properties along the turnpike today.
Monday, August 20, 2007
The Godfather Of Trek: This Day in Sci-Fi History - August 19th
Huffington Post: Marty Kaplan "The Truths Rove Told"
Sunday, August 19, 2007
Steven Seagal Accuses FBI of Ruin, Demands Apology
I thought it was over him busting the Mafia in the film industry around him as reported in the press. That would screw up some people's careers, make heroes out of others like former Federal prosecutor Rudolf Giuliani. Five year investigation of the Fulton Fish Market turned up one misdemeanor, set new rules then hired a lawn-mower entrepreneur, gave them new hi-los (NY Post said unregistered) as then a mayor, turns out the lawn-mower man was in Federal court. No wonder the Teamsters sued. Now the same happened to the EPA ordered filtration plant in the Bronx golf course (could have been in 3 other locations) more recently. Fishing boats don't come to lower Manhattan anymore all the fish trucks now get unloaded in the Bronx, near where Herman Wouk lived I heard. Tai Zen.
posted 03:10 pm on 08/17/2007 Huffington Post
Yesterday, a Pro-Peace Picnic
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Our Roots Were in Duopoly
Thursday, August 16, 2007
World's Largest Camera and Photo
Guinness Certifies World's Largest Photograph and Camera
(Press Release)
Wednesday, August 8, 2007
The Great Picture -- the world's largest photograph -- will have its premier showing September 6 to 29, 2007 at Art Center College of Design, South Campus Wind Tunnel, Pasadena, California.
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Local station WFUV to start alt. rock music channel - - Topix
I am a sometimes listener, sometimes member of WFUV and have watched the FCC and Bronx Botanical Garden tug-of-war over, what I thought quite intelligently designed and "pretty" radio antenna that was going up on the small green space between the road and the sideline of the Fordham University football field (the team has a tug-of-war with a Bronx Zoo elephant at the beginning of the season). Michael Powell, (General and former Sec. of State Colin Powell's son) has also left the Bush admin and the antenna has been moved to the roof of Montefiore Hospital, who offered when the Botanical Garden found the antenna eleven (11') too close to it's view of the plants. One of its DJ's when the antenna clung to a chapel tower was actor Alan Alda. I can't think of a better use of "payola" money, they have a wonderful dedicated station, and the longest running sports broadcast in the country, and have introduced and continue to broadcast some wonderful performers.
Local station WFUV to start alt. rock music channel - - Topix
Richard Belzer: Defaming History or, Who Didn't Kill JFK - Politics on The Huffington Post
Congratulations on becoming the first television character to appear in more shows than any other character, Mr. Belzer. Speaking of shows I used to be a big fan of "The Marvin Kittman Show" his column on television. One of his last columns I read in "Newsday" (that paper is on Long Island, NY a place once reported with the most per capita "disposable income" in the US, hard selling door-to-door "Public Citizen" for $10 a year though) was about the Marine he spoke to at the rifle range who tested the "Oswald" weapon. He said there was no way he could have been aiming at the President. He would have to have been aiming at Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy to hit where he did the Marine said after testing the rifle. The report was left out of the Warren Commission I think I read. There was also talk about Marina Oswald's obsession with Mrs. Kennedy. Mr. Kittman writes here at the Huffington Post. I hope no one "asks him" about it, to me it was his last published column. I was waiting for a clarinet lesson (the only one with a black one in the Wood Road School band) from Mr. Abrams who never showed up offstage. Walked back into the six grade class with my case right into the tragedy being shown on the television.
Richard Belzer: Defaming History or, Who Didn't Kill JFK - Politics on The Huffington Post
Agreement to clean up gas sites in Brooklyn and Nassau County
After (Google Earth)
Before (Virtual Earth)
Agreement to clean up gas sites in Brooklyn and Nassau County
I worked on the archaeology of one in Saratoga Springs, NY. "After and Before" from on-line public aerial photos. The brick gas-holder is now on the US National Register of Historic Places thanks to local participation. Gas-holders floated on vertical rails though inside of a brick tower with water in the tank below ground to seal the gas in. They stored the manufactured "coal gas" and as "city gas" lit the public and private lights of Saratoga Springs, manufactured across Excelsior Ave. from "Old Red Spring". The EPA mandated clean-up site was on a geologic fault with an underground concrete drainage tunnel under it, robot video-taped as a suspect, by the company also working on the US Navy facilities in Connecticut. The Niagara Mohawk electric utility yard was also on the border of two geological zones, the Adirondack and the Taconic regions. The rectangular underground drain may have drained into nearby Lake Loughberry. It looks like they dug up the much of site leaving the early electrical generating plant and moved the brick circular gas-holder once used as a garage away to empty its toxic potential. Most of the "historic" coal tar was once probably removed and spread in unknown locations I was told until a use was found for it. Holy cow, was it! It began the chemical revolution in the 1870s, and from it, aspirin, fabric dyes, synthetics, etc., were created from it, primarily in Germany at first to great profit. There had been a number of other cylinders and tanks, one a twin of the surviving gas-holder, the ruins of which we re-located and mapped in a cesium magnetometer survey in the then active yard next to a large regional natural gas line. Other tanks and manufacturing remains, some all metal, had been scrapped but survived in the ground. Historically it was also next to a rail line and one of the maps show a transition to "coal oil" storage perhaps resulting from the "cooking" of coal for the "city gas". Nearby to the north, near Wilton, former President Ulysses S. Grant passed away after completing his memoirs. The site, Mount MacGregor, is on a correctional facility grounds
"Agreement to clean up gas sites in Brooklyn and Nassau County"
Name the baby elephant
"I was born at the Dublin Zoo on 9 May, 2007. My wonderful keepers tell me that I am the first elephant ever born in the Republic of Ireland." RTÉ News> "Name the Elephant competition"
I think the "Dharma" for one baby elephant should be:
Adyapi
In one of the oldest verses recorded in the human language, that is in Sanskrit, every stanza of this very old poem, starts with "Adyapi" which means roughly "Even now I recall" or remember, in particular, the "pendulous breasts of the elephant" is what I remember from reading the very long poem in English translation.
Monday, August 13, 2007
BBC - History - Viking Ship Voyage - ArchaeoSeek
Thank you. The Suffolk County Historian on Long Island, NY once published an account thought to be perhaps from the saga, to relate to Vinland. In the account two Irish slaves were sent out from the drowned meadow (Port Jefferson, NY) to the top of the moraine where they recounted seeing a large bay a barrier beach and the ocean beyond. We worked in Fort Golgotha then a Queens Ranger headquarters in a cemetery on-top of a hill in Huntington, NY where Nathan Hale was thought brought to before hung in New York City having but "one life to lose for his country".
Around the same time the Hargrave Vineyards opened up (1979) who had searched all over New York State for a vineyard location and decided the Town of Southold, which receives more days of sunlight than any other location to be the ideal location. Local legend also had the 17th century would be European vineyard grower (Mr. Moses) unsuccessful in planting the European root stock, unresistant to the local soil biota, until grafted onto the local grape rootstock shown how by the Rocky Point Indians (a confusing toponym for a couple of places on Long Island). Vineyards there were blown off by hurricanes in the 17th century and in the 1840s. Since 1979 there have been over 25 vineyards started and producing wine on Long Island.
Interesting also lately the so-called "Vinland map" has been under scrutiny partly at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, now run by a consortium, led by Stony Brook University, once under the direction of the US Dept. of Energy. The argument I read has been that because the ink contains titanium it must be more modern than its provenance suggests. During WWII, in the foothills of Mt. Marcy, titanium ores were mined from the vicinity of the origin of the Hudson River the "Tear in the Clouds" and the old McIntyre Iron Mines and foundry of the 19th century shown first by a "St Joseph" Indian as a dam in the mountains of solid iron, a "titaniferous magnetite." It said, the titanium oxide mined from there painted all the Allied tanks of WWII white for winter combat, a railhead established at Tahawas (another name for Mt. Marcy, the tallest mountain in NY State) which ran through North Creek, NY where Teddy Roosevelt had been driven to on a relay of buckboards through the night, after the death of President McKinley to assume his role as President inaugurated in Buffalo, NY after reading the telegram and taking the special train from North Creek.
I'd recently did some research and mapped what were probably the remains of an early 20th century slaughterhouse which serviced the various Adirondack hotels and retreats. North Creek is where modern skiing in New York may have begun, moved to nearby Gore Mountain. A proposed ski-trail interlink may spur development. Anyone an expert on those early industrial facilities that were the fore-runner of the modern chemical industry (everything but the squeal) please contact Greenhouse Consultants, Inc. in NYC.
The Official Site: Sea Stallion from Glendalough 2007
The return of the Viking longship - 1000 nautical miles from Denmark to Dublin "The Vikings Are Coming, Again" The Irish coverage of it.
Sunday, August 12, 2007
Turning the Clock Back Two Millennia to Recreate Scotland's Wild Past (TreeHugger)
Turning the Clock Back Two Millennia to Recreate Scotland's Wild Past (TreeHugger)
Perhaps they could do something similar with Gardiners Island, NY which is the "last manor" in North America technically and still has that status. The reproduced document that I read in the Huntington Free Library at Westchester Square in the Bronx, granted the property of the island as such, signed by King James, King of Scotland, it's signed. Many ospreys have nested there and often the deer herd has to be culled.
Saturday, August 11, 2007
WeirsCAM Remote Window
BBC - History - Viking Ship Voyage
Norman Horowitz: Don't Mess With the Long Ranger or Walter Cronkite - Politics on The Huffington Post
I'm not sure if this is relevant but I heard that at the United Nations Chapel, Edwin Newman, also like Walter Cronkite, a famous television journalist, read a eulogy about my cousin George Murray, an award winning television producer of NBC news, who started in the "film at eleven" news editing room, becoming a director of "Huntley and Brinkley" one of the early pioneers of TV news along with CBS's and eventually producing both Democratic and Republican convention coverages for CBS in 1976. He died in Mexico where his wife was introducing Avon beauty products there.
I heard at the eulogy in the UN chapel that Mr. Newman read a letter George Murray had to send to his crew in Vietnam who were in a long investigative job of trying to show the "common soldiers view" of the conflict, which was canceled by higher-ups. If you recall sometime after the end of the Vietnam War, the entire NBC network was sued by General Westmoreland for millions, settled for an undisclosed amount, over an NBC News retrospective of the war, where in it was alleged or shown, that body counts had been manipulated by the US military to show, or alleged to show, that it was winning not losing. His crew had spent many dangerous months there and it was a shame that these "higher-ups" had made sure the documentary got nowhere I believe.
Norman Horowitz: Don't Mess With the Long Ranger or Walter Cronkite - Politics on The Huffington Post
Between the "screws" the Cuba Reef
Friday, August 10, 2007
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
...for all the marbles (histarch)
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Kings Point Merchant Marine Academy, Kings Point, NY
Inside there are many exhibits of the Merchant Marine Service, once the most integrated (both minorities and in ages of troops) service in the US armed forces, though granted only half the pension and recompense of the other branches, though suffered the most casualties as a percentage of those involved in the conflict of World War II.
In the 1970s the Emperor of Japan's "Sword of Surrender" a plain white samurai sword given to the US during the terms of surrender signed, was stolen from this museum. It was returned in the 1990s with a note that explained that the person who took it did so to draw attention to the lack of treatment merchant mariner veterans received. Just recently the Canadian government recompensed to equal amount their own merchant mariners to reflect their other armed services. However, the US has yet to. When the "thief" died of cancer, he left instructions for its return. It was left on the entrance step with a note explaining the theft and reason for it.
I was there when it went back on exhibit when as part of the annual meeting of the National Maritime Historical Society, we visited the museum. There is a monument to Merchant Mariners in Battery Park in lower Manhattan.
Google Earth Download U.S. Merchant Marine Museum - Large propeller.kmz
State University of New York Maritime College, Fort Schuyler, the Bronx, NY
Louis Seymour Bazett Leakey (1903-1972)
Monday, August 06, 2007
New York State's Oldest Lighthouse to Be Preserved?
New York architecture and archaeology
Saturday, August 04, 2007
Screen Vendors
Friday, August 03, 2007
Charlie Rose: Robert Novak on Bush's Decision to Invade Iraq
Thursday, August 02, 2007
Are All Those Copyright Warnings Deceiving Us?
Two great male actors:
A Great Gentleman Friend of America: the Marquis de Lafayette:
A New Hermione a New York Times slide show of the ongoing replication of the ship Lafayette sailed to America on. He was wounded in the Battle of the Brandywine. There are two white marble busts, one of him and one of George Washington, in the US National Trust "Lyndhurst Estate" near the Tappan Zee Bridge. Some of the property nearby was donated by the Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon.
Thank you Jean-Luc Picard...
Re: Hand Scanner (histarch)
I used a hand scanner to scan the profiles from the West Point Foundry "workers houses" from the field and then with Corel scan to vector software bring them into state plane coordinates in AutoCAD back in 1992-1993. It worked pretty well as you could adjust the input and all the graph paper lines would disappear leaving only the drawing. Once they were cleaned up and often "closed" as polygons they were exported back to image software where the strata were painted or filled further (then AutoCAD was mostly filling closed objects with hatching. There was a certain satisfaction in that what was drawn was what was "framed" by the rest of the drawing.
There was just a recent NY Times review of some of the scanners by David Pogue which he attempts to get the scoop on the Harry Potter book which is pretty funny over at the tech reviews he does. Some work solo some work with a notebook computer. I recall having to check with the library if you can scan some things because of light issues. I once stood on a large portable ladder the Map Room of the NY Public Library had to photograph a large scale map which hinted at a partnership with a large dairy owner with then "Boss" Tweed administration to control the land around the proposed new aqueduct. The map was the largest I'd ever seen on paper and tough to photograph, considering we were interested in the one section, where the high voltage underground cable that was going to come through from biogeneration at the world's second largest sugar refinery in Yonkers to the power grid at Dunwoodie, NY.
A number of years ago, just before the restoration work of the Main Reading Room of the NY Public Library, I recall reading a “Writers Guild of America” article on copyright. The author stated that photocopy was very regulated in other countries but not here. Also, in the same article I recall was the discussion of the Supreme Court ruling that found baseball was a “national past-time” and not subject to the rules limiting monopoly applied in other business and that speech (writing) about baseball not subject to the same rules. I recall a sports bar in Brooklyn, the Brooklyn Dodgers or “The Dodgers” that was sued by the Los Angeles baseball franchise for copyright infringement, even though the team had originated there. Lately, I read the WGA is being sued for collecting foreign authors monies but not redistributing it correctly along with other problems, I wonder if they will go on the rumored strike.