Monday, March 31, 2008

Newsvine - September 11 Was a Third-Rate Operation

After the attacks, I was at recently badly flooded Bridgewater, NJ, West Point M.A., and Picatinney Arsenal those days, stretched out as they were, working in the archaeological testing required by law that precedes construction, part of a crew, at West Point, for new roads after Hurricane Floyd to clean up the tree-falls and new road to Bull Hill radio towers. I read the Washington Post book (apparently not the Judith Miller one from the NY Times) which reviewed all the available facts about anthrax research in general. Recently "Conscientious Objectors" who were volunteered for anthrax exposure by the government as their "alternative service" to the Selective Service draft were given medals for their participation in the exposure studies, which as far as was reported, no one died in the experiments. However, perhaps international human rights "flags" might be thrown on that play one might say.

It was sort of tense at West Point after 9/11, and many were at the checkpoints in and out. However, they never looked under the vehicles that I saw so like in the remake of "Cape Fear" the Robert De Niro character might have been there. Apparently the "chain of command" did not see it as that a serious a threat at first. However, at Fort Hamilton, where I also worked shortly thereafter, the vehicle was taken into a tent and looked at by armed uniformed soldier(s) and daily passes with a daily photo i.d. was required even for a few days we were there testing the "Parade Grounds" near the Robert E. Lee house behind the Northeast center of the Army Corps of Engineers for previous construction episodes with our hand dug shovel units, the S.O.P. even when materials are known found down 1 meter.

Maybe you've read some of the British royalty, Princess Anne I think went down to Antarctica (which Sir Edmund Hillary wanted them to protect and which they then still hadn't agreed) and showed that the early 20th century hay for the Himalayan ponies used in the expedition contained anthrax spores that could still pose a danger. As more and more contact occurs (pallets, etc.) with Asia there is more of a chance of natural anthrax appearing in the Western hemisphere where it has not been very prevalent before.

Still unsolved was the victim from the Bronx, Kathy Nguyen a medical nurse who died in Manhattan. A former Vietnamese national, no trace of anthrax was ever found in the vicinity where she died nor in the area of the Bronx where she lived. Many soldiers were also objecting to experimental anthrax vaccines given before they served in the Persian (Arabian) Gulf region and some even refused, some even allegedly died in another Washington Post reporter's research published.

#7.1 - Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:30 PM EDT Newsvine - September 11 Was a Third-Rate Operation

BBC - History - Stonehenge Dig 2008

The first excavation in nearly 50 years began today. I wonder what an "ace find" is? Apparently that was found today. Perhaps something from Wales? The original circle construction of "blue stones" recently found to have been from 200 miles away from there in Wales is where the excavations will go on here reported. Wiltshire is nearby and where the secret underground homeland security base (of acres and acres) was during the Cold War and Ian Anderson of "Jethro Tull" lives out of the salmon farming in Scotland into the oak tree farming business I thought I read. Some of the original research took less than a number of seconds on a computer to analyze the alignments of the stones to the heavens. Interesting work was also done similar in intent at Stony Brook University on the possible and potential orientations of larger abandoned prehistoric public architecture in the New World in the early 1970s, also using "state-of-the-art" computers at the time. BBC - History - Stonehenge Dig 2008

Newsvine - Court Agrees to Take Free Speech Case

When the NY State Law School opened in Buffalo, NY (the only one) I recall reading a few Supreme Court decisions as part of my anthropology background (a number of us do continue on in law) and I want to thank you for posting this. The Supreme Court over-ruled the State of Washington in previous appeals and stated that a gentleman was within his rights of free speech to have had a so-called "peace sign" on his American Flag placed with tape and not in the alteration or destruction of the flag. It had been in a window of his apartment on the sixth floor or something and a small demonstration below it ensued and a police officer ticketed him for $75, which he fought, along with the help of a native American group, all the way to the Supreme Court. Public vs. private speech helps clear that up for me, beats secular vs. profane in these cases. Newsvine - Court Agrees to Take Free Speech Case

Newsvine - Former 'Quincy, M.E.' star Jack Klugman sues NBC over profits from show

I heard him on the radio driving back from Mansfield, Pennsylvania, near where Babe Ruth used to hunt, fish, play ball after the season ended, and he was working on stage still. Why can't they just let him have a copy of the contract he once had with them?! His agent died it disappeared, it seems the least they could do for the guy who first put the idea of an entertaining forensic "law and order" show on the boob tube. What are they gonna do, put it in the TV museum? Boohoo NBC!

Newsvine - Former 'Quincy, M.E.' star Jack Klugman sues NBC over profits from show

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Bob Cesca: The Tide Is Turning - Politics on The Huffington Post

Yeah Lucille Ball's grand-father sent in $30 once to see who they were and she had to live to regret it, from western NY State. Out there you can dump a cup of water in the Allegheny River and it'll flow out up over the streets of New Orleans, Louisiana, some of them below the levee. What a drainage! God-forbid us to be allowed to look at hydraulic despotism in the past and where it might have arose, with its first tested civil service class in the world, in Mandarin, in China and compare other despotism (or lack there-of in Katrina?). I would like to take this public opportunity to thank the Ball family. The head of the American Communist Party lived in very upscale Greenwich, Connecticut my grandfather told us, he from some of the highest tides in the world, Grand Manan Island in the Bay of Fundy, a bit higher than the English Channel. The tide is turning somewhere all the time thanks to the Moon. It should be an interesting Democratic convention a mile above the tide in Denver, Colorado. My cousin George Murray, who once directed "Huntley and Brinkley" (NBC) produced both parties' coverages for CBS in 1976. This will certainly be different from then in this new medium and communications era of the 21st century. So what did the FBI do with the "Operation Megiddo" $6 billion for the millennium? Start WWIII?

Bob Cesca: The Tide Is Turning - Politics on The Huffington Post

Friday, March 28, 2008

The Fearful Among Us Off My Head

Sent to Lou Young at CBS-TV in response to "The Fearful Among Us"

Years ago as a PhD candidate in the graduate school of Anthropology at Stony Brook University, which I graduated from also as a BA, after taking a Spanish language course, I had the opportunity to study with professors who had done their fieldwork in Hispanic countries or were from one. In fact the chairman of the department Pedro Carrasco, PhD, an economic anthropologist, I think he had to escape out of Tibet, studying the local markets there, on horseback, in one of the invasions by the Chinese into that region. Incidentally I also studied social anthropology with Rex Jones who studied the Limbu in Nepal and recently alumni of the university had been traveling in Bhutan which just had its first democratic election. Nepal also has decided after years of fighting by "maoists" as reported in the press, to become more a constitutional monarchy, the rulers Hindu and the people more Buddhists and many, the sherpas have linguistic roots in Tibet. Sir Edmund Hillary who just recently passed away, a New Zealander who worked in building schools in Nepal, and tragically lost a daughter to the ice-up of a small plane wing back in the late 1970s, once visited Wood Road School in 1960 or to our third grade class, taught by Miss Loman, and made quite an impression I think on me, just moving out of the "poorest parish" in NYC in the Bronx, St. Rita's, where many recent immigrants seek help in establishing their lives in NYC.

Well I screwed up. I was the only student in the Chairperson's class in economic anthropology and I took an incomplete. The department has gotten more physically oriented, with the medical school there and Richard Leakey, from the world renowned family of paleontologists from East Africa, is a faculty member. Many of the "cultural anthropologists" retired though the social anthropologist who studied in East Timor, David Hicks, PhD of Oxford University, was made a provost of the university. Another of my faculty advisors, originally from Illinois, who works and has written on the prehistory of the state of Zacatecas in Mexico, returned there where his wife is from, whom I worked for selling her crafts and others in the Student Union for awhile. She had a Masters finally on Huichol weaving (also Quichol) once written up in science as part of a special case of vibrant colors and art that was thought to mimic psychedelia.

I thought it odd when they started confiscating everything on air flights one of the first was a Nepalese man who had a number of knives he was going to give as gifts back in Nepal among the circle of dance that courtship there has changed from. The Himalayan woman today is now part of an economy and not as traditionally bound by ritual and belief.

Well what I think is that if say there is an appropriate level of supervision by a community of interested parties, i.e., Hispanic citizens (civilian review board, after all they took the biggest hit in casualties in Vietnam I was reading. All the US helicopters were gone by 1972. The famous news photographer who took the famous girl napalmed whom he saved and never given credit for is in the press again, taking the picture of the manikin and the poor woman who had to take her breast earring out with a pliers in order to fly domestically. (AP Photo/Nick Ut and further on that day in Vietnam from SteveHouse comment #5.1: Whoa, buddy. You should probably calm down.) are in place then maybe it might be good to catch fugitives who may come to the attention of those who at the very least speak the same language. Better than trapped in an oil tank and thinking there's no way out and some act of violence happens to those "innocent" intruders.

George Myers, BA

Thursday, March 27, 2008

yRead from Spacejock Software and Project Gutenberg eBooks

NED MYERS or, A Life Before the Mast

By James Fenimore Cooper.

Thou unrelenting Past!
  Strong are the barriers round thy dark domain,
And fetters sure and fast
  Hold all that enter thy unbreathing reign.
BRYANT
Entered, according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1843, by J. Fenimore Cooper
Comment: The events around the War of 1812 as seen from one perspective.
Release Date: January, 2006  [EBook #9788]


"Shiloh" As Seen By A Private Soldier.

War Paper No. 5. Commandery of the State of California Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. A paper read before California Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, May 31, 1889. By Companion Warren Olney, Late Captain 65th U. S. C. Inf.(Insignia No. 4862.)

The Battle of Shiloh.

With Some Personal Reminiscences.

"The complete absence of the ordinary precautions, always taken by military commanders since the beginning of history, is inexplicable. The only reason I can conjecture for it grows out of the character of General Grant and his distinguished subordinate, and their inexperience. They had had then little practical knowledge of actual warfare. General Sherman, except on one occasion, had never heard a hostile gun fired. They had to learn their art, and the country and their army had to pay the cost of their teaching. Happily, they were able to profit by every lesson, and soon had no equals among our commanders. But because they have since deserved so well of their country, is no reason why history should be silent as to their mistakes. The Confederates would have made a great mistake in attacking us at all in such a position, if we had been prepared to receive them. But this want of a preparation prevented us from taking advantage of the opportunity, and inflicting a crushing defeat upon the South. By it the war was prolonged, and every village and hamlet in the West had its house of mourning." 


Comment: A strange, sad place like the Antietam battlefield near Sharpsburg, Maryland I've also visited. Antietam,  fought later in 1862, was enough of a victory to give President Abraham Lincoln the confidence to announce his Emancipation Proclamation. (Wikipedia)  At Shiloh, three R.P. Parrott rifled cannons, cast in the West Point Foundry in New York, are pointed in a tripod, their muzzles pointed in the sky, as a symbol of peace, next to the small formal cemetery where one of the fiercest battles of the American Civil War was fought, in Tennessee near the Mississippi border. Aaron Burr was found to be in the area earlier, after the duel with Alexander Hamilton in New Jersey, near Tishomingo, Mississippi they found out in the US Bicentennial research of 1976. The Tennessee-Tombigbee Barge Canal starts in  this general vicinity. Archaeologists worked nearby in the summer of 1979. My grandfather worked on the S.S. Beauregard on the North Atlantic convoys to Russia in WWII before serving on the U.S.S. Buckner. His brother when they both worked for Savannah, Georgia shipping lines, a harbor pilot, captained the S.S. City of Atlanta, which my grandfather was almost on, which was torpedoed by U-123 in "Operation Drumbeat" in early January of 1942 having left the dock in New York City. The ship and 43 of 45 were lost  in what has sometimes been called the "Graveyard of the Atlantic" off of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, a badly magnetic anomalous region for navigation besides, and was to be a hazard to further shipping.
Release Date: February 8, 2008 [EBook #24548]

Paper Apologizes Over Tupac Shakur Story - The Lede - Breaking News - New York Times Blog

I think it might have been started to counter the other side of the story. Supposed it was that his father was the African-American acupuncturist (very radical medical practice just “then” afterwards licensed in the State of New York) imprisoned for his part in the Brinks, armored car robbery, a division of Pittston (oil? They wanted to build a refinery, fought off in Eastport, Maine across from Campobello Island, in some of the highest tides in the world, the Bay of Fundy) that appeared in the NY Daily News as a son visiting his father.  Paper Apologizes Over Tupac Shakur Story - The Lede - Breaking News - New York Times Blog

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Morning Shows Snipe At Clinton Over Bosnia Remarks - Politics on The Huffington Post

This was about two weeks before the "Questionable Air Crashes" story when the Commerce Secretary and former Democratic Party Chairman, Ron Brown perished in an air crash there, their good friend (see for example "What Really Happened") along with other business leaders there to help restart their economy. Speculation as to the wound Mr. Brown had, a gun shot perhaps, (discussed on "Tony Brown's Journal" on PBS) and an airport worker who just before he was to testify over the crash shot himself with a rifle at extreme close range, has perhaps led to the tragic retelling in "then" Mrs. Clinton's memory. Morning Shows Snipe At Clinton Over Bosnia Remarks

Monday, March 24, 2008

Take Action: Tell Your Senators: Pass the Foreclosure Prevention Act

In particular, S. 2636 would eliminate an inequity in the bankruptcy code that currently grants protections for vacation homes, yachts and family farms but denies borrowers similar protections for their primary residence. More important, this provision of the bill would help low- and moderate-income families save their homes, without any cost to the Treasury, and ensure that lenders recover at least what they would in foreclosure. Take Action: Tell Your Senators: Pass the Foreclosure Prevention Act

Newsvine - Google Wants TV 'White Space' for Wi-Fi

A long time ago, the Computers Show on TV, introduced a TV concept by the shows speaker Steve I think it was, the show was from Peterborough, New Hampshire I think, one/quarter of the screen of the TV was shown in a series of b+w digital "images", that could be translated into binary computer program code and the speed and the volume was pretty amazing. I thought Microsoft was going to look into it. It would make a nice replacement as we all go to digital. Here in NYC there's quite a bit of it already, it fades in and out on an omnidirectional antenna but the picture and sound is very good. Hey, the Congress said so, so why not use the analog band to our benefit? Replacing phone books like they did in France might be a good use, and other public information. Someone is also developing indoor GPS using the available TV bands, interesting idea for public service too.

Newsvine - Google Wants TV 'White Space' for Wi-Fi

Newsvine - A Space Odyssey's feuding fathers

I recall after the film going up to the screen in Syosset, NY on Long Island. I found a perforated strip screen and speakers on a scaffold behind it (not the Wizard of Oz?) and I recall this was before Dolby came to the theater. It was interesting, I wondered were certain sounds programmed to come from certain parts of the screen? When I saw "Clockwork Orange" in NYC later I couldn't see the screen. Once upon a time the indoor/outdoor drive-in I used to spend Saturdays in had one speaker in a horn behind the screen, and well today they can send the drive-in sound to your personal FM radio in your vehicle.

I read there was supposed to been an "Intelligent Life in the Universe" board of scientists in the beginning of the film that fell to the cutting room floor so to speak. I'm not sure if that was either Kubrick's or Clarke's intention. All of Kubrick's "stuff" is on display online. One exhibit had the "ape" suit looking across the hall at the Oscar statue. (also in English).

Newsvine - A Space Odyssey's feuding fathers

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Marianne Faithfull on ‘Irina Palm’ and Her Five Lovely Daughters -- Vulture -- Entertainment & Culture Blog -- New York Magazine

Interesting. The last thing I saw her in was the Metallica music video, which appeared like they were spinning around on some sort of super ferris wheel (not a very old invention) but instead SPOILER the room was on gimbals sort of like HAL's space station in Stanley Kubrick's 2001 the set model on exhibit, part of a traveling exhibit, also Quicktime 3D tour on-line. Like the opposite of Gene Kelly and Lionel Ritchie dancin' on room walls and ceilings. I heard her sing some of her "friends" live in caves, tough to see in aerials and satellites, like many of our war "problems" in karst country. Still laugh now and then her getting arrested with the Rolling Stones with Keith Richard's secret stash of American candy bars! Ha...ha...years ago.

Marianne Faithfull on ‘Irina Palm’ and Her Five Lovely Daughters -- Vulture -- Entertainment & Culture Blog -- New York Magazine

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Newsvine - White House: Computer Hard Drives Tossed

Forensic accounting requires that records be kept and this seems to me a gross mis-management of what could be, how would we know, of those national security issues in any cases that might require the relevant information. I thought the courts ordered that they be kept. Former President Nixon's tapes were not required per se in his office, an administrative choice, a new technology applied in a complicated job. It behooves them on behalf of their predecessors to stand and deliver what is the people's "right to know" and provide access to the information either now or in roughly 300+ days in some sort of agreement.

Newsvine - White House: Computer Hard Drives Tossed

Newsvine - The Republican Resurrection - New York Times

Someone, and I think it was Republicans, should admit they were wrong for putting 4000 Grumman employees and 80 F-14 Tomcat fighter bombers (like Tom Cruise's in "Top Gun" film, ours "Anytime, baby." arm patch) in Iran with the Shah just before the "hostage crisis" which was spawned from one point of view by the friendly arrangement we had, their students however did not like being spied upon in the U.S. by the Shah's secret police, Savak.

Henry Kissinger's, out of office, diplomatic answer, when asked by the Iranian students here, if there was anything that could be done, admitted there was nothing that could be done. We announced on TV we would, at that time I was sitting in the house of the F-14 test pilot, who also administers the "Cradle of Aviation Museum" on Long Island, NY, blow them all up if the USSR made a move for the Iran/USSR border. Mr. Gwynne, said the F-14 air-to-air missile technology was a strategic resource that if they, the USSR, got would upset the balance of power in the world.

C'mon admit that was a wrong thing to do and seemed right at the time. Then there was an Iran/Iraq war and over 1 million people died in it.

Newsvine - The Republican Resurrection - New York Times

Newsvine - Flood victims react to home destruction

In 1979 I worked on the archaeology of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Barge Canal running from NE Mississippi into Alabama and Mobile Bay on the Gulf of Mexico. As I recall it was a choice between it and an "energy island" for NYC in the US Congress. In retrospect I wonder if the money might have been better spent in the central drainages. Believe it or not I can dump a cup of water in the Allegheny River in western New York State and have it flow out above the streets of New Orleans in Louisiana. That's some drainage!

Newsvine - Flood victims react to home destruction

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Today in history...

image

Clinton Calls on Obama to Back Primaries

I remember it was just last November that petitions in New York City, in the Bronx where I am, were signed to get the New York Senator on the ballot as a Presidential candidate. It seems to me, that the early primaries were rushed and should be redone. Consider that President Bush spent Veterans Day in Waco, TX and the then almost US House of Representatives impeached VP Cheney was at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, recently replaced by one whose DNA has not been matched. Senator Clinton petitioned after, just before Thanksgiving Day.
News Creator Wednesday, March 19, 2008 1:57:21 PM
Newsroom

March 25, a 201st anniversary of the abolition of slavery...

The transatlantic slave trade stands as one of the most inhuman enterprises in history. Over 12 million people were transported. Some two million died.
Thankfully, on 25 March 1807, Britain became one of the first countries to abolish the slave trade. The bicentenary of that event offers us a chance not just to say how profoundly shameful the slave trade was – how we condemn its existence utterly and praise those who fought for its abolition – but also to express our deep sorrow that it ever happened and to rejoice at the different and better times we live in today...
From "A message from the Prime Minister" then Tony Blair in the foreword to "Bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act 1807-2007" (322014.pdf)  © Crown Copyright 2007. Copyright in the contents, the cover, the design and the typographical arrangement rests with the crown.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

A Silver Streak in His Golden Years: Gene Wilder's Latest Novella - Huffington Post

A little creative anachronism or error I thought WWI "top Nazi spy" is that supposed to be "German" as my "Zum Zum" trained brain thinks they didn't arrive until after Adolf Hitler was shell-shocked in WWI? Zum Zum was Bavarian theme fast food franchise that once served at the PanAm building, on Washington Square, Montreal, and other locations. The one in the Smithaven Mall could not serve the "Hell" nor "Dunkel" (light or dark beer) and the owner was busy trying to bust the NY State Liquor Commission with crooked former FBI agents, a part owner in the now NYC landmarked "Four Seasons" restaurant, and a personal friend of four of the five borough DA's in NYC, a graduate of the Cornell School of Hotel Management. I think they do the "US Open" and museums now.

I enjoyed Gene Wilder in the sleuth role, a play within a play, from the 30s or 40s or so in Greenwich, CT on TV. I was once told it to be the home of the head of the American Communist Party. I still recall going to Kingston, NY to escape the heat of the summer camp dish-washing room in the Catskills, to see "The Producers" and having a fun time. I enjoyed the films he did with Richard Pryor they were also very good, and wish they could have made another buddy film.

Comment on "Uncommoner Than Thou: Buckley, Part Two" - Dick Cavett's blog NY Times

I always read the "op-ed" side of Newsday's (once run by the brother of important author Isaac Asimov) editorial page and enjoyed Mr. Cavett's occasional column. He once wondered on a friend of mine, where he lives out on the east end of Long Island, on "Tick Hill" or something. I would like to congratulate him on restoring, it tragically (over 100 years old I think) burned down. My surfer friend had Mr. Cavett wondering what and why one Feb. or March. I played soccer with the surfer's brother tragically shot outside of "Dante's" over an argument (either over Marines or sports, home we were to one of the first JROTC in the US in Selden, NY named after a judge who was Susan B. Anthony's "character witness" at her trial Upstate for posing as a man to vote) and he had a surf shop in Hampton Bays. Hmmm. Mr. Cavett's article on Janis Joplin still has me wondering about a sighting in the Catskills of her (or someone that looked a lot like her) and Jimi Hendrix in house up there in 1968. I thought I saw him in a cafe in Woodstock, washing dishes nearby at Timber Lake Camp. WFB was an interesting guy and I thought he was very bold in his position on the independence of Panama, where my Irish stone-mason great-grandfather worked on the canal much later after the Brooklyn Bridge where they've had an Irish Appreciation Day after Monday.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Subject: Re: Cannon / Swivel Gun id

"I am wondering if anyone can help identify / date a small iron cannon (swivel gun?) found by a beachcomber in southeast Alaska? Russians, British, Spanish, and Americans were all in this region during the late 18th and 19th centuries. I have posted a photo and dimensions at: http://www.alaska.net/~oha/Kake-Cannon/. Sorry for the cross-posting -- this was also sent to SUBARCH." Dave McMahan, State Archaeologist, Deputy SHPO, Alaska Office of History and Archaeology

Date: Wed, 12 Mar 2008 22:36:54 -0400 From: George Myers Subject: Subject: Re: Cannon / Swivel Gun id

I thought to pipe up, and state it doesn't look like the smaller "brass" swivel cannons. One was once on exhibit in "New York Unearthed" at 17 State Street in Lower Manhattan across from Battery Park run by the South Street Seaport Museum. Not does it look like the "molded" one on the tribute to John Peter Zenger on Governors Island. "*John Peter Zenger* was born in 1697 in Germany, and migrated to New York as a child in 1710" (Wikipedia) and lived there before owning the second printing press in New York and tried for libel for allowing an opinion contrary to the "official" press to be printed. The NPS commemorates the "freedom of the press" that resulted at the St. Paul's church "green" election site just over the NYC (Bronx/Westchester) line. That is across the bay there from where Herman Melville once lived, (Pearl and State Sts.) when he worked for US Customs. They, however were in a sling like mount, or represented a curved mount I recall.

I worked in Skagway, Alaska for the NPS the summer of Mt. St. Helens, 1980, and more recently I read that at one point in the 19th century a US gunboat fired a Gatling gun over the Tlingit. Perhaps some gun like this was seen as a threat, that they had and some one had the wrong info. The trunions don't look right, bit I know nothing about guns per se. Looks like a heavier mount was required than a "rail gun".

Monday, March 10, 2008

Friday, March 07, 2008

West Point Foundry, Cold Spring, NY (pre-post Windows desktop archaeology)

I was then using close-range photogrammetry digitization on a GTCO 48" tablet and Rollei MR2 software in development, 3D measurements from 2D photographs, theoretically extremely accurate if need be. Some First Nation petroglyphs mapped, some "as-built" historical structures, some engineering documentation of the building stones inside the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City, [are they moving...which ones], the "Crazy Horse" monument engineering design, traffic accidents in England still are, etc., were some of the projects that were being done back then on the 386/387 Intel design. I was using it in the West Point Foundry periphery for an EPA Superfund cleanup in Cold Spring, NY brought to us by friendly Canadians at Prometric Technologies. There we recovered the R.P. Parrott designed rifled cannon "gun platform" (prototype or the "Swamp Angel"?) used in the incendiary bombardment of Charleston, South Carolina in 1863, from under the "bridge shop" remains (burned ca. 1912) in the Constitution Island marsh in Foundry Cove, across the Hudson River from the West Point Military Academy. Geospatial Archaeology West Point Foundry Archaeology Project at Cold Spring, NY West Point Foundry Preserve Putnam County Historical Society and Foundry School Museum Gallery Opening March 29, 2008 The West Point Foundry: Unearthing the Past, Forging a Future The artifact in the ad is a 10" low bowl not a "Plate" which pops up in the mouse "hover" in the pointer when you pause over it. It is from the "Haul Road" excavations where the earthen dam materials were brought through the "workers houses" into the cove, to create an empoundment to excavate the cadmium contaminated soils, mix them with concrete and haul them out on the historic rail-bed by train. Then the marsh was returned to a more natural state. Clues: They've been doing survey in the marsh around Charleston, South Carolina looking for the "Swamp Angel" but the grillage was never found thought maybe sunk so there's a sign in the swamp in the water, here's where it might have been. The cannon, it exploded and is in Trenton, NJ, investigated (NY Times Dec. 1, 1876 "The "Swamp Angel."; A Monument Made Of The Old Gun Which Was Used In Bombarding Charleston In 1863--A Unique Memorial By The Citizens Of Trenton, N.J.") Perhaps the original was towed back to Cold Spring, NY. They should bring the cannon back and West Point should give back the 10" Armstrong breech loader they have from the South. Or put the "Swamp Angel" up at West Point Academy. I worked around there on Bull Hill for Panamerican Consultants, Hurricane Floyd damaged it a bit and testing was required for a new road to the radio towers on Bull Hill and elsewhere, about the same time anthrax appeared in the US mails. In which case may it have been the actual rather than a prototype? And would or should there have been further documentation of the "best invention of the Civil War" according to the South Carolina Historical Commission, even though used in the somewhat harmless incendiary bombardment of civilians? There's an argument going on between the "North" and "South" today over the 10" gun there at the Academy.

Re: Should I remove SP 3 v.3264 before final release--not having problem - TechNet Forums

I have the same "problem" on my setup. I hope the final will work as well by replacing the files as the other SP's did. As I recall they didn't have to be removed first then installed. It might be because of the beta format that they are I guess. v.3264 was back in December and I haven't had any problems with it, and was an improvement (wish however I could figure out why the mouse goes on and off sometimes, replugged it comes back, a Logitech Optical Mouse. I remember at an early computer show at the now demolished Coliseum in NYC, when parallel cables were 49.99 elsewhere and the Osborne portable and computer chairs were on exhibit, accosted as I was by a rolling robot who apparently read my name tag, the optical mouse and its red led on a metal pad with scored grid lines. It was an interesting show. I was working then with the world's first laptop the Epson HX-20 hooked to an infrared "total station" bounces led to a corner prism and back timing the speed of light adjusted for atmosphere. The pressure tablet and sublimated dye printer was great!

Re: Should I remove SP 3 v.3264 before final release--not having problem - TechNet Forums

Thursday, March 06, 2008

archaeologyfieldwork.com :: View topic - CRM debate in Japan

PostPosted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 8:45 pm    Post subject: Re: CRM debate in Japan

I have watched some TV from Japan in NYC (a relatively new enclave of Japanese-Americans is across the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee, NJ it's reported. A Zen restaurant on Union Square was once opened when I worked nearby for the archaeologist Joel W. Grossman, PhD, where once around 1945 there was recorded only one Japanese restaurant in all of NYC and a well-known historian reported the first Japanese person arriving in NYC not until around 1870 or so...) and on one of the shows they were discussing available employment for women. For example, coloring animation "cels" at home, and along with the different jobs described, was what I've seen in a similar American film in a library lunch hour in Buffalo, NY, referred jokingly as a "career in ruins". Their archaeology however showed a number of mostly women working with hand hoe excavators for a certain scale of yen per day, that in the upper quarter I'd say of wages described, in what was described elsewhere as about a $1 billion expenditure per year (in US $) by the Japanese in the archeology of their country.

I once worked for Petr Glumac, PhD, in the first "almshouse cemetery" in NYC City Hall Park in 1999 who had just returned from Japan for his private company working on the US military archaeology requirements there, on US base. Another location is currently at issue partly over the rare sea-going dugong, similar to the mostly Florida seen "manatee" (the dugong I remember was noted in the lagoon in Jules Verne's "Mysterious Island") though recently the overlooked historical impacts have been brought up as importantly overlooked in the citing of the US military base. Thanks for this interesting article. Archaeology fieldwork is often in the middle and eleventh hour of things in the public sector, and why it should be planned for. This sounds an interesting development there.

archaeologyfieldwork.com :: View topic - CRM debate in Japan

Secular skepticism

"Fearful that the Russians are fluoridating America's drinking water, General Jack D. Ripper unleashes a B-52 nuclear bomb attack on the Soviets, and a frantic president and joint chiefs of staff must somehow find a way to stop it. A pitch-perfect black comedy, DR. STRANGELOVE was nominated for four Academy Awards and ranked 39th on AFI's 100 Years 100 Movies-10th Anniversary." - Arclight Cinema - Sherman Oaks and Hollywood, California (no one will be seated after the feature film begins)

SECULAR PAKISTANI WINS TALIBAN SUPPORT - MSNBC World Blog

Comment: Exposed in anthropology to Roland Barth's early study in Pakistan, the "Swat Pathans" I have been dismayed over the militarism that has arrived over the years, partly over the theft of Afghanistan's treasury, before it destabilized and the USSR invaded, the Iran "hostage" situation, where we once had 4000 Grumman employees training the Shah's pilots for 80 F-14 fighter-bombers just before the Iran-Iraq war, the rise of the Tale(i)ban, which at one time was against the opium crop, reported now for it by the MSM (main-stream media, source?) which was replaced for awhile in Pakistan by the cash-crop producing the "sunblock" PABA, until it was found hazardous, (would be nice if botany could solve that) and generally the region became extremely dangerous after Kuwait would not sit down with Iraq over the oil reserves reported to be 80% in Iraq that Kuwait was pumping on their mutual "line in the sand" border drawn by the British in the 1920s. Our generalized solution of a "war on terror" is and has, in my opinion, to be too simplistic, and almost an excuse to avoid the extremely complex problems that could be more rationally discussed, without the "terror" umbrella and more with emphasis on terrafirma, the lands, in the understanding of the area. After all the Encyclopedia Britannica cites Iraq as in "southwest Asia".

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Slate -> The Fray -> The Spectator

Please keep the book...

I once put the jacket back on right-side-up on one of Nabokov's books in a Bronx public library, a borough where Stanley Kubrick, film director of "Lolita" came from and I currently live, where also the US Supreme Court Chief Justice Roberts' wife is from. I read recently, thinking of monarch butterflies flying around West Point Academy that I saw testing Bull Hill and environs there for archeology, that he, V.N., is also known as a famous lepidopterist, or butterfly collector. I've also read he had the condition of "synesthesia" its been written, where words are colors, an experience that is difficult to sort out as alluded to in this article. As an example to others with it and as a beacon for study so to speak, it would be a shame to destroy "Laura" a further example, to look at it clinically, to understand our collective brains and its artistic creations, a loss to many perhaps.

When my father died, I read an obituary of Carl G. Jung's nephew or relation on Long Island, who held three or four patents and worked in the Third World, trying to improve the human condition there. I would hope like him, another reputation and cloud of opinion would not might convince Dmitri Nabokov to do something foolish. Consider all the brou-ha-ha over Sigmundus Freud's associate!

Slate -> The Fray -> The Spectator

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Candygram for Mongo...

Projects in Parks: Thirty Years of Historical Archeology in Skagway, Alaska by Becky M. Saleeby

Klondike Gold Rush NHP, in Skagway, is one of the most popular attractions in Alaska, offering tourists a chance to see restored Gold Rush era buildings and exhibits.  Even though archeological testing has regularly been associated with the preservation and restoration of historic buildings since 1978, the role of archeology in the development of the park is not widely known.  Among the major results of thirty years of historical archeology in Skagway is a ten-volume series of reports that document the town's colorful past.  They serve as an example of how historic preservation laws and regulations can be a driving force and, together with good historic archeology, can result in the enrichment of our knowledge about the Gold Rush era and its aftermath for the benefit of scholars and park visitors alike.

Archeology E-Gram, distributed via e-mail on a regular basis, includes announcements about news, new publications, training opportunities, national and regional meetings, and other important goings-on related to public archeology in the National Park Service and other public agencies. Recipients are encouraged to forward Archeology E-Grams to colleagues and relevant mailing lists.  The Archeology E-Gram is available on the News and Links page http://www.nps.gov/archeology/public/news.htm on the Archeology Program web site.