Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Not Arrogance, but Excellence

So this weekend brings me the first really great problem with being away from home. This weekend is the start of the college football season, the one I've been waiting for since USC (the real one, the one in LA) leave its tire marks on top of the group of people who appeared at the Orange Bowl in Oklahoma Sooner uniforms. Unfortunately, because New England is, well, different from the Midwest with regards to college football, I've gone from being surrounded by discussions of Notre Dame and Chad Henne to discussions of how Jerry Remy's announcing effects the Red Sox. This means that this Saturday, the real opening day of college football, instead of seeing Michigan at 3:30, its BC and BYU. Now don't get me wrong, I respect BC, in fact I think they'll wing the Atlantic Division of the ACC over FSU, and it'll be good to see BYU wearing their old uniforms again, rather than the bibs, but come on. And, to make things worse, XM, which is supposed to carry Big Ten football games, doesn't have any Michigan broadcasts (or Ohio State), which makes me think that there's a problem getting the rights. Now, beccause they are Michigan, I'll probably still be able to watch quite a few games (ND and OSU come to mind, plus the ESPN games) but what concerns me will be my ability to watch games like Iowa or State, where I might end up having to watch a lame ACC game instead of Michigan. I may just resort to calling in to TKA and asking to listen to the feed from WJR. This is the height of poo.

A couple of weeks ago, myself and the Adams agreed to join a Salmon Press Fantasy Football League. While I originally was not totally into it, as the draft approached last Sunday , we, as a group started having stategy sessions, and got a draft plan together. Seriously, we took a lot of time and planned everything out. Sunday, we made our way to Meredith, witnessed an accident directly behind us, and then made our way to the draft. We did pretty well, considering that this was our first real draft, and our startaegy sessions/gameplan seemed to pay off. Here's our team- Our league requires 3 QB, 4 RB, 4 WR, 2 TE, 2 defenses/special teams and 2 kickers

QB
Peyton Manning
Carson Palmer
Kyle Boller

RB
Stephen Jackson
Willis McGahee
Carnell Williams
Thomas Jones

WR
Chad Johnson
Nate Burleson (sorry John)
Michael Clayton
Darrell Jackson

TE
Dallas Clark
Randy McMichael

Defense-Special Teams
Chicago
Denver

Kickers
Matt Stover
Shayne Graham

One last football related thing. Yeah, I watched the game Monday. It was bad, really bad. One thing I'm noticing, and frankly, we should have seen it when he was hired, but Steve Marriuci is one of the primary things holding the Lions back. Among the many teams that run some version of the West Coast Offense, the Lions' is by far the most conservative. Teams like the Packers and Broncos run rush heavy versions of the WCO (or the Cincinatti System, as it should be called, since that's where Walsh developed it for Ken Anderson) but also go downfiel often. The Vikings and Cardinals both run a version using three wide recievers. Even the Rams and Chiefs' offeses carry elements of the West Coast Offense. With the three wide receivers, the Lions should have an exciting, vertical style of offense. But they continue to dink and dunk. They run 4 yard patterns when they need five yards, or they give to the fullback on fourth and one. Marriuci, for one reason or another wants to stick to perhaps the most outdated version of the offense, without fully utilizing the potential of his receivers or his quarterback. if the Lions aren't in three-wide sets at least 35% of the time this year, and they lose, it shouldn't be on Joey. It should be on Mooch for taking bullets out of his own gun.

Monday, August 29, 2005

To Hell with the Moon Man


I didn't watch a lot of the VMA's last night. When I did, I happened to see a couple of commercials MTV was running for itself, one of which was them trying to refute the charge that they don't play music. They do, in fact, play music. They are right about that. Unfortunately it’s often late at night or in the early morning, or at any other time where the majority of their audience won't be watching. The problem with MTV, and I know I'm not alone in saying this, is MTV, like ESPN often does, has lost its original mission. Some of the original stars of MTV included Rick Ocasek and other not so attractive people. Today, even if one looks at the shows MTV puts out, the not incredibly attractive people are shunted to the side.
What we're seeing now is that shows like Laguna Beach, Room Raiders, and other shows essentially celebrate the importance of wealth, of the rest of u watching spoiled children acting like spoiled children, and having it passed off as some kind of hard earned or superior maturity. It’s not.

Last season, when Trey Parker and Matt Stone explicitly went after Paris Hilton, they had Mr. Slave tell us that parents essentially need to teach their children that people like Paris are not to be admired, but to be despised. What MTV is essentially telling a generation of American young people is to be as vapid as possible, and that when they are, they will be that much more superior to those who aren't. The only time we see nerds, geeks or other not incredibly attractive people, its them being changed, essentially being told to stop being themselves and be a part of the faceless mass worshipping the beautiful vapid people. We see this in the Real World as well. In the beginning, it was a fascinating character study of people being placed in an unfamiliar situation, with unfamiliar people, and asked to live their lives. They were real people essentially continuing their own lives, not people plucked from an A&F catalog to make out in a hot tub. While MTV embraces the idea of being the channel of youth culture, the one that sets trends in the teeny-bopper set, they might have done so too much, to the point where it is obviously no longer about good music, but about selling MTV as a product. Those original VJ's, the one's who attended Live-Aid and were as swept up in the emotion of the day as anyone, those that brought us Headbanger's Ball and Yo! MTV Raps, shows that were actually about expanding the audiences of metal and hip-hop, that themselves are considered defining moments in the history of those genres, they at least seemed to give a damn about music, to actually care about what they were playing. They had opinions, and if something socked, or was much too poppy to be considered anything but selling out, they would let you know. Those people are gone, and the ethic that spawned them seems to have been killed in some meeting room at Viacom. Now, its nameless, pathetic hipsters and a few of the old guard who've compromised themselves so much they're barely recognizable. That's not what made us want our MTV.

It's odd, but MTV was really one of the first networks on cable to put out their own shows. Now each and every one of their reality shows, and their scripted ones, is found wanting when compared to the shows on channels like F/X, Bravo, SciFi, and, perhaps worst of all, by VH1. Each, in their own way, has taken on the limits MTV used to pride itself on pushing. Nip/Tuck , The Shield and Rescue Me are all incredible shows, but each push limits and also show real pathos and heart. SciFi might have the best show on TV. Bravo's reality shows, no matter what criticisms you want to make of them, at least show real people. Do you think Wendy Pepper or Austin Scarlett would have been on Project Runway if MTV did it? Of course not. It would have been some neophyte graduate of the Fashion Institute who looked good in low-riders. VH1, despite their obsession with lists and celebrity news, at least shows us what real people look like on a show like Celebrity Fit Club. And to be quite frank, Gary Busey is a far more real person than the cast of Laguna Beach combined. Hell, if you want a realistic picture of high school, go find The N and take in a few episodes of Degrassi.

When I was in high school, I always imagined there'd there would be some sort of show made about our class; that we were just small enough to be manageable, and just large enough to provide good characters. Now, I realize that while our problems were often petty and immature, we would never have made good TV. We probably wouldn't have been thought of as pretty enough and those who didn't drive Escalades home wouldn't count.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Back, Back again

So I have a new, or at least semi-new, computer now. My parents came Monday, along with my grandmother, and brought the desktop my brother had formerly used at school, but no longer needed. Frankly, its worlds faster than what I had, so anything would have been an improvement, but it still does some taking used to. My parents, my grandmother and my aunt Claudia have been here all week and leave Saturday morning. Its been really good to see them, especially since I usually don't have a ton of time at home when I'm there. Still, I've had to work all week still, so yesterday and Tuesday I didn't get to see them very much those days, but we're going to dinner tonight, and will have much of the day tomorrow before they leave.

Good to see that its been a relatively uneventful return to school for the Albion folks, as well as Robert at Valpo. Now, I did see that the long distance cables went out in Albion, so there was a brief loss of long distance phone coverage, but there was something similar that happened up here a few weeks ago, when a truck took one out of the low hanging cables. Just a note to a few of my Albion friends, if you're going to go to the Barbara Bush lecture tonight with the idea to create a scene to protest the war, or ask a very smart alecky question, don't. If you want to protest, b respectful and do it quietly. Like it or not, Barbara Bush is still a beloved Grandmotherly figure, and it will almost certainly be covered by local media. We really don't want to create a controversy that will ultimately embarass the college, or our student body. I don't really like that she's coming either, but it might be best to just grin and bear it tonight.

I'll post stories from the last couple of weeks, as well as more thoughts tomorrow. Break a leg tonight John Paul.

Friday, August 19, 2005

So yeah...

So most of this week, my computer has either been disabled, or simply turned off. The reason? While surfing on Monday, I seem to have downloaded some spyware and a virus (the New Poly Win32 virus), which has made using this computer very difficult, so this might be a truncated post. My parents, along with my grandmother and my aunt Claudia will be coming next week, and will bring with them Robert's desktop, which he doesn't need at Valpo. So I'll likely be switching computers sometime Monday or Tuesday, at which point I'll be totally up to speed with emails and IM's.

Its been an interesting week, but I want to focus on just a few issues, two from sports, and one news story.

First, golf. I watched most of the final round of the PGA Sunday, mostly in part to Phil Mickelson being involved. Like many people, I tend to prefer Phil to Tiger, for the same reason people root for John Daly, Phil is more human, more approachable than Tiger. I began rooting for Phil in 1999, when I heard a Detroit radio host criticize him for saying he would leave the US Open if his wife, Amy, went into labor. When I heard that, I immediately saw Phil as someone who actually had his priorities in the proper order, and therefore, as someone to root for. The fact that he survived being labeled, "Best Player never to win a Major," for so long, also made him human. It really shouldn't surprise anyone that he drew such crowds of vocal support Sunday and Monday, in many ways, he's closer to the rest of us than someone like Tiger.

Part of the worship of Tiger, and the subsequent derision directed at Phil for so long can be explained by the movie Searching for Bobby Fischer. Joe Mantegna's character, the father, is a sportswriter, and wants his son to have more of a "killer instinct" to have more of an all-consuming drive to win at allcosts, the same qualities he admires in the athletes he covers. Josh's mother, Joan Allen, loves that her son is sensitive to other people, and is, in many ways, a saint. She doesn't really want her son to become some cold, unfeeling chess machine. In the end, it's Mantegna's character who learns that his son, the person, is much better off being the kinder, more sensitive person, than the killer. What people admire about many athletes, like a killer instinct, like their single-mindedness, can often make them wretched to deal with outside of those arenas they are used to. They might not know how to relate to people, how to be anything but the athlete or coach. What I love about Phil is that its obvious his family is the most important thing in his life, that he'd rather be a great father than a great golfer.

The Randy Moss issue, frankly, is incredibly stupid. Personally, I'm not shocked he admitted to smoking marijuana, and frankly, neither shopuld anyone else. He hasn't been a part of the substance abuse policy, and it hasn't seemed to effect his performance on the field, so frankly, I don't see the real issue people have with him. The issue might well be why the NFL only tests once a season for illegal drugs, essentially allowing someone to smoke 11 months out of the year, except before camp.

I admire Cindy Sheehan. I can understand why, for example, she seems to have been somewhat radicalized, especially with regards to Israel. She has been, by far, the most effective messenger of the anti-war movement, one who has an incredibly powerful story. Has it helped that it is August, traditionally the slowest news month? Of course. It's helped that there is very little activity in Washington, nothing to distract the news cycle from Sheehan's protests. The President has mostly appeared cold and unfeeling, as someone more interested in working out and tooling around his Crawford mansion (a ranch is a working farm, with animals. The Bush "ranch" is not a working farm, after all, he's only there about two months a year."), then dealing with Cindy Sheehan. The Republicans can't attack her directly, though theirr proxies on radio and on Fox are doing so. It will be interesting to see what happens when Bush goes back to Washington, but right now, things at Camp Casey certainly seem to be interesting.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

That escalated quickly, I mean that really got out of hand fast.

I wanted to use today to talk about just a few things that have been in the air for the last couple of weeks.
The Native American mascot issue: I have always been of one mind about this. Frankly, the offensiveness of something should be judged the offended party, not the offenders. I believe the outrage over the issue that we've heard, frankly, just comes from white people afraid of having these vestiges of their unfettered dominance over the culture swept away. I understand that in some cases, like the Seminoles or Utes, the schools might have the support of the tribes. If they do, they should probably be allowed to keep those names. But frankly there are teams that need to look at their mascots. Illiniwek, for one, is offensive to many whites (including myself), as well as many Native Americans.

This one is for John, but it’s a question I've been wondering about for a while. Why is it, that with Mad TV being on for more than a decade that we've never seen anyone go from SNL to Mad TV (like a featured player, or well, there's no other way to say it, someone who got fired) or someone going the other direction. It would seem that Mad TV would look for the cache of stealing an SNL person, or that SNL would really benefit from stealing someone like Nicole Sullivan (when she was still on the show, or the guy who played Stewart.) The one guy I think the move would help the most is Frank Caliendo, because it would allow Darrell Hammond to finally leave SNL, and give Caliendo, who is seriously talented, a wider forum. The only difference between the shows seems to be that Mad TV is taped. Would the SNL people really be that nervous about hiring people because of that? I don't know.

Rush Limbaugh has offered to mediate the Donovan McNabb-Terrell Owens situation. Yes, Rush Limbaugh. The guy who got fired because he made remarks saying people wanted McNabb to be successful because he was black. Yes. This seems a good idea.

Ok, I just wanted to post this, from Dr. Dobson's website. Its from a doctor who tries to give families advice on how to prevent their children from being gay: "Meanwhile, the boy's father has to do his part. He needs to mirror and affirm his son's maleness. He can play rough-and-tumble games with his son, in ways that are decidedly different from the games he would play with a little girl. He can help his son learn to throw and catch a ball. He can teach him to pound a square wooden peg into a square hole in a pegboard. He can even take his son with him into the shower, where the boy cannot help but notice that Dad has a penis, just like his, only bigger."

Now, for a totally different (and not totally, freaky, crazy weird) piece of information- The Bears just signed Jeff Blake. Blake really seems to have never gotten over losing his job in New Orleans to Aaron Brooks. I don't know how seriously he can compete for the job of starter, nor how effective he would be when he got there. He always had the "Mad Bomber" reputation in Cincinnati, but I don't know if you can take the Bengal out of him, just like it takes time to "de-Clipperize" NBA players.

One more thing. I believe I'm not alone in saying that "American Dad" lacks something compared to "Family Guy". One reason, I think, is that there aren't the fun and random pop-culture references and random occurrences. It's all about how funny Stan is because of his job. His identity is all about his job. Peter Griffin really doesn't seem to work all that often, so his character seems more rounded and not as job-centered. The funniest moment, for me, on "American Dad" is the weird 2 or 3 minute interlude with the two electrical workers who find the golden, jewel-encrusted, you know, fecal matter, in part because it was so totally random.

Friday, August 12, 2005

Stories, and sorry, Chicago

So I went to watch the Red Sox play the Pale Hose at Adam and Shannon's and I then came home. I went to check on the Lions score (and they lost, but Joey played well), and see that Rex Grossman was carted off the field with a broken ankle. I have to admit that I laughed a bit. While viewing the Bears off-season from afar, it was obvious the one thing they couldn't afford to have happen was to have Grossman go out. Now comes an interesting question. Do they stay with Chad Hutchinson, who isn't great, and go with Kyle Orton as the future guy? I think they should go out and sign Vinny Testaverde, who at the very least is a legitimate quarterback, and could compete with Hutchinson, and could be a legitimate QB to start the season with, one that would give them a shot. It's too bad for Grossman, who I like, because, he keeps getting hurt. Its not like he's failed, he just hasn't been on the field. The question will be why was he out in the second quarter of a preseason game, where you’re almost asking for something bad to happen? Still, I guess this was the great failure of the Bears this winter coming back to bite them. Now Chicago will trudge down Michigan Ave. and consume Billy Goat burgers, and Mr. Beef Italian beef sandwiches, along with plenty of Old Style, to drown the pain. I guess it could be worse.

Here's this week's stories:


Truck accident causes phone outage; What happens next?
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
ALTON — An accident involving a tractor-trailer knocked out phone service to Alton, Barnstead, New Durham and other communities for more than two hours Monday, Aug. 8.
According to Alton Fire Chief Alan Johnson, the truck was traveling on Rte. 140 at around 10:30 a.m., and was either riding too high, or simply connected with low hanging telephone wires in the area, causing the outage. The broken cable also caused an accident, as a trailing motorcyclist was struck by the wire. Johnson reported that the truck had been stopped later that day.
What concerned Johnson, and other officials in the area, most, was that along with local and long-distance services, 911 service was also lost in these communities. The problem, Johnson said, came was because of the lack of a default number provided by the telephone company used by the towns. "If you lose the main lines in other towns, the calls will go to a default number. If you dialed 911 right now (during the down-time), it would tell you the switch was out of service." Johnson said the only service in Alton came through the dispatch center.
All told, the outage lasted more approximately two and one half hours. But very soon, according to Johnson, there might be a move to change the situation. "This is an issue that I see – there’s currently no default number for the town of Alton."
Barnstead Police Chief Ken Borgia echoed the remarks made by Johnson. "This is an issue that is going to be discussed with the selectmen. Hopefully we can get this resolved before any future incident." According to Borgia, Barnstead Fire Chief George Krause was also concerned about this, and had in fact looked at the problem in the past.


Board hears opinions on driveway ordinance
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
ALTON — Residents spoke up at Monday’s Board of Selectmen meeting, worried about the possible ramifications of proposed restrictions on driveways in the area.
The Board had looked at these restrictions in response to Fire Department concerns about the length and steepness of many new driveways. The department questions whether or not the town’s vehicles would be able to reach these homes in an emergency.
Fire Chief Alan Johnson appeared at the meeting, along with photographs he had taken of areas which concerned him (see photo, page A5). "We’re having issues with some of the larger roads," said Johnson.
He identified the area around the Alton Shores development as a problem and said that delivery trucks had had a difficult time there as well.
Johnson also pointed to the number of calls the Department had received, more than 100 in July, as evidence as to why the board should at least look at the possibility of setting up restrictions. The initial draft of such rules being looked at by the board included a provision that a homeowner could receive a waiver on the restrictions if they signed an indemnification to the town.
Public input began with Fire Department member Ned Consentino, who wondered what would happen in the future with the indemnifications after a house was sold.
Earl Bagley told the board he believed a certain pitch, or steepness, of a driveway could not be maintained by a homeowner, and that "somewhere down the line, you need to say how long a private road (can be)."
Landowner Van Hertel said that he was "very strongly opposed to the ordinance." Hertel believed that the proposed restrictions unfairly burdened owners of existing lots, and felt that if the town were to put in an ordinance, it should be for new lots only. Hertel was also concerned about the restrictions on the slope of the driveways allowed in the area, citing the hilly nature of much of the land in Alton.
Residents spoke up about another side to widening roads: the greater likelihood that someone may speed. Some questioned whether or not the fire department really needed to be concerned about this. Scott Williams, a member of the department, said, "We’ve never not been able to get into a driveway." Board chairman Alan Sherwood said the board was primarily looking for a compromise, and that the board would take into account the input from the meeting in working with the fire chief to set up another draft.
Other Business
The board announced that there would be an open house Saturday at the Town Hall, from 9 to 11 a.m. in conjunction with Old Home Days.
The board granted approval of waivers for an improved septic design at the Half-Moon Cottage Colony. The new system would be taking the place of an old, outdated one.
The board also announced a return to a more traditional schedule in September. The selectmen agreed to meet on the first Tuesday of the month (after Labor Day), Sept. 6, and then meet on the third Monday, Sept. 19.
Resident Greg Fuller brought up potential safety hazards, especially for children, at the Swap Shop at the town dump.
Finally, the board voted to accept the offer of Health Trust Service to take over the billing responsibilities for retired town employees. Currently, town employees needed to take time to work on sending mailings out.


Planning Board approves Goodrich application
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
BARNSTEAD — After a lengthy series of questions, the Barnstead Planning Board approved waivers for the current plans for Clarke Goodrich’s subdivision along Narrow Road, and ultimately accepted and approved the plan at their August 4 meeting.
Much of the controversy about the plan stemmed from its location, as it sits between to parcels of town owned conservation land. Members of the planning board are trying to come together with Goodrich on a plan for what might happen to the land if Goodrich sold or passed along the property.
Secretary David Allen and others urged a solution, which might give the town some right of first refusal on portions of the subdivision if it was to be sold or passed along. Goodrich initially was hesitant, stating, "I can’t predict the future about this land. I have no intention of developing beyond the subdivision…let future boards look at what might happen in the future." Eventually, however, Goodrich said that the area behind the lots was considered "unbuildable," with hilly areas and wetlands, and Goodrich and his representative said they would look into the possibility of placing such a note, giving the town right of first refusal on that portion of the property, on the plans.
The other main point of contention was the maintenance of the road being put into the area. Goodrich said that the residents of the subdivision would keep up the road. There was some concern among board members about whether the road would continue to remain private in perpetuity, however.
Goodrich said he "would intend on owning the road, to keep it from being a hassle to the town." Member David Kerr, however, worried that the current plans, which called for the area to be used as vacation homes, might not change and that the area might well become permanent dwellings. The board did, however, ultimately accept the environmental waiver as well, and Kerr again voiced his worries about future road ownership and traffic when he voted "no" on the conditional approval of the application.
North Barnstead Road
Much of the public attending the meeting were there to address the board about the property owned by John and Frank Capone and Anthony Alba. The abutters are concerned about a sub-division, which would create six new lots on a 10-lot subdivision (there are already four buildings in place). Current problems with drainage along the back of the property, abutters feared, would be exacerbated by the new buildings. Board members pointed out, however, that the applicants were not responsible for correcting the current problem, only to minimize the impact of their own property. However, the board did urge the applicants to have someone look at the drainage issues raised by the abutters.
The most controversial moments of the night came in the discussion of whether or not the board would waive the fiscal impact study for this subdivision. Board members were concerned that the newly built properties, which would be permanent, needed to be looked at in terms of how much money the new buildings would cost the town in education and maintenance.
The applicants said they did not understand the need for such a study, especially since the previous applicant (Goodrich) had been given such a waiver, and was putting in more new lots. Alba said that the houses would be bringing revenue into the city and asked, "What will be the burden to the town?" Ultimately, however, the board voted to require the impact study, as well as to require a look at the environmental and drainage issues involved at the site.


Barbershoppers bring ‘Harmony’ to Alton
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
ALTON — After a five year hiatus, fans of harmony and barbershop music can again find a home for a weekend in Alton, as barbershoppers return to the town for the "Harmony on the Lake Festival," Aug. 19 and 20. This is hosted by the Alton Centennial Rotary Club and the Nashua chapter of the Barbershop Harmony Society.
For more than 50 years, barbershop quartets made their way to Alton, with the help of Alton residents Lester and Aida Downing. After their deaths, says Event Doug Dore, chairman of the Alton Centennial Rotary Club, "it was getting very hard (for the Downing descendents) to get help the last few years. There was no one on this end to help these things."
This year, the Rotary Club has revived the tradition, working with selectmen (to put an event in Alton Bay), with Prospect Mountain High School (to hold a large concert in the school’s auditorium), and the American Legion (to provide an "after-glow" event for the singers).
The high school is the change most exciting the singers, according to Dore, "A lot of the barber-shoppers said the old school wasn’t air-conditioned, and the concerts were on hot August nights. The auditorium at the high school has air-conditioning."
The festival kicks off Friday at noon in Alton Bay’s Railroad Square Park at the town boat docks, and will culminate Saturday night at 7:30 p.m. with a concert in the auditorium of Prospect Mountain High School (Route 28, south of the Alton Traffic Circle).
There will be several free informal workshops on Saturday. Everyone is invited to show his or her talents by joining in songs in harmony or participating in a one-hour "learn to sing" lesson. Quartets will entertain those who prefer to relax on the Winnipesaukee Belle, an old Mississippi river paddle wheeler, which will depart from the Alton Bay town dock at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Saturday.
There will also be a silent auction, vendor stands, information on local community organizations, barbershop history, and a variety of food booths, including a spectacular southern BBQ, in the area around the docks.
The biggest event will be the Barbershop Harmony Show, held at PMHS Saturday evening, Aug. 20, at 7:30 p.m. This show features barbershop choruses and quartets from around New England singing a variety of songs that celebrate the "golden age" of American songwriting.
Highlighting the program is "The Granite Statesmen" Barbershop chorus, which features 50 performing members in an all-male chorus. The Granite Statesmen’s president, Roger Menard, said the "barbershoppers are excited" about returning to Alton.
"There (are) a lot of happy memories, and a lot of excitement about returning." Menard also pointed with excitement at many of the other events on the schedule.
Dore said he was also hoping to take quartets out on the Bay on his pontoon boat "to sing to the boats." Dore says that in the future, the Rotary Club is looking to expand the festival to include other areas of Lake Winnipesaukee as well, perhaps taking various quartets to the other ports on the lake via pontoon boats.
Menard described barbershop as "a unique and traditional American art form." In bringing it back to Alton, he says, residents will again have the opportunity to "learn, listen, sing and eat." A full schedule of events at the festival can be found at www.granitestatesmen.org, and tickets for the Saturday event can be purchased at the Profile Bank in Alton.


Local crafters show at annual fair
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
NEWBURY — Artisans from towns across the Lakes Region, and across various mediums, are among the more than three hundred participating artists participating in the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen’s Annual Fair at Mount Sunapee Resort.
The event, which runs until Aug. 14, features "about 200 booths," according to Carol Fusaro, a public relations representative for the group. "More than 5,000 people were there Saturday (Aug. 6, the opening day of the fair)." Tents house demonstrations by artists from various mediums, as well as musical groups and the booths themselves.
Jennifer Kalled, of Wolfeboro, says she has been exhibiting since the late 70s. Kalled has been working in jewelry for the last 27 years, and works "primarily in 22 and 18-carat gold, with precious and colored stones." Kalled is also quick to point to her use of drusy quartz, which comes from the inside of geodes. Kalled’s booth was also a family operation, her daughter, Alie, assisted her mother by modeling jewelry and answering customers’ questions.
Teresa Taylor, of Barnstead, who runs Salty Dog Pottery and is an exhibitor at the event, and has been for 29 years, says that the event "gets bigger every year." Taylor primarily works in clay, creating what she describes as "functional and decorative pottery." She said she builds most of her pieces by hand, or by using a potter’s wheel. Taylor also says that her use of a salt-fired kiln makes her unique among her peers, "most potters don’t use that type of kiln."
Wolfeboro etching artist David Olson was among the group of artists who were the first to exhibit at the resort in the early 70s. "It was really fun. It was a very small community. We had tents on Lake Sunapee, and our kids would slide down (the ski hills). Olson and his wife, Susan Dean Olson, a teacher at Kingswood Regional High School, remembered listening to radios with various other craftspeople the night Richard Nixon resigned from office. Olson’s work primarily consists of his hand colored etchings of New England scenes, which he creates by using special equipment to put the design on a zinc or copper plate, then printing and hand coloring the design.
Alton has two of the more unique artists at the event. Nancy Stillwagon, creates what she calls "quaints (quilted paintings)," by painting or drawing on linen fabric, and then "quilting the focal points to create depth and softness." Stillwagon has been exhibiting at the event for more than 20 years, and has been working on her unique art form since she was 17.
Sandra White, of Alton, is the only artist working in paper at the event. Her art form, quilling, is the creation of images using tiny, rolled, pieces of paper. White says that she has been exhibiting at the Sunapee event for 19 years, and that her art form, one dating back to the middle ages, is still unique. "I haven’t run into anyone else in 30 years doing quilling."
Mirror Lake photographer Mark Klein, who specializes in "Rural images" of New England, is also an exhibitor.
Awards for Excellence presented at the preview party included the E.L. Grodin Best Collaborative Design Award, which went to Sarah Burns of New Durham and Dustin Coates, of Etna.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

"I will smash your face into a car windshield, and then take your mother Dorothy Mantooth out for a nice seafood dinner and never call her back."

Tomorrow is the Lions first pre-season game. Last week, when they held a public practice at Ford Field, Joey Harrington was booed lustily by some of the fans. To be frank, I've never understood the large segment of Lions of Lions fans who so vehemently dislike Joey Harrington. There seems to be so much resentment, whether it’s about him playing the piano and the sometimes subtle and often not so subtle questions about his sexuality. The calls for Mike McMahon, I always felt were silly, because, let's be frank, all McMahon could really ever do is run around like a crazy person, he couldn't actually hit anyone throwing the ball to save his life. Harrington has struggled, but last year was, by far, his best year, and with the improved supporting cast, you would think there would be more support. Still, there seem to be a large number of fans hoping and praying Jeff Garcia is in by week four, essentially hoping Harrington fails. I am really hoping, frankly, for a Drew Brees type year from Harrington, just to shut those people up.

While at the gym today, I watched the PTI interview with Terrell Owens. Frankly, for a long time, I could understand and even sympathize somewhat, with Owens, because contracts aren't guaranteed in the NFL. But today with the PTI interview, and the petulance he exhibited really made no one happy (one other thing. The one thing that disappoints me about PTI is the fact that they rarely seem to really push athletes to answer questions. Today it was Wilbon and Ryan, but I've noticed Tony do it, along with others. Part of it, I think, comes from the way athletes deflect those questions, but still, I would have liked to have seen T.O. and Rosenhaus pushed a bit harder.) The Old School NFL Live type guys really seem to detest him at this point, as I'm sure many of the writers do. Also, Owens needs to realize that he can only live off of the Super Bowl for so long, especially since his team lost. Had they won, he would be a hero, but they lost, so he merely became an interesting footnote. There doesn’t seem to be any logical takers for Owens (though how about this, Mushin Muhammed and Thomas Jones to the Eagles, T.O. to the Bears?), so he won't be dealt. He won't be released. We probably have another Keyshawn situation on our hands. Last week in SI, Peter King made mention of the fact that this NFL season seemed to one of the most anticipated ever, and he's probably right. But the fact that the Owens saga has so dominated the headlines would have me worried if I was in the NFL offices. And isn't it funny, that with a lot of great stories in baseball, the summer has really only had three huge sports stories (Raffy, Owens, and LB)? And one more thing, when Owens talked about how he was a grown man, did anyone else want him to finish the sentence by saying "I'm the man who discovered the wheel, and built the Eiffel Tower out of metal...and brawn?"

Monday, August 08, 2005

R.I.P. Peter Jennings

A very sincere Rest in Peace for Peter Jennings. I, like much of America, grew up with the big 3 (Jennings, Rather, Brokaw) delivering the news every night. Personally, I always preferred Jennings. He seemed the most thoughtful, the logical heir to Cronkite, more than the other two. The odd thing now, is that after more than 20 years of having these three on forever, almost not being able to imagine life without either of them, they are now all gone- Brokaw last December, Rather earlier this year, and now Jennings. It will take time to get used to these new faces.

The other odd thing about Jennings is, frankly, how close he was to losing his job in the early 80's. There was a TNT movie a few years ago that showed Roone Arledge, the man who created Monday Night Football, was put in charge of ABC news. At one point, the movie makes clear, he seriously thought about replacing Jennings with Jim McKay and Howard Cosell, which would have been one of the biggest gambles ever. The funny thing, is the that Jennings made his bones at ABC working the Olympics in 1972 in Munich, when the hostages were taken. The lasting image of those games has to be McKay suddenly having to deliver the worst possible news to the home audience, that the Israeli athletes were dead, "They're gone, they're all gone."

I must say this, in looking at the coverage on cable of Jenning's death tonight, puts into perspective why Bill O'Reilly sucks. While Keith Olbermann began his show with a 15-minute long tribute which summarized Jenning's career, O'Reilly began with his usual self-aggrandizing spiel, not about Jennings, in fact he didn't mention Jennings death until the bottom of the hour. As usual, Fox, and O'Reilly, served as the Pravda of the Republican Party, not as any sort of journalisticly credible institution.

Today was media day at Michigan. Being me, I check fairly often for Michigan news in the national media, and I check in the Free Press, the Ann Arbor News, the Detroit News and WTKA. There is, not surprisingly, a large contingent of Michigan fans that feel Michigan was overrated at #4, and who seem to be quick to fear the worst about the defense. One person I saw even speculated that if the the defense didn't get markedly better, they would be headed to San Antonio rather than New Years Day (or this year, January 2). Personally, I think that they forget that Michigan is going to be far more talented than most of the Big Ten teams they play, and that the mobile quarterbacks Michigan has so much trouble with include only Drew Stanton and Troy Smith (along with the scrambling Drew Tate). They get OSU at home, and beat Iowa handily last year. MSU could well be a problem, but they also have time to get the defense together before they play.

One thing I have to say, that I prefer about New Hampshire to the other paces I've lived, is that it's a lot more fun to drive here. Back home, its flatter and straighter. In Chicago, it was more about survival, about making it wherever you were going without getting hit or in another accident, or confused. In Maryland and Virginia, again, it was more about getting places without getting in an accident. Even on the long trips I've taken, its mostly straight. Here, there's lots of very nice hills and curves, and while you have to go slower, it is more fun to take those curves than going 75 on 94.

The last thing I wanted to mention is this, as something that can only happen in theatre. Rosie O'Donnell, an openly lesbian woman, will be taking over for Andrea Martin, later this year in the role of Golde, the wife of Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof. Tevye will be played by Harvey Firestein, perhaps the most famous openly gay actor working in theatre. So you have Rosie and Harvey playing husband and wife in a play about the painful changes experienced in society as it evolves. Huh.

One quick message, to the hard working young lady in Madison: Tutti noi avere fede.

Thursday, August 04, 2005

Stories, and a salute

I've been wanting to post about this for a couple of days, but hadn't gotten to it until now. Barry Alvarez announced that this will be his last year last week. I believe that the hiring of Alvarez is one of the two most important hires of the last twenty years in the Big Ten (along with Joe Tiller at Purdue). For so many years, it was just Michigan and Ohio State, and you'd sometimes have an occasional "one year wonder" team, like Iowa in 85, who had a bunch of seniors and could beat one of the aforementioned teams (or caught OSU at a time when they were down a bit). Alvarez made Wisconsin, which was the worst program among the Big Ten's public schools when he got there in to a potential contender every single year. With the introduction of Penn State, the league could have become incredibly top heavy, instead, Alvarez helped to lead the Big Ten's middle class into a new golden age. Now, if Wisconsin, Purdue, Northwestern, State, or Iowa win the conference, its not a surprise. The amazing thing about Alvarez, too, is that, unlike Joe Tiller, who brought the spread to the Big Ten, played real smashmouth football. Basically, he just went ahead and punched the other team in the mouth with his giant offensive line and big running backs. The fact that he beat the big boys (except Michigan, he never beat Michigan with any consistentcy) playing that kind of style shows that success could still come from running the ball. He also did it without ever having a really great quarterback either, which to me, is all the more impressive. While the Badgers have slipped, as Iowa, Northwestern and Minnesota have improved, they were the one's who set the bar. Bret Bielema has a heck of a task ahead of him.

By the way, its really great to see this, finally.

Here's this week's stories:

Valley Dam Road residents bring selectmen to the scene
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
BARNSTEAD — Selectmen were given explicit examples by residents of Valley Dam Road in Barnstead of some of the things that have been going on there at their July 26 meeting. Tuesday evening, Aug. 2, the selectmen went to see some of the "damage" for themselves.
Homeowners showed selectmen where they found beer cans, diapers and even a used condom on the road near the dam. Selectmen Frank Sullivan, Gordon Preston and Mike Akstin then had a spirited discussion with the residents about what the best solutions to some of the problems experienced by the residents were.
The July 26 meeting included testimony by residents of drinking, fires being started, nudity and sexual activity at the area near the dam.
Residents did say that the parties had lessened over the weekend, but did say that with the weather expected to heat up, there may be more activity later this week.
One of the more frequently raised questions was that of liability. Resident Dottie Sowards addressed the issue of liability for the town if something were to happen at the dam. Sullivan said that he believed the town had "limited liability if the town acts properly." Residents also asked why there were regulations on who can swim in other areas of the town but not at this particular area. They cited YMCA groups from other towns that had come in and used the area for swimming in the recent past as an example.
The selectmen did agree to try and set up certain rules for the area. The three selectmen believed that putting a trash barrel in the area, secured, so that it couldn’t be thrown into the river, might help alleviate some of the litter problems.
The selectmen also believed the area to be a class five road, meaning that the town could come clean up the area if things got particularly bad, and in fact, would empty out the trash barrel once a week, according to Selectmen Gordon Preston.
The selectmen also said that they would look into possibly instituting some sort of curfew, or time restriction, for when the swimming area would be used. Preston added that the town might put up signs reading "Swim at your own risk," in the area, in order to inform people of the potential hazard of swimming to close to the dam.
Sullivan said, "I don’t want to restrict people from using it (the area) properly." He agreed with residents that the selectmen would back them in efforts to get state and local ordinances, especially with regards to public intoxication, minor possession, and other acts enforced. The selectmen agreed that the police should be the main enforcers and that the residents of the area could report suspicious activity to the police.


Cooperation or court for New Durham resident
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
NEW DURHAM — The town of New Durham will be taking resident Erven Duncan to court later this month, unless a meeting with town officials brings another solution, according to Police Chief Shawn Bernier.
Duncan, who owns property along Rte. 11, has vehicles and tires along with other articles, along his driveway, and has been ordered by the town to clean up the debris.
After initially cooperating with town official’s requests, Duncan has changed his mind, according to Bernier, "All of a sudden it’s defiance." A reporter for The Baysider tried to meet with Duncan at his property, but was turned away by Duncan, who had initially agreed to be interviewed.
The reporter did confirm that vehicles and tires, along with assorted other debris, was visible along Duncan’s driveway, and at the entrance to Duncan’s property.
Duncan had been scheduled to meet with the selectmen at their last meeting, but refused to show up, according to Bernier, who was at the July 20 meeting. At that point, the selectmen said they would meet with Duncan at his driveway, per Duncan’s request, after Chairman Ron Gehl returned from vacation. Selectman Dwight Jones said, "I really don’t want to make a comment until we talk to him and see what’s going on." At the July meeting, Gehl said the board "may be looking into an ordinance to deal with trash. Bringing it into compliance is what the town is interested in."
Bernier said that Duncan had been cooperative in anticipation of a July court date on the matter. After that date was pushed back, Bernier says, Duncan changed his mind, and no longer wanted to cooperate with the town. "Its up to Mr. Duncan as to whether or not he wants to meet (with the Board), to resolve this," said Bernier.
Bernier also said that Duncan has options. "He can apply for a junkyard permit," similar to others in the town, "but he doesn’t consider what he has to be junk under the statute." But at the July 20 meeting, there was some question as to whether Duncan’s property met the standards for a junkyard, however. Bernier said at the time that Duncan’s property did not meet the 1,000-foot standard currently in place for junkyards.
The trial is currently scheduled to begin Aug. 17, according to Bernier. A similar situation in Wolfeboro resulted in jail time for town resident Charlie Teryek. The procedures followed by Wolfeboro officials were cited by Bernier at the meeting as a possible model for how to deal with Duncan and future problems.


Barnstead based co-op now one of state’s largest
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
BARNSTEAD — Barnstead resident Dan Barraford’s time has often been spent two ways in the last six years. Between his family’s publishing company and energy co-op Barraford, has very little time to waste.
It seems that that effort is paying off, however. This spring, Barraford took over the management of Energy Alliance, a co-op operated by Wayne Mock of Tamworth, which was primarily based in the North Country.
"We started 15 years ago," says Mock, "last year, we had over 1,530 accounts." However, Mock had been spending more time in Florida recently. "I retired, and I was spending less time here. I couldn’t devote the time and ‘energy’ needed to the co-op."
Barraford said that earlier this spring, Mock called him to let him know that he would no longer be running Energy Alliance, and he offered Barraford the chance to take it over. "It seemed the logical thing to do," said Mock, "it was the perfect fit for him to take it over."
Barraford says that with the addition of the Energy Alliance customers, as well as additional ones for his own Our Town Energy, the organization is now one of the largest co-ops in the state. Still, there have been some problems integrating the two companies. "There was really no time to do anything but run with it," according to Barraford.
The differences between the two companies, though they are similar, have made the transition a little harder for the Barrafords. "They have a totally different structure," says Barraford, who cited a difference in paperwork and filing systems as reasons for why the companies are currently being kept separate. "We had four (phone) lines going (filled with Energy Alliance customers who had questions) and have only three people here," says Barraford.
Barraford began Our Town Energy in 1999, he says, to help seniors in the area get cheaper prices on heating oil. "There were 75 members, that first year," Barraford said, who added that the rolls of Our Town Energy have swelled to more than 3,000 this year. That, combined with new and old Energy Alliance customers brings the total to almost 6,000 customers represented by Barraford. He says that such numbers will allow for more access to goods and services from companies that would not have previously been open to Our Town Energy.
As for the marriage of the two companies, Barraford says that next year, Energy Alliance will be more fully integrated. He said the Energy Alliance filing and tracking system "was not quite up to date as far as computers." "It will be much easier next year. This is a new page for us, we’ve crossed a threshold of some sort."


Alton planners take a look at expanding marina
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
ALTON — The July 19 meeting of the Alton Planning Board featured a lengthy discussion of the proposed expansion of Gillan Marine. The proposed expansion would include an increase in the size of the current sales facility, as well as replace a 2,000 square foot building on the premises with a two-story, 11,600 square foot structure.
Board members, who had taken a look at the area following their June meeting, said that one concern was about how much the proposed paving would effect the grassy areas around the business.
Several members of the board suggested that builders try to implement "green engineering" principles, such as putting in porous concrete. Board member Tom Varney stressed the need to approach the plan in "an environmentally sensitive and protective way." Members also said that the plan needed to have appropriate stamps and an engineering review to assess the environmental impact of such paving. There was some disagreement between the board and representatives for Gillan Marine about how much space could be paved.
Other board concerns involved the aesthetics and the drainage of the new, larger building being placed on the premises.
Gillan’s representatives said that a system for protection of the wetlands in the area would be built and maintained by the owners, to avoid sedimentation running in from Rte. 11.
Board member ex officio Alan Sherwood addressed potential traffic problems on Rte. 11, related to the new building and the increase in the number of boats.
In addition, abutters worried about the possible environmental changes and the divisions of the proposed new site.
The board voted to require an engineering review of the drainage design for the proposed site, and also agreed to continue the discussion at its next meeting, Aug. 16.
Soil becomes issue for subdivision
The board also approved plans for a subdivision on Stockbridge Corner Rd. – but not before getting into a spirited discussion regarding the soil information for the property.
A representative for the applicant, Benjamin Finnegan, said that the standard soil map for the property was the one completed in 1968. The board said that the information on that map was likely well out of date, and that the information needed to be updated. The board made an update of the soil information one of the conditions for approval of the application.
Cell Tower issues
The board used two nights to cover various cell tower issues. A tower being proposed by Midwest Towers, LLC, had their application accepted, contingent upon a site plan review being attended by representatives of US Cellular.
Discussion of another tower, a Nextel tower, proposed for Old Wolfeboro Rd, was a continued to the August meeting, though the board did agree to enter into a contract for an engineering review of the site.


New Durham Planners approve subdivision
Land Use Ordinance hearing penciled in
By Jim Shilander
Staff Writer
NEW DURHAM — At a fairly straightforward meeting Aug. 2, the New Durham Planning Board voted to approve a three-lot subdivision and to continue other discussions until their next regular meeting, Sept. 6.
The subdivision, located on Brackett Road on property owned by the George family, had been looked at by the board on a site walk after their last meeting. Additionally, Bruce Pohopek, who surveyed the land for the Georges, added several technical requirements to the plan that board members had asked them to include at their last meeting.
Pohopek said that the lots were all "over 150 percent of their required lot size," for their soil type. He also mentioned that he was planning on meeting with the Conservation Commission and the Zoning Board of Adjustment later this month to discuss their concerns about the property. Board member Mike Clarke said that the applicant "has met all the criteria we asked him to meet," and urged the plan be approved. The board unanimously agreed.
Excavation
The board agreed to continue discussion over the renewal of an excavation permit for a lot on North Shore Rd., after an abutter, John Crickett, brought his concerns to the board. The operation has been going on for the last 12 years, and comes to the board every two years for approval, according to Paul Gelinas, representative for the excavator.
Gun Shop
The board, with the help of Dwight Jones, the Selectmen’s representative, who also happens to own a gun shop in Wolfeboro, agreed to continue a hearing for an occupation permit of Raymond Gamble.
Gamble, who is building a home in New Durham, has owned a gun shop in Newton for the last 25 years. He came to the board to talk about obtaining a renewal for his license to sell firearms by the ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, U.S. Department of Justice) at his new address.
The board encouraged Gamble to apply for a continuance on his license until his house was complete, which Gamble said would be sometime in September. At that point, Gamble said, he hoped to open a small gun shop out of his home.
Other Business
The planners went through proposed revisions to regulations involving site plans and subdivisions, and sent the amended regulations to the Town Council for review. The board also announced that the public hearing on the proposed land use ordinance would be held in the library on Aug. 16, pending the availability of the library’s space.

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Ch...Ch...Ch...Changes

The Palmeiro story continues to fascinate. While I was at Courtney's in DC, I watched the testimony on C-SPAN, and the endless replays on ESPN and other networks. I believed Palmeiro then. To be quite frank, I didn't think that the testimony needed to happen. I saw what was going on as only political grandstanding, and frankly I would consider further efforts on the part of Congress to lecture Major League Baseball or the NBA on how to police themselves. Either make a law stating that the leagues have to abide by the World Anti-Doping Agency Regs, or don't do anything at all. Now, frankly I don't know what credibility Palmeiro still has, especially given how vociferously he refuted Canseco's charges in front of Congress, and the lameness of the excuse, if indeed he is lying, and especially given the way he's been portrayed before this, after 3,000th hit, as the sort of forgotten superstar of this era. What pisses me off more than anything, however, are two things. One, the number of commentators now saying that Jose Canseco is a credible source. There's nothing that says any of what Canseco said was true in the book, that Palmeiro, in fact, was lying to Congress in March. Jose Canseco is still the worst kind of person, with the worst kind of credibility imaginable, meaning, none. Second, because Palmeiro had an early slump, its no seemingly taken as gospel that steroids fueled his revival, which is the worst kind of bull. Baseball is a game of streaks and slumps, it doesn't mean everyone is taking 'roids. And there's no reason, that I can see, to look into perjury charges against Palmeiro.

The NBA trade is really quite weird to me. I think that Jerry Sloan just wanted to beat up on Greg Ostertag for a while before he leaves. I question if this trade makes the Heat truly better, too. Williams and Walker both need the ball, and frankly, in that offense, they shouldn't be getting it. I just see Antoine Walker ending up just camping out at the tree-point line taking ill-advised shots after Shaq passes to him out of the double. I see Jimmy Buffet being hit in the face several times by errant White Chocolate passes. I still believe the Pistons will make a big move for depth, they'll be fine. Its more important to make the right move, than just a move.

The thing about the new NHL, is that when they drop the puck October 5, not only will the game be different (with the lack of the red line) it will be the odd sight of all of these stars in new uniforms. Chris Pronger an Oiler, Peter Forsberg a Flyer (as is Derien Hatcher), and Darren McCarty will be a Flame. But, I suppose this will be something that's to be expected. Hopefully, by November these changes will have sunk in, but its also good to see that some things, like Steve Yzerman as a Wing, won't be changing.

Monday, August 01, 2005

Weekend of Wonder

So, it was, suffice it to say, an interesting weekend. Starting last Thursday, things have, been, well, just a bit off.

Last Thursday, I had a rather, I guess, troubling confrontation with a potential story subject. We had agreed to meet at his home that day, except that well, he didn't remember it that way. I had joked with the Adams about feeling like I possibly might be staring down the barrel of a twelve gauge. I felt like I nearly was. So I turned around and went to the gym.

The next day, I trekked up to Meredith to see someone about my benefits. There are certain times, really, where you'd like to be someplace for a while. It takes me about 45-50 minutes to get to Meredith, to the home office. I was there, maybe, for ten. So it took me forever to get back. I went to the office to do the Real Report, so far everything is fine. I go to New Durham to take a picture. Everything still fine. I go to the airport...Not fine. I got stuck behind some farm equipment, slowed things up a bit. So I arrived at the airport a bit later than I expected. So late, in fact. That they didn't seat me on the plane. They put me on a later one, to Minneapolis. I really don't like going past the place I intended on going, I really do. I had a layover of about 2 hours. Then I boarded the flight to Detroit, from Minneapolis. It was late, like midnight, when I got in, and I was tired.

The next day, I wanted to go out to Albion to see Andy, before he leaves for his City Year, in San Jose, something I greatly admire him for, by the way. On the way out, in my dad's new car, that he just got from Tennessee, I had nice conversations with Andy and my folks. Then, just outside of Jackson, the car begins to rumble. Yes...one of the tires was punctured, and I had to change it, on the highway.

Anyway, I still got to see Andy, Steph, and Nick for lunch in Albion, which, despite a lack of fundamental Lopez-ness, was still good. I also hung out with them at Goodrich for a bit, before taking off for home, to see Robert in Into the Woods. I enjoyed it, though there was more students than last year, and fewer alumni, though Ms. K-M herself was in the show. I liked it a lot, and it was great, after the show, to talk to Jon Ophoff, Paul Van Slambrouk, Miss K-M and Rachel Gessert (who I hadn't seen since before I graduated high school), and who just came back from spending five years in Rome. She's going to be going to New York soon, for photography, and hopefully I'll see her when I go down there again.

Sunday, I saw the Shilander's as they came up to see the show, then went home to get ready for my flight. My grandmother drove me, and we listened to Sinatra and talked on the way in to the airport. When we arrived at the Terminal, I collected my things...Except my keys. So my grandmother drove back to the airport, though thankfully she hadn't gone far. So I got my keys back and got to the terminal, and the flight was delayed.

Eventually, I did get back to Manchester, and made the ride home. Unfortunately, beginning Friday, my TV had been on the fritz, so today, I bought a new one.

So that was the weekend. Tomorrow, I'll post more about the play, on Raffy, and some other stuff, but I just wanted to let you know about the weird.