Mayor Stephen R. Reed reminds city residents that Trick or Treat Night in Harrisburg and most of Dauphin County’s other municipalities will be held on Thursday, October 29, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. The date and time for the fun-filled evening is annually set by the Dauphin County Chiefs of Police Association.The police decide!? That seems decidedly un-Halloweeny to me.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Harrisburg Tradition?
Friday, October 30, 2009
Ahead of the Curve
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Civil Discourse in CA
California has a dysfunctional government, and nobody on either side of the wide political spectrum out here would disagree. For a more quantitative view, see the picture below, which shows how California has the most liberal liberals and the most conservative conservatives.

Fairly recently, following the Joe Wilson (R-SC) "You lie!" outburst at the State of the Union address, one of our more, uh, outspoken state legislators, Tom Ammiano, pulled the same stunt on Ahnold. Now, just to show he's no girly-man, Ahnold replies by vetoing a San Francisco bill in his own special way:

Lovely to have such grown ups in charge, isn't it. If California is a leading indicator of what the future holds, you should all be afraid.

Fairly recently, following the Joe Wilson (R-SC) "You lie!" outburst at the State of the Union address, one of our more, uh, outspoken state legislators, Tom Ammiano, pulled the same stunt on Ahnold. Now, just to show he's no girly-man, Ahnold replies by vetoing a San Francisco bill in his own special way:

Lovely to have such grown ups in charge, isn't it. If California is a leading indicator of what the future holds, you should all be afraid.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
The Incredible Journey?
Via another of those lefty blogs comes a pointer to Eternal Earth-Bound Pets.


You've committed your life to Jesus. You know you're saved. But when the Rapture comes what's to become of your loving pets who are left behind? Eternal Earth-Bound Pets takes that burden off your mind.And as seen in the picture, you can even get their tee shirt for you or your dog.
We are a group of dedicated animal lovers, and atheists. Each Eternal Earth-Bound Pet representative is a confirmed atheist, and as such will still be here on Earth after you've received your reward. Our network of animal activists are committed to step in when you step up to Jesus.
No Einstein
Now that Walt Disney Company is giving refunds to parents who feel ripped off by Baby Einstein not delivering on its promise, will parents be telling little Johnny in later life how they had to get a refund when he didn't measure up? Just wondering.
The Short List
Here are a few books I've enjoyed lately, and none of them were on Steven's summer reading list.
Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living - Tiffany
This is the Australian fictionalized version of The Worst Hard Time. Having a story line makes it easier to read and not quite as depressing. Who knew they were having their own dust bowl while ours was going on? It's a first novel, not very long, made more interesting by the author's background as an agricultural reporter. Lots of quirky stuff about farming.
The Living - Annie Dillard
A couple of generations of pioneers in the very north west of Washington state. Think Puget Sound and environs. The geography is so totally unfamiliar as well as the problems the first settlers encountered. No time wasted on how they got there (wagon train), but a lot about how they managed to survive when they settled down. I enjoyed the characters and how the story flowed from one generation to the next.
Fingersmith - Sarah Waters
This was my favorite. Set in Victorian England and beginning (quite literally) in a den of thieves. The main character, Susan, grows up knowing how to pick pockets, fence stolen goods, and take care of abandoned babies for the chance to sell them. The plot has so many twists and turns I could never guess what would happen next. It's a long book, but worth it because it's hard to put down.
Oh, and one I did not like: Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Zafon. When will I learn not to try the books my friends recommend?
I'm looking forward to the one with the Dragon tattoo...
Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living - Tiffany
This is the Australian fictionalized version of The Worst Hard Time. Having a story line makes it easier to read and not quite as depressing. Who knew they were having their own dust bowl while ours was going on? It's a first novel, not very long, made more interesting by the author's background as an agricultural reporter. Lots of quirky stuff about farming.
The Living - Annie Dillard
A couple of generations of pioneers in the very north west of Washington state. Think Puget Sound and environs. The geography is so totally unfamiliar as well as the problems the first settlers encountered. No time wasted on how they got there (wagon train), but a lot about how they managed to survive when they settled down. I enjoyed the characters and how the story flowed from one generation to the next.
Fingersmith - Sarah Waters
This was my favorite. Set in Victorian England and beginning (quite literally) in a den of thieves. The main character, Susan, grows up knowing how to pick pockets, fence stolen goods, and take care of abandoned babies for the chance to sell them. The plot has so many twists and turns I could never guess what would happen next. It's a long book, but worth it because it's hard to put down.
Oh, and one I did not like: Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Zafon. When will I learn not to try the books my friends recommend?
I'm looking forward to the one with the Dragon tattoo...
Travel Time
I never thought I would see the day I occupied 2 hotel rooms at a time but here I am. After working last week in Roanoke where I have a room for 1 month I rushed home to shower, and repack for our nieces wedding in New York Where I am now staying for the weekend. Probably routine for some readers here but a little weird for me. I always enjoy Steve's reading list and was surprised to know I had my own radio station based on the few music recommendations I made. As I get tuned into my new traveling lifestyle I may find it easier to post, right now I am using a courtesy computer in the lobby but I have some better equipment as soon as I figure out how to use it properly it will be useful. I look forward to seeing most everyone on T-Day in beautiful Stanley Va.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Musicology
I've been a Pandora fan for a while. Pandora lets you create your own radio stations based on a few songs you like, and then plays ones that it thinks you will like. Today I have a station called "Folky Females" that Dara refers to as "angry chick music". I have one called "Keith's Choice" based on some recommendations from Keith once, not to mention "Dara's Manly Country". I don't know anything about classical music, but Pandora does. The magic behind Pandora is the Music Genome Project, and it was the subject of a NYTimes Magazine article last week.Some elements that these musicologists (who, really, are musicians with day jobs) codify are technical, like beats per minute, or the presence of parallel octaves or block chords. Someone taking apart Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy” documents the prevalence of harmony, chordal patterning, swung 16ths and the like. But their analysis goes beyond such objectively observable metrics. To what extent, on a scale of 1 to 5, does melody dominate the composition of “Hey Jude”? How “joyful” are the lyrics? How much does the music reflect a gospel influence? And how “busy” is Stan Getz’s solo in his recording of “These Foolish Things”? How emotional? How “motion-inducing”? On the continuum of accessible to avant-garde, where does this particular Getz recording fall?The article talks to the analytical model used by Pandora in comparison to the "social" model used by almost everyone else for their "if you like this, you might like this" approach based on user recommendations.
Westergren maintains “a personal aversion” to collaborative filtering or anything like it. “It’s still a popularity contest,” he complains, meaning that for any song to get recommended on a socially driven site, it has to be somewhat known already, by your friends or by other consumers. Westergren is similarly unimpressed by hipster blogs or other theoretically grass-roots influencers of musical taste, for their tendency to turn on artists who commit the crime of being too popular; in his view that’s just snobbery, based on social jockeying that has nothing to do with music. In various conversations, he defended Coldplay and Rob Thomas, among others, as victims of cool-taste prejudice.One word: Britney!!!
Pandora is pretty much all I listen to, unless it's news on the radio or I'm tethered to an iPod. That our stereo-replacement worked with Pandora was a major reason I bought it. I've discovered some terrific artists thanks to its recommendations (like Patty Griffen we saw in concert this summer). If you have a broadband connection, check it out.
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Goodbye Summer Reading List
Not as many books this time, but I suppose at least as many pages.
Palace Council, by Stephen L. Carter. Carter ratchets up the "first families of old Harlem" motif that made non-central appearances in his other books, crossing it with a central political conspiracy theory in this case. As usual, my ability to enjoy the book was dependent on buying into the plausibility of the conspiracy theory, and for me that was just too hard to do. Can you really believe there is a secret cabal of politically well-connected black conspirators working over the generations? If so, this is your book!
The Terror, by Dan Simmons. And speaking of having to buy into plausibility, Dan Simmons stretches the frozen bozo genre to include a mysterious arctic beast (or is it?) stalking the Erebus and Terror in the ill-fated Franklin expedition. Since nobody survived, who's not to say he's right? I enjoyed the frozen bozo-ness, but the (lowercase) terror and occasionally mystical aspects of this novel made it a bit of a slog. Reading it wasn't the Worst Journey in the World, but it wasn't a luxury cruise either.
Nixonland, by Rick Perlstein. Subtitled "The rise of a president and the fracturing of America", I believe this is the definitive examination of what has led us to the polarized political discourse we have today. Well worth the 800 pages. Nixon comes out as the conniving political scumball history has conclusively proven him to be. That's not the point, though. The book examines the political calculus behind Nixon's rise, fall, and subsequent winning presidential elections. The game plan adopted by Nixon certainly left a long-lasting imprint on today's political alignments, as Democrats lost their stronghold in the south, and Republicans latched on to identity politics in ways that continue to reverberate in our elections.
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, by David Wroblewski. Oprah doesn't disappoint with this selection. I enjoyed the story of Edgar, a boy whose family breeds and trains a special kind of dog. Good dog book! This was not the feel-good happily-ever-after book I had imagined. Instead, it is full of crises and bad guys, all of which Edgar must overcome. Oh, and he was born mute. The whole muteness thing, and a bit of mysticism along the way, was in my opinion not needed, but still highly recommended.
The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo, by Stieg Larsson. Terrific mystery with lots of action. Avoiding exposure after a libel case, a Swedish investigative journalist agrees to re-examine the disappearance of a young girl from forty years ago. He teams up with a quirky but brilliant female investigator, and they turn up all kinds of ugly stuff within the family that hired him. It all takes place on an island that is privately owned, a kind of modern Wilkie Collins in Scandinavia. Check it out. I'll be reading the next book of Larsson's when it arrives in paperback. Too bad he died after finishing this trilogy!
Errors and Omissions, by Paul Goldstein. A strange little mystery that I picked up because of the legal angle. The main character is a tortured attorney specializing in intellectual property for the entertainment industry. He's brought in to secure an assignment of ownership for the story on a famous film from the blacklisting McCarthy era. His efforts uncover a hornet's nest of problems, a murder, and some long-buried and well-hidden relationships in the film industry. It was a different kind of mystery with a different topic than I'm used to. Not exactly John Grisham when it comes to cheap thrills, but I learned some things and enjoyed the ride.
Sacred Hunger, by Barry Unsworth. Another Booker Prize book. I enjoyed this story, but I wish it had weighed in at several hundred less than its 600 pages. The book follows the fictional Kemp family. The patriarch builds a slave ship so as to make some money off of the hot triangle trade route. A cousin joins the ship as its doctor, so we see a lot of the story through him as the ship goes down the African coast and gathers its cargo. When the ship meets its ill-fated end, the patriarch loses his fortune and his son has to adapt to his newfound penniless circumstances. Eventually these two stories converge. I enjoyed the details on how the slave trade worked, and the details of how it affected the various interesting characters. The last third of the book, when the stories converge, was a voyage too far for me, although I suspect the Booker Prize committee would disagree with me on that one.
Obedience, by Will Lavender. A Kyla recommendation that I would recommend to you. What seems like a preposterous premise -- a college class being asked to find a missing girl based on clues the professor will hand out over the semester -- turns out to be more real than the students imagined. As readers, we think the whole thing must have some kind of hole-filled explanation, but the author pulls it together and pretty much fills every chink quite neatly. I am not the best at solving mysteries while reading them, but my wife and daughter are notorious for doing just that. Dara did actually figure out what was happening, but I think that was only because I kept telling her it would all make sense in the end.
The Chameleon's Shadow, by Minette Walters. What seems like another in a line of decreasing quality semi-mysteries by Minette Walters. Or it could just be that they all seem to be the same approach recycled with different characters and story line, so maybe I'm just weary of her. In this story, a recovering and deeply troubled Iraq war hero is suspected of killing people. Of course, it couldn't be him; but, as one after another of suspects are draped past you but don't end up fitting the bill, maybe it could be him after all.
Palace Council, by Stephen L. Carter. Carter ratchets up the "first families of old Harlem" motif that made non-central appearances in his other books, crossing it with a central political conspiracy theory in this case. As usual, my ability to enjoy the book was dependent on buying into the plausibility of the conspiracy theory, and for me that was just too hard to do. Can you really believe there is a secret cabal of politically well-connected black conspirators working over the generations? If so, this is your book!
The Terror, by Dan Simmons. And speaking of having to buy into plausibility, Dan Simmons stretches the frozen bozo genre to include a mysterious arctic beast (or is it?) stalking the Erebus and Terror in the ill-fated Franklin expedition. Since nobody survived, who's not to say he's right? I enjoyed the frozen bozo-ness, but the (lowercase) terror and occasionally mystical aspects of this novel made it a bit of a slog. Reading it wasn't the Worst Journey in the World, but it wasn't a luxury cruise either.
Nixonland, by Rick Perlstein. Subtitled "The rise of a president and the fracturing of America", I believe this is the definitive examination of what has led us to the polarized political discourse we have today. Well worth the 800 pages. Nixon comes out as the conniving political scumball history has conclusively proven him to be. That's not the point, though. The book examines the political calculus behind Nixon's rise, fall, and subsequent winning presidential elections. The game plan adopted by Nixon certainly left a long-lasting imprint on today's political alignments, as Democrats lost their stronghold in the south, and Republicans latched on to identity politics in ways that continue to reverberate in our elections.
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, by David Wroblewski. Oprah doesn't disappoint with this selection. I enjoyed the story of Edgar, a boy whose family breeds and trains a special kind of dog. Good dog book! This was not the feel-good happily-ever-after book I had imagined. Instead, it is full of crises and bad guys, all of which Edgar must overcome. Oh, and he was born mute. The whole muteness thing, and a bit of mysticism along the way, was in my opinion not needed, but still highly recommended.
The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo, by Stieg Larsson. Terrific mystery with lots of action. Avoiding exposure after a libel case, a Swedish investigative journalist agrees to re-examine the disappearance of a young girl from forty years ago. He teams up with a quirky but brilliant female investigator, and they turn up all kinds of ugly stuff within the family that hired him. It all takes place on an island that is privately owned, a kind of modern Wilkie Collins in Scandinavia. Check it out. I'll be reading the next book of Larsson's when it arrives in paperback. Too bad he died after finishing this trilogy!
Errors and Omissions, by Paul Goldstein. A strange little mystery that I picked up because of the legal angle. The main character is a tortured attorney specializing in intellectual property for the entertainment industry. He's brought in to secure an assignment of ownership for the story on a famous film from the blacklisting McCarthy era. His efforts uncover a hornet's nest of problems, a murder, and some long-buried and well-hidden relationships in the film industry. It was a different kind of mystery with a different topic than I'm used to. Not exactly John Grisham when it comes to cheap thrills, but I learned some things and enjoyed the ride.
Sacred Hunger, by Barry Unsworth. Another Booker Prize book. I enjoyed this story, but I wish it had weighed in at several hundred less than its 600 pages. The book follows the fictional Kemp family. The patriarch builds a slave ship so as to make some money off of the hot triangle trade route. A cousin joins the ship as its doctor, so we see a lot of the story through him as the ship goes down the African coast and gathers its cargo. When the ship meets its ill-fated end, the patriarch loses his fortune and his son has to adapt to his newfound penniless circumstances. Eventually these two stories converge. I enjoyed the details on how the slave trade worked, and the details of how it affected the various interesting characters. The last third of the book, when the stories converge, was a voyage too far for me, although I suspect the Booker Prize committee would disagree with me on that one.
Obedience, by Will Lavender. A Kyla recommendation that I would recommend to you. What seems like a preposterous premise -- a college class being asked to find a missing girl based on clues the professor will hand out over the semester -- turns out to be more real than the students imagined. As readers, we think the whole thing must have some kind of hole-filled explanation, but the author pulls it together and pretty much fills every chink quite neatly. I am not the best at solving mysteries while reading them, but my wife and daughter are notorious for doing just that. Dara did actually figure out what was happening, but I think that was only because I kept telling her it would all make sense in the end.
The Chameleon's Shadow, by Minette Walters. What seems like another in a line of decreasing quality semi-mysteries by Minette Walters. Or it could just be that they all seem to be the same approach recycled with different characters and story line, so maybe I'm just weary of her. In this story, a recovering and deeply troubled Iraq war hero is suspected of killing people. Of course, it couldn't be him; but, as one after another of suspects are draped past you but don't end up fitting the bill, maybe it could be him after all.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Five Years of History
1,067 posts later. Not bad. It's interesting to scan through the posts. A lot has changed in five years. Who knows, maybe we're up for a Nobel Prize for blogging. Or persistence.
Now That's A Reading List
I've been thinking I need to post my latest reading list, but courtesy of the NYTimes comes a story of a woman who has been reading a new book every day and posting brief reviews. She's on day 350. I'm feeling inadequate.
“This is not someone trying to run an ultra-marathon,” said her husband, Jack Menz, a lawyer, whose first thought about her plan was, “How about a book a week?” He added, “It’s someone getting to do what she really enjoys.”I like the husband. My latest reading list is coming once I'm past this ugly work week. In the meantime, you might find something of interest on Nina Sankovitch's blog.
Ms. Sankovitch, a former environmental lawyer with piercing blue eyes who wears a locket containing an image of a man on a toilet reading a book, follows some rules. All the books are ones she has not read. She reads only one book per author. She reads one day and posts the review the next morning.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Iris Lady with Helper
Friday, October 09, 2009
Having Fun On Our Bacation

The Cape is lovely. Zillions of things to do and see. Like Mom says, "There's no end of 'Quaint' here." We are staying at The Inn At Cape Cod. It's just as lovely as it looks in the photo. We've had GREAT weather. Some clouds and some rain, but mostly sunny, breezy and mid 60s. Delightful. Here we are at Heritage Gardens on the carousel. While there wasn't much in bloom left this season, the woods were lovely. We had a very nice walk after a long rain. That's when we stumbled on this beautiful carousel at their folk art museum and even took a ride. Yesterday after some of the best oysters on the 1/2 shell I've ever had (Snot on a half shell as AJ likes to call them) and an outstanding fish sandwich at Moby Dick's in Wellfleet, we took a beautiful coast drive and walked several miles on the Audubon Trails. Though most of the birds have left for the sunny south, we saw lots of fall foliage and almost got caught by the incoming tide, which happens FAST around here.
Cow Hide & Seek
Though they are not as cute as pigmy hippos, I couldn't resist taking some pictures of these guys when riding my bike last weekend. I can't imagine why they were so wary of me - helmet, purple flowered shirt, padded spandex ass (like I need more padding), hot pink sox & REALLY dorky shoes with a square thing stuck up to my face as I whispered sweet nothings to them.
Thursday, October 01, 2009
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