Sunday, December 30, 2007

Sunday AM

53rd Street SB's. Quiet. Big difference from the gathering yesterday morning at the Duck Creek store where my pal Roy hosted his now, designated-by-me, coffee entourage. The entourage has taken on a life of it's own.

I started to watch the pro football game last night in which the Patriots were attempting to complete an undefeated season. This was the game that the NFL Network had originally been scheduled to broadcast only on it's limited cable feed, and that had then been opened-up to the regular networks due to it's "historic" (to whom?) importance. I fell asleep before halftime.

Football may be the only major pro sport where an undefeated season is truly possible. There are just too many games in baseball, basketball, and hockey for a team to not to lose. Anything over 100 (out of 162) wins in baseball, 60 (out of 82) wins in basketball, and who knows (?) in hockey, are considered great seasons.

Individual pro sports also have few undefeated examples. Rocky Marciano in boxing. Others? Maybe some bowlers, archers (Robin Hood comes to mind), or runners? Seems like everyone loses. Tiger. Michael. Federer. That must be why culture gets so fascinated with the undefeated season, whatever the endeavor.

College, high school, and other amateur teams go undefeated fairly often in various sports. Talent allocations can be more easily skewed at these lower levels of sport, and competition is often un-even. Not all sports have true elimination tournaments (NCAA D-I football, i.e.), and not all teams or players may necessarily appear in all events. None the less, any undefeated season in any sport at any level is an accomplishment that will stay with the competitor for his/her lifetime.

Switching gears.

I feel somewhat vindicated from one of the Q & A's in this morning's Parade magazine. The question was as to why the female characters on the various CSI shows consistently wear such low-cut tops. Not that I have in anyway found the the fashion offensive, but it has often occurred to me that the revealing attire wouldn't normally be considered work-appropriate. The response in Parade made sense: wardrobe is decided by the shows' producers who follow the Hollywood mantra, "the deeper the cleavage, the higher the ratings." Another mystery solved.

Lots of local and national stories this weekend on the "Best" and "Worst" of 2007. Movies, music, sports, entertainment and the like. Here's my shot at the fam's Best of 2007:

1. 1 and 1.1's wedding weekend.
2. 3's college graduation.
3. 3's starting her career in C-town.
4. 4's Summer in Spain.
5. 2's half's in St. Louis and QC.
6. My successful Turkey Trot with 2.
7. 4's 21st B-day.
8. 1's first sub-4, and 1.1's first.
9. 2, 3,and 4's FFF in Europe.
10. Tuscan red with all.

Here are some "Best's"that are a bit more personal:

1. Augie b-ball games.
2. The re-model of my bathroom.
3. The Saturday TOMRV ride to Galena.
4. The laptop and a mobile 4000 Days.
5. Friday nights at Biaggi's.
6. Crow Valley golf tournament with Roy.
7. SB's coffee at multiple local sites.
8. QC Criterium sponsored by my company.
9. Successful, safe trips to KC, TC's, PHX, C-town, and others.
10. Contact from old ND friends Mary and Bill.

Those contacts from Mary and Bill came separately, and totally out of the blue. I think I wrote here about them at the times that they appeared. Good friends can last a lifetime.

Ok. I've just set a personal record of time in a SB's at a single sitting. They haven't asked me to leave, but they are looking at me funny.

Have a great day.

BCOT

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Saturday

No good excuse for the last couple of days. Just a continuation of the irregularities of the season.

We had the biggest snow of the season yesterday. I'm guessing that the official total was in the 6-8" range. I had to use my snow blower to make my driveway passable. Looks like most of it will be staying with us for a while as the forecast has cool temperatures through most of next week.

About the only news in Iowa these days is politics. It would be hard to describe that topic as interesting. At this point, it's the equivalent of a five day weekend in Vegas: no ground has not been covered, and everybody's tired of everybody.

The college football bowl season is in full swing. Rah-rah for the Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte! Wish I were there. Not! The college presidents must be looking at themselves in trick mirrors to defend a position that a playoff system wouldn't work because of academic integrity. The rationale behind everything is spelled M-O-N-E-Y. If they have a Golden Goose in the NCAA b-ball tourney, why wouldn't they work to make a clone in a f-ball playoff? Some argue that the Rose Bowl and the Rose Parade are the primary impediments to making a move to a new system.

I am so disinterested in the bowl season that I haven't even gone to Wikipedia to investigate the facts. And I go to Wikipedia to look up information on some of the most obscure topics on earth.

The latest news on my laptop is that the mystery of the out-of-service cordless-mouse has been solved. Our IT guy was through the office this week and, just as he was leaving, I remembered to ask him about my mouse problem. His first question was, "Did you try the reset button?" Since I didn't even know that the thing had a reset button, it was an easy answer. And I had actually looked for something like a switch on the underside of the thing, but hadn't detected anything. Sure enough. There's a little recessed dot, the size of a ballpoint pen point on the bottom. Hit that with a pen point, and waallah! A functioning mouse. I am an idiot.

This is the weekend of the annual office clean-out. Files that haven't moved in months go to the cabinets. Unread "Read" piles go to the recycling bin. Miscellaneous "junk" goes to the dumpster. This is just like any other New Year's Resolution program, whether it be for weight, personal enrichment, or fitness. I hope I do better than my "No Pile Left Behind" program of last year.

There was a story in the local paper this morning about the Inventory Reduction Sale going on with the big NASCAR teams. The older style of cars will not be used in 2008 as The Car of Tomorrow (COT) will be the only car run in the new season. The big teams have dozens of the older cars that have essentially become obsolete. $50K (or less) can get you a real hotrod. I told my Pal Roy that we ought to keep our eyes open for the right deal.

I was going to do a top ten list of New Year's Eve stories, but with no serious additions to the list since my 25th birthday, it's a fruitless effort. This year will be more of the same.

Included in my traditional gifts to the girls were several of the current weekly Hollywood trash magazines. In the course of my afternoon ennui on Christmas Day, I paged through two or three of them and was amazed at how few names and pictures of the "stars" that I recognized. There are now probably at least two generations of starlets and hunks to which I am totally oblivious. (The girls' near-naked pictures not with-standing.) When you watch mostly sports shows on the tube, don't go to movies, don't have an ear for anything approaching modern music, and stay close to ESPN and MarketWatch on the Internet, you don't keep much contact with the current "in" set.

So tomorrow will be a SB's morning. See you then.

Have a great weekend.

BCOT

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Wednesday PM

I had great expectations of doing an entry while while-ing-away Christmas afternoon. It just didn't happen. 2 and I finally went for a long walk before dark, but that was about the extent of our productivity. But it was a good day, none the less.

When I met up with 1, 1.1 and 3 for some adult beverages on Sunday afternoon at Chili's after their workouts at Gold's, there was a small debate as to whether the laptop was having a negative impact on blog quantity. I admit that my entries over the last couple of weeks have been below standard, but I attribute that result to the season rather than the new technology. With so many irons in the fire with work and Holiday commitments, it's been hard to get any rhythm with the blog. My guess is that that condition will continue for another 10 days.

I vaguely remember 3 stealing Mom's dinner at the hospital after 4 was born. Hard to believe that the entire crew has now reached legal age. A lot of water has passed under the bridge of my own life in that time span. A rough time here and there. But very few things worthy of change.

The first couple of glitches came up on the laptop over the weekend. The wireless mouse seems to have died. Even with a fresh battery properly installed. And my IT guy had not initially installed Adobe for reading PDF files. When I tried to download it myself, I couldn't find where I had it saved. For all I know, I have a web-cam now activated on my machine streaming video of my sorry life to the Internet.

The NFL has caved and is allowing broadcast of the Patriots-Giants game this Saturday night on the broadcast networks, not just it's own NFL network. If it were a lesser game, there would have been little outcry. I still can't see where they'll give in on the longer term issue. This was just a public relations decision because of national interest in the game.

The Bull's fired Scott Skiles after about a quarter of the season. The team has been the biggest disappointment in the league this year. This is a case of where you can't fire a team, so the coach has to go. In my opinion, the GM now has license to trade some supposedly "un-touchable" players, although it could be argued that the team's poor performance is because no such moves were made previously. They still need inside scoring.

I heard an Old Wive's tale today that you don't give knife sets as gifts because it's bad luck? I really like the set I received from 3. If I have any problems this week, I'll have to check out my Old Wive's Almanac.

Anybody notice the passing of the Winter Solstice last week? The day's already seem longer. Not!

I made a miscalculation on SB's hours yesterday. The local stores were actually open from 8-3. I had somehow recorded that in my mental computer as "opening" at 3. So I had Shell gas station coffee yesterday. SB's shouldn't worry too much about losing many customers to that brand.

We had basically no time to catch our breath from "Christmas" shopping to launch head-long into "post-Christmas" shopping. I understand that December 26th is second only to the Friday after Thanksgiving as the busiest shopping day of the year. I know the Target lot was packed at 7:30 this morning as I drove by after coffee. If cars-in-the-lot is any indication, the deals at Target must have surpassed those available at Kohl's. What's next, New Year's Day final write-downs? This all smacks of old-fashioned bartering on the streets of Tijuana.

So I'm trying to feed the masses of my readers a little literary fodder here. But that's it for today.

Have a great evening.

BCOT

Wednesday

Great Christmas here. More later.

BCOT

Monday, December 24, 2007

Monday

Happy Birthday to 4! She is Daughter of the Day.

We did our usual Chunky Cheese and a movie. I Am Legend was less than one for the fam.

Quiet day at the office. A small Santa rally on Wall Street. My pal Roy stopped in and gave me a couple of books as my gift. I still owe him. Not an easy guy to shop for. After lunch, 3 met me and helped me do a little shopping. She seems to have inherited my procrastination gene.

For those early risers on the 25th, Merry Christmas to all!

I'll be adding an entry tomorrow. I may have some help.

BCOT

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Sunday

Happy Tax-Birthday to 4!

Weather came in overnight. Very quick moving front. Started out as misty rain yesterday around noon. Converted to rain in the afternoon. Freezing rain by night. And then snow. Fairly clear now, but cold and windy. Definitely a Christmas feel.

Broadcasting from SB's this AM.

FFF at the Augie game last night. Good game, but the home team came up a little short against a very good Wisconsin state system team that had some serious three point gunners. 4 did a little filming for a class. She looked very officially newsy. (2 was a no-show because of a commitment to some high school friends who had scheduled a reunion dinner. Her loss.)

More FFF today as we celebrate Christmas with 1 and 1.1. They head back to Minnesota early tomorrow.

The local fishwrap endorsed Hillary and McCain in today's edition. Why do newspapers need to do endorsements for both parties? Not that anything that that paper says is worth noting. Less than two weeks now until Iowa gets rid of all the politicians. Can't be soon enough for me.

The atmosphere in SB's is always a little lighter on a Sunday as parents often come in with kids. Today has an even more festive feel as there is evidence of out-of-town relatives joining in for the fellowship. SB's is one commercial establishment that allows friends and family from all over the country to meet in a common place where everyone can feel at home (when not at home).

That's an interesting thought. Where can you go when you're not at home where it feels like you are in a very familiar place? A couple of easy answers for me: 1) a Main Street bar in a one-horse town on a hot RAGBRAI afternoon, and; 2) Wrigleyville in C-town. Places like Sand Harbor at Lake Tahoe and The Plaza in KC are possible alternative choices as well.

On a different topic, how irritating is it to have people in close proximity to you on extended, gratuitous personal cell phone calls in public places, like SB's? While loudly chewing gum? And displaying other annoying habits? But I digress.

It's getting down to the Christmas shopping time for me. Actually, 1 and 1.1's schedule has accelerated my time frame by a day.

A number of businesses have taken off Monday as an official holiday. Not Criterium. With the markets open, so are we. Till noon. But I am certain that it will be pretty quiet. After lunch I can get to my shopping.

I don't think that I mentioned it here, but I did get a clean bill of health from my regular doc on my annual physical last week. This after spending more time in medical offices in the last six months than at any time since I tore up my knee almost twenty years ago. I used to think that only old people needed a line-up card to keep track of their doctor appointments. What's that saying about "them" being "us"?

So I'm off to make a couple of stops. Hope everyone has a great day.

BCOT

Friday, December 21, 2007

Friday AM

This has been a bit of an unusual week. There are always a few business things that crop up at the end of the year, and then there are some evening social functions that disrupt the norm. My entries may remain a bit erratic over the next few days.

Hope all who will be on the road have safe travels. Keep it between the ditches.

More later. Maybe.

PCH

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Wednesday AM

Oops. I didn't even get on to say, "No blog today", last night. Sorry.

It was one of those somewhat spontaneous evenings at Biaggi's with some friends, clients and Tuscan red. And I never got to the laptop at home.

2 has had some bump-ins with Hillary and Bill that she may wish to share with you.

3 had an overnight in Minneapolis for a company office party. Details to follow?

More later.

BCOT

Monday, December 17, 2007

Monday

Just checking in.

2 was front row for a Hillary event tonight at the museum. So jealous.

3 is pounding the overtime clock tonight after a long weekend on the job as well. Sympathy welcome.

In honor of 3, a list of my 10 worst days at work, ever:

1. Sued by a client, circa 1992.
2. Surprise USAF safety inspection of my outfit, Korea, circa 1974.
3. April 15th, just about any year.
4. Someday in May 2007. An oversight on an account cost me five figures.
5. January 1972. I wrecked my new car while running a red light.
6. July 1957. I struck out 3 times in the City Championship game.
7. January 1995 or so. Wally and Daddy pass on.
8. May 1979. I don't get promoted to Manager at AA & Co.
9. Spring 2002. I lose a bitter personal battle with the IRS.
10. 9-11-2001. Everyone was affected.

That took quite a while to compile that list. On the other hand, I could do a "great days" list with ease. Maybe I will. Tomorrow.

This is 4's tax-week birthday. 6 days to 21!

BCOT
6.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Sunday

Low key day for me. Domestic stuff. My pal Roy and I did lunch at Gov's.

There was golf on TV this weekend. A non-Tour, small-field of 16 event called the Target Challenge. Hosted by Tiger. He won by a bunch. And contributed his winnings to his foundation. After not having watched golf for two months or so, I found it enjoyable viewing.

I'm really looking forward to Speedweeks at Daytona.

Sounds like I am Legend starring Will Smith may be an option for the 24th. It was the big draw this weekend. Wacha thinkin', 4? (Meet Me in St. Louis was on the classics channel this weekend.)

I caught glimpses of a couple of at least C-rated movies on cable this weekend in which Shelly Long and Cheryl Ladd each portrayed mothers to hot young daughters (who were the central characters in the movies). The disturbing thing to me was that these two actresses were at least minor fantasies of mine in years past. And I'm older than both of them! Actually, Shelly Long (whom you would not describe as aging gracefully) was amusing, at best, on Cheers, and did her best work in the sexually-charged Troop Beverly Hills. On the other hand, with proper lighting, a little Botox, and the right camera angles, Cheryl could still play a slightly older Charlie's Angel.

I feel a little guilty that the Christmas lights are still in storage in my basement. But not so guilty that I've scheduled a time to get them out to my front bushes.

A friend in C-town sent me a couple of short biker books that I read last week. (The books were short. I really don't know about the height of the bikers. As a rule, bikers tend to be shorter rather than taller.) The one book was the mental diary of the author's thoughts as he competed in a one-day amateur race in Europe 20-odd years ago. Mildly entertaining, but the guy was definitely anal retentive. He remembered all the races that he had competed in over the years (and specifics about each race), by the chronological number that he gave each race.

The one recurring factoid that he kept bringing up that I found identity with was the math in his current gear ratio. I don't necessarily worry about gear ratios, but I am always doing equations when I'm going up a hill. How many gears do I have left in my rear cassette? Do I have to go to my triple crank? Can I keep this cadence without dropping a gear? Do I need to get out of the saddle? Where's the beer vendor?

It wasn't meant to be a Christmas gift, but persistent delays basically made it so. My pal Roy's brother John acquired a framed Lance Armstrong work destined for me at another charity golf event this Fall. It's a series of all of Lance's Sports Illustrated cover shots. With an autographed card in the middle of the collage. It's going to be hung on a wall in my office. (The framed photo of Lance that Roy gave me a couple of years ago that hangs in our reception area still gets "oohs and aahs".)

Aunt Martha sent her Christmas e-card over the weekend. Nice family pics make the greeting very personal. I also received Uncle Phil's picture card last week. Great picture! Of his entire family at 1's wedding. Finally, I also recently received a very traditional card with annual letter from a long-time friend who has done a great job of keeping holiday traditions, through thick and thin, kids, grand kids, and every other family event. I admire her determination.

Just to give myself a little treat in the middle of the storm, I fired up Margret today. She initially resisted, but then couldn't deny my appeal. Those dual pipes purred like a kitty.

Hope everyone has a good week.

BCOT

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Saturday

Real Winter here today. The snow began this morning and has continued to fall most of the day. No blizzard or anything. Just steady. Fluffy stuff. I shoveled about 4" off the sidewalk around 5 this afternoon. And there's another coat on it now.

Didn't get to the blog at the office yesterday afternoon, and 2 had borrowed my laptop for use at a function last night at the museum. Not that I ever do much writing on Fridays anyway.

3 had a scheduled weekend in NYC (New York City!) with a college friend who's working there taken away from her by a boss's decision. A deadline for some report on one of her cases that wasn't supposed to be until a February date was unexpectedly (unnecessarily?) accelerated. The fact that the East Coast is under a Winter storm watch is cold comfort. (No pun intended.) Sorry, Kiddo.

Looks like while there will be no Cabo trip, there will be a long weekend in Scottsdale. I have an invitation to a vendor conference in Scottsdale on January 10-11. The boys are now talking about heading down the 9th and staying through the 13th. I'm going to try to work it so that the vendor pays for my airfare and a couple of hotel nights. If I don't play golf Wednesday and Thursday, so be it.

SB's has opened yet another local store, this one on Locust Street in west Davenport, at a busy intersection within a few blocks of West HS. I'll likely never get there. One of the assistant managers at Duck Creek said that the busiest QCA store is over in Moline, which is their only location on the Illinois side. The multiple Iowa stores are probably just stealing business from one another. In my case, once they stole me from Panera, my daily consumption didn't add to their overall sales, regardless of the store I stopped at each day. Unless the girls came to town.

I was very impressed with a recent online transaction with The Gap. In reference to my misplaced/lost jeans from last week, I elected to order some new Gap jeans to upgrade my look. I paid (with my Gap credit card) $34.50/pair for three pair to get over a $100 minimum order to obtain free shipping. The package arrived at my doorstep within four days.

I should have my clients as satisfied with my services. The product was exactly what I wanted. The process was efficient. The delivery very timely. The online equivalent of concierge service.

(I suspect that it is not lost on the more fashion-conscious that I acquired three pair of jeans for the cost of a C-note. And while there is no designer label involved, I think that they look just fine. I mean, it's not like I bought them at Tractor Supply.)

I'm wondering if Ultimate Fighting will be supplanting "48 Hours of Bond", or perhaps, "48 Hours of Eastwood" over the holidays on Spike TV. It's a sign of the times. Young men in the preferred age groups don't know who Sean Connnerly was/is. And I don't have a clue who the players are in the Octagon. Talk about disconnect.

I heard a teaser today on Sportscenter for "Capital One Bowl Week." The onslaught of post-season games between teams with so-so records. From December 20th to 30th. Why would anybody in the media be concerned that a week is made up of seven days? At least NASCAR calls their extended stay in Daytona, "SpeedWeeks."

I have made special arrangements with my Russian cleaning lady to come by for an early visit next Friday since her normal day falls on the 25th. FFF here one of those weekend days.

More tomorrow.

BCOT

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Thursday

2 and I had a nice night over at Augie. The home team won in their first game without their senior-captain, leading scorer who blew out his Achilles last weekend. He's toast for the year. A freshman off-guard stepped up for 18. A very good sign for the future.

The big news in sports today is the doping report on Major League Baseball. This has all the combined trappings of a Hollywood scandal and a mudslinging political campaign. Popular figures are accused of headline-grabbing activities. Holier-than-thou reporters are out there "representing" the public's need-to-know. I am probably more troubled by the righteous angst being expressed by the investigative media than I am by the alleged drug use. Kieth Olberman's moralizing on NBC's Nightly News was enough to make me wretch.

Sports have become largely entertainment businesses. Movie stars, musicians, artists and other people in various spheres of entertainment don't have the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) dropping by unannounced to take a syringe of bodily fluids. Why is it that athletes are held to this uncompromising standard? I suppose that it can be traced to an Olympic connection where "sports" are, in the IOC's mind, not tainted by the unpleasantness's of life on the street.

Science has made the whole matter of diet and health an evolving landscape. Gatorade is OK. Red Bull too, I think. But don't take too much Benadryl or Claritin so that you can breathe. My guess is that there are science-geeks out there now who are working on the next generation of supplements that will enhance athletic performance. Supplements that will line up the atomic structure to conform to the rules. If it looks like a duck. And walks like a duck. And quacks like a duck. Is it a duck?

All for tonight. Good luck with your Friday.

BCOT

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Wednesday

No blog today. 2 and I are headed over to Augie for a game.

I considered Wilson's column today an admission that the older you get, the less you know, and the more comfortable you are in your skin to publicly admit this ignorance. The concept is obvious to most truthful old farts. The gratuitous reference to Oprah wasn't needed.

More tomorrow.

BCOT

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Tuesday

Sorry for that slight omission yesterday. The best laid plans...

Interesting weather day here today. Ice. Rain. Now it's freezing whatever is on the ground. Yuck!

Glad to hear that we all have lost causes. Then again, where's 3's?

I have another example of my anti-geek-ism-ness. The wireless mouse, to my new-found wisdom, is powered by one AA battery. I actually originally thought that there was some wireless power source that came from the laptop to the mouse. Whatever. Anyway, a few days ago, the screen had given me an alert that the mouse was low on power. I disregarded the warning, thinking that re-charging the laptop would transfer to the mouse. I'm not making this up.

A couple of days back, when I picked up the mouse to stow it in my carrying case, I accidentally tripped the neatly-concealed release button...to the battery drawer/housing. Which made the "power low" warning make sense. If that were the end of the story.

So I happened to have a spare AA battery (which I thought was a new one) in my "junk" drawer. I swap out the new for the old, and, "Waallaah!" Nothing. So my natural conclusion was that my supposedly "new" battery was not so new, and a trip to Walgreen's was in order. Which didn't happen for another day or two. So I was working with the irksome touch-pad to move the mouse. Bah-humbug. (In the spirit of the season.)

I eventually do acquire said AA batteries, and subsequently do a new swap. Still no movement to the mouse. I'm mystified. I do a de-bugging exercise to see if I had unknowingly turned off some switch on the mouse protocol. I go to about the third or fourth level of the de-bugging program and I still can't find the disconnect. Do I call the geek-squad? Of course not. I resign myself to the touch-pad.

Another day later, I have an idea. I open the mouse's battery drawer and flip the battery. Problem solved. Again, I'm not making this up.

I could relate a similar story about the time a few years back when I bought a lightweight Fall coat before I realized that my Columbia full Winter coat (that I had purchased earlier that Fall) had a zip-out liner. Meant to work as a Fall jacket. But that may push the "losing the audience" envelope.

I have two graduate degrees and several professional certifications. But I wasn't in attendance at all of the classes. I'm sure some of these things were covered on those days.

3, your BFF Warren was all over the MSNBC today with Hillary. Having just hosted an intimate $1 mil fund-raiser for her. But he also supports Obama. And the estate tax. An unusual set of contradictions. Then again, when you have that much money, you can afford to be whatever you want to be.

So more ramblings tomorrow. Have a great evening.

BCOT

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Sunday

Morning coffee at SB's. A little more Winter in our lives.

There is the possibility that I may put up my four strands of Christmas lights today.

My house situation is something less than 100% perfect, but I have one exceptional next-door neighbor. For each of the two modest snow-falls this past week, my front walk was shoveled by a Good Samaritan, and the day after the second one, I came home to find my driveway cleared all the way back to my garage! Now it's not like there was a ton of snow, but Jim took the time and made a compelling statement of neighborliness

1 and 1.1 are in C-town for the weekend. An idealist might suggest sisterly affection. The realist would know that KG and the Celts were in town.

2 and I did Biaggi's on Friday night to catch up on things. 2 had had a busy and successful week at the museum. A membership event on Thursday night turned out great in spite of the snow. Way to go 2!

I was too busy yesterday to make it to The Oprah celebration. Maybe next time.

Several interesting commentaries in the op-ed columns this week about the Romney religion speech. And most conclusions from both ends of the political spectrum suggesting that Huckabee has left-handedly played the religion card to cater to religious conservatives in Iowa. Would the media put up with that tactic if the affected opponent was Joe Lieberman?

Speaking of religion, the Diocese of Davenport has reached an accord in it's bankruptcy case to pay out $37 large to the victims of clerical abuse. But the plaintiffs' attorneys have assured the public that it's not about the money. While on their way to the bank.

The revamped Veteran's Committee in Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame has nominated former commissioner Bowie Kuhn for induction next year. That nomination has been universally panned in the sports pages. Marvin Miller, the ground-breaking leader of the players' union, who won most of the significant battles against Kuhn in the course of their contemporaneous tenures, was virtually ignored in the voting. And who said men have short memories?

I seem to have lost a pair of jeans. Which has given me much consternation over the last few days. I don't have that much stuff. How can I lose a pair of jeans? (And why can one piece of clothing be called a pair? But that's a different story.) It is possible that I simply misplaced the jeans. Which raises the question, "When does an item go from misplaced to lost?" Is it a matter of time or simply a change in mental conviction?

Here's a list of some common things that people lose:

1. Keys.
2. Wallets/purses/passports (3?).
3. Trains of thought.
4. Focus/concentration.
5. Games.
6. Places (Reading).
7. Contact (proximity).
8. Contacts (eye wear).
9. Direction (life).
10. Virginity (Just checking to see if anyone is reading...:)).

Then there's the whole business of being lost on a trip. Or in one's thoughts. Or being a lost soul. Or lost at sea. Or at a loss for words. Or being lost in translation. Or having lost one's sanity. Or track of time. Interest. A bet. The cell signal. One's audience (as in this entry). This could be a long list.

This is an amazingly universal term that we each experience in some fashion every day. If we extended the analysis to the infinitive (or verb?) form, to lose, or the gerund form, losing, this little analysis could go on all day. But I guess I have made my point.

Back to my jeans. It's possible that the Russian cleaning lady made a command decision and placed a clean pair in an unexpected location. Or I may have left them (again, how can jeans be called them?) at a hotel on one of my trips this Fall. Or in the Buick which I haven't driven for three weeks. Whatever. What was most certainly initially considered as misplaced, is rapidly becoming lost.

Remember this entry when Craig Wilson goes off on a "lost" tangent. I'll also take credit if he hits the concept from the opposite direction, as in "found". Think of the possibilities of "lost" and "found". It could be a book.

Hope everyone has a good week. Thanks to 1.1 for details from Memphis. It's always good to hear from the crowd. I use that term loosely.

BCOT

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Thursday

Another snow storm here. Not a lot. Just enough to make the streets slick.

I had high hopes of getting on the site this AM, but fates did not allow.

Maybe tomorrow.

BCOT

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Wednesday

There may not be a blog today. I'm headed over to Augie for a game. I may cut out at half and if there's time when I get home, I'll jump on. Otherwise, it will be an AM entry tomorrow.

BCOT

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Tuesday

Travel Tuesday.

I made the initial inquiry of Uncle Phil to check out the availability of the retro condo at Tahoe for some time in the latter half of July 2008. That condo, or something similar to it in Incline, should do the trick. Scheduling conflicts need to be voiced now.

Now that the BCS games have been set, I'm wondering if all the .500 and 7-5 teams are excited about their destinations. The upper tier teams who maybe didn't get their appropriate recognition, like Missouri and Georgia, at least get to go to decent bowling destinations. On the other hand, how high do you suppose that the enthusiasm is running for trips to Boise, Detroit, Shreveport and Birmingham?

My most memorable travel experiences, not necessarily in order of enjoyment:

1. 1973 USAF to Korea.
2. Tahoe. Any year.
3. Cabo. Any year, although 1999 was a real hoot.
4. First airplane ride, circa 1968. ND to Omaha. Via C-town.
5. Family vacation to the 4 Heads (Rushmore, to the world), circa 1989.
6. The trip from my HS g/f's house to the farm to make curfew.
7. Washington DC, circa 1962 with Mother, Rosie and Marg.
8. C-town commuting 1976-1980.
9. Fishing in Canada, circa 1990.
10. RAGBRAI. Good and bad days abound.

It is interesting that travel tends to be a memory maker almost all the time. Perhaps it's the break from the routine that gives us the extra thrill. New experiences in unfamiliar places tend to take up a semi-permanent residence in the back of our minds. And if the experience is particularly good (like Tahoe) or bad (like my Canadian trip), the recollection is even more defined. I still can almost taste the shore lunches from that fishing trip (which was about the only good thing on that adventure).

Our extended family has been extremely fortunate to experience a wide range of travel. Here and abroad. The cousins generation has seen the world. Quite a contrast to myself and my siblings who saw little beyond the Midwest before college. Then again, Southwest Airlines didn't exist in 1950's and '60's. It might be worth the debate to consider where wealth comes into play with the ability or requirement to travel. Join the Army. See the world. Europe on $5 a day?

Travel tends to be a avocation of many, and a goal of many retirees. Personally, I don't mind staying closer to home. Security is a huge hassle. My back doesn't like hotel beds. There's the funkiness of the body clock and time zone changes. Then again, I do like the concierge floors at the nicer places (if Criterium can afford the freight). And I would be remiss if I didn't add that whenever my pal Roy needs a companion for a weekend in PHX, I can be had.

I can take the Winter in the Midwest. KC. The TC's. C-town. I can get into plenty of trouble there and not be that far from home.

Not all that eloquent here. Don't be afraid to share.

BCOT

Monday, December 03, 2007

Monday

Here's a couple of general discussion topics that Craig Wilson could absolutely use for a weekly column and be done with each inside of an hour: 1) memory issues, and 2) long term mental and physical heath effects of working third (midnight) shift.

Memory is a crazy thing. And selective. It continues to amaze me that I can remember my high school girl friend's birthday, but I have to look up my Mother's. I remember my telephone number on the farm...2-2548..., but I have to go through a process to recall my own current cell number. For years, I had my ND laundry number at the drop of a hat, and there was a combination for a padlock that followed me through the USAF, grad school, and C-town that I couldn't forget.

Jerry Lucas, one of the old NY Nicks who played at Ohio State, is a renowned memory expert. He has pulled schticks like regurgitating the name of every person in an audience after meeting each person as they come in the door. Check him out on Wikipedia. He's an interesting guy.

My pal Jake's Pants can give you a phone number of some guy he met six years ago at a bar in Malibu. Then again, he may forget his passport the next time he leaves for Mexico.

Mother remembered many things from her younger days much better than any recent things in those last couple of years of her life. Of course, she also remembered driving to South America with Daddy.

Smells have a memory trigger too. Although my sense of smell has diminished over the years, popcorn is one that still registers and brings back to mind lots of times and places. The "new car" smell is a good one too, for obvious reasons. Incense at church. Burning leaves.

Sounds too can be memory makers. Favorite songs. The crunching of snow beneath your feet on a cold Winter night. Hearing an old phrase or term in a conversation.

So we establish that all of these things allow us to recall various moments or times in our past. Does that mean that we need to crack a small vial of distinctive smelling salts to permanently etch in the date of an anniversary or birthday? Or maybe have a recording of fingernails scratching across the blackboard that you can leave with your message on the phone for a friend to return your call.

I'll tackle the graveyard shift matter tomorrow.

Have a great week.

BCOT

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Sunday

Hangin' out at SB's. Just like the college kids.

The ice has shrunk from the streets and any high traffic area. Now they are saying that cooler weather is on the way, so we may see the stuff on the edges stay around for the week. Welcome to Winter.

Looks like the annual trip to Cabo will be a no-go this year. My pal Roy needs to stay in a US area code. Maybe a long weekend to Scottsdale, if the spirit moves us.

3 sent me a text, and later a call, last night from the Bulls' game at the United Center in C-town. She and some friends had come into some comp tickets from another friend who works for the team. Turns out the seats were in a box actually above the SRO area. At least you have TV monitors in those areas. I know that when I go to Arrowhead in KC with my pal Jake's Pants that I usually sit inside the box and watch the game on the tube. Sounds like 3 had to buy her own $5 beers as well.

The local fishwrap this morning had a story in the business section about a QC company that gives employees a 30 day sabbatical (paid, I think) after 10 years of service. It's a fairly progressive concept, and I'm sure allows some longer-term employees to do some things that they otherwise just wouldn't be able to do. And I'm sure that there are some "recharging of the batteries" benefits to the individuals that may indirectly benefit the company. (As I recall, some colleges and universities have similar programs that extend to at least a semester in length.)

While such a program may make the HR hit parade, there has been no complementary impact on the Investor Relations side of things. The stock has been in the tank for years.

The Frederic Remington program that 2 and I attended on Thursday night at the museum was a bit of a let down. The speaker was a doctoral candidate at Iowa, and her presentation was mostly just read from her notes. I could have learned as much from a little time on Wikipedia. The speaker was actually more of a fan of the other Old West artist featured in the exhibit, Charles Russell. And the paintings/canvasses/sculptures in the exhibit hall were just so-so to me. Live and learn.

The DaVinci exhibit, on the other hand, is worth a visit.

Rick Reilly has announced his departure from SI and will be moving to ESPN in June 2008. He is a very popular sportswriter, but I have never been a huge fan, mostly because, I suppose, that I don't like sportswriters. He does have a good sense of humor, and he's done some good charitable things. He's adept at pulling the "heart strings" of readers on little human interest stories that come to his attention.

Reilly is in a fairly select group of sportswriters that would include Dan Patrick and John Feinstein, among others, whose works tend to become the story rather than the story itself. I attribute this phenomenon to the post-Watergate condition in the mainstream media where the writers have pietiously (sketchy word usage) become the Protectors of Truth, Justice and The American Way. In a bit of stilted logic, it could be argued that we have Richard Nixon to blame for all of this. And to think that upon his departure,Tricky Dick had the audacity to say that we, "wouldn't have him to kick around any more".

If it were not for RMN's arrogance, Robert Woodward and Carl Bernstein may have had nothing more to report on other than routine Pentagon malfeasance. This after a decade of Viet Nam. The public was ready for real dirt, and Bob and Carl delivered. And those glory days of investigative journalism spawned a generation of wannabees. With steroids, HGH, and other doping story lines, not to mention rap sheets (music or criminal, you pick), unwed mothers, Bobby Knight, and the likes of Pacman Jones, Latrell Sprewell, Reilly and his friends will be able to opine from On High for years to come.

I guess I have become as judgemental on sportswriters as they have on sports. I can live with that.

Speaking of sportswriters, the local guy writes (I use that term very loosely) a catchall Sunday column that is nothing more than a collection of primarily negative items about mostly college or pro coaches/players in various sports. Zero creativity. If it was a football game, he would be flagged for piling-on after every paragraph. Do these guys think such efforts qualify as journalism?

Sorry about that tirade. It was too easy.

I'm off to find Nirvana. Have a great day.

BCOT

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Saturday

I had planned to get a good entry in today, but I just couldn't sit myself down to do it. Sorry.

Congrats to 1.1 for his success today in completing the Memphis marathon. He had been unable to get the bad taste of the Chicago out of his system, and he found the cure in in Elvis' hometown. You da man today, 1.1.

Winter here. Ice. But there's a warm front on the way, so it all should be gone by tomorrow night.

I'm taking the laptop to SB's in the AM for an early entry.

BCOT