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10/21/25 05:53 PM #16394    

Joseph Gentilini

Well, Michael McL -- we do enjoy them.  What a wonderful gift for your children and grandchildren!  Sharing your legacy.  joe


10/21/25 08:53 PM #16395    

 

John Jackson

Harold, it looks like 3i/Atlas will miss planet Earth - or do you have inside information to the contrary?


10/21/25 08:55 PM #16396    

 

David Mitchell

Mike, et al,

Your video of Springsteen brings back a fond memory.

In 1985 he played a couple nights at the old Mile High Stadium in Denver. My older daughter Sara (Watterson about '90) had won a contest at her "Most Precious Blood" catholic grade school in Denver for selling the most candy in a school fund drive. She won two tickets to Springsteen's concert for a Saturday or Sunday night.

She wanted to take her best friend with her - another 13 yer old - and I said "No Way" would I let two 13 year old girls be alone in that stadium with 75,000+ fans at night. It happened to be a night that her young uncle Brian Hughes (a late twenty something fan of Bruce), living in Fort Colllins Colorado could take her and he agreed to go with her. But it snowed and they cancelled that night's concert, pushing it back to Monday night. Brian coud not go that night so guess who it fell to? At the time I had no interest in Springsteen but I had to be the one to take her.

It rained hard but the concert went on that night. I really didn't not want to go but I had to, or disappoint a daughter who I loved dearly - and had "earned it" - - or else face a firing squad from my wife. I reluctantly dragged myself out to the stadium with my 13 year old beauty.

OMG! I will never forget that night! We stood and rocked all night! I could not hear for three days, but It was one of my all-time fondest memories of having children. 

 


10/22/25 03:56 PM #16397    

 

Michael McLeod

I was going to write a funny little essay about what a pain in the ass it is to trim the bougainvillia in my back yard. But just writing out that word,"bougainvillia,"is a pain in the ass. Saying it out loud -- "BOO - GUN - VILL-YAY - YAH " - is equally exhausting. Hope I spelled it right. Beautiful red blossoms but one scritchy-ass bush that is. Worst thorns that I've ever encountered. I'm not the most coordinated guy these days and so I'm punctured and scritched no matter how careful I am Like a rose bush on steriods. I don't remember them - the bougainvillia - from columbus. Do they grow up there? I got one that's ten feet tall in my back yard down here.

Now i need a nap.

And a transfusion.

 


10/22/25 04:36 PM #16398    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Inspiration 

I can't remember if I had ever posted on this Forum a photo that appeared in our city's newspaper before, but now that I am looking over old pics I have on my cellphone it seems appropriate since I am now recovering from surgery that allows my legs to walk better without pain. And no, I did not take this photograph.

Note that this canine isn't even using a walker!

Jim


10/22/25 05:07 PM #16399    

Joseph Gentilini

WOW, Jim H!  My dog never learned to do that!!  And so glad the pain is subsiding for you.  joe


10/22/25 05:44 PM #16400    

 

Harold Clark

john j and mike b.  3i/atlas is not about to hit earth, it doesn't need to.  it's changed the preimeters of our science.  it has, so far.  defied all the known principles physics----changed course----disappeared and re appeared----emits the same harmonics as the wow moment---when it directly sent energy to mars, mars answered back.... when it sent an energy pulse to our moon, our moon responed....it split, now there are 7 other objects following, in formation....it emited an enery beam(enough enery to power earth for a day) that shut down all of earth obsevarories for 47 seconds,  when they came back on line there was new information in their memory banks...it emits chemical traces of eliments we don't have on earth...to be continued..

as to trump...he is worst tragedy to ever befall the usa.  at the no kings day i attended, we were all anfita, anti fashists.  our flag is the starts and stripes.   what he is doing to the white house is symbolic  of what he's doing to the country


10/22/25 08:56 PM #16401    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Just A Small Part Of The Universe

 

Fascinating things going on out there in interstellar space and it is mind boggling to even wrap one's mind around the thoughts of it! 

But here in our little corner of the ever expanding universe is where I find the beauty of God's creation and I so miss getting out there surrounded by it. 

I know that I will be able to return doing that at some point, but probably not as aggressively as in the past. (Of course my age could be a factor there also 🤔!!)

Jim

P.S. Spread the pic with your finger and thumb, look close and see if you can find the kissing camels in the rock of that name 🐪!


10/23/25 06:34 AM #16402    

Joseph Gentilini

Jim H. - picture of the countryside and the camels is stunning.  Thanks for sharing!  Joe


10/23/25 07:31 AM #16403    

 

Michael McLeod

LOL JIM.

Found 'em. "Humpbacks," indeed.I think I should get a ride on a camel as my reward. Better yet an all expenses paid trip to see that gorgeous place in person. I'm sitting here in bed of a morning looking at that photo and imagining what a breath of morning air in that place would feel like. (sigh).

PS to Harold:

You are dead on with that last line. Just reading it gives me a chill. This country is in peril. Foundations are being rattled in more ways than one these days. We can only hope they hold up to it over time.

 


10/23/25 09:49 AM #16404    

 

Michael McLeod

I have been going over old columns i wrote. I promise i won't make a habit of it but just had to share this one. I think you'll see why. 

She was - as you will immediately see - quite the clothes horse. But lordie, what a heart this woman had. I interviewed hundreds of people, smart people, famous people, courageous people, interesting people,  over the years. But ask me to pick the one I fell in love with and here she is, a crinkly wisp of a woman but damn what a magnificent soul. 

And John: good advice on that "stfu" when it comes to blabbling-our- whereabouts-to-the-universe story.

 

Goodbye, Gorgeous

Harriett Lake had style. But that was the least of it.

 Over the past few years, as she grew older and finally became housebound, I would call Harriett Lake every now and then, having gradually shifted from somebody who just wrote about her into somebody who, like so many, just flat-out loved her. I always got a kick out of how she’d say goodbye.  No matter what we had talked about, people or politics, my problems or hers, or how lousy she might have felt, she’d always chirp, at the end of the conversation: See ya!

 

 It wasn’t so much the words themselves. It was how she said them. No: how she sang them, sang them from the middle of that self-generated, no-matter-what, sun’ll-come-up-tomorrow spotlight that had been emanating from her, as far as I could tell, since her childhood in Depression-era Lebanon, Pa. She was the eldest of seven children, charged with caring for the little ones. Nicknamed Skeezix by her father, after a comic-strip character who was left on a doorstep as a baby, and as the only brunette among blondes, she came to see herself as the ugly duckling of the family, and decided she’d have to try harder to get people to notice her and to make her mark in the world.

Well. Did she. Did she ever.

Harriett Lake, who died at the age of 96 last week, was buried on Friday at Ohev Shalom Cemetery, with Rabbi Aaron Rubinger presiding and roughly a hundred close friends and relatives in attendance.

A flag was draped over her casket, and two uniformed Marines were there to pay tribute. But of course they were. She had served in World War II, doing everything from peeling potatoes in pre-dawn darkness to processing paperwork for soldiers being sent overseas, rising to the rank of sergeant—and making the most of her olive drab uniform by having a tailor duplicate it in better wool.

So a bugler played taps for her. But a violinist—Orlando’s preeminent violinist—was also present: Rimma Bergeron-Langlois, concertmaster for the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, was there to play the theme song from Schindler’s  List.  But of course she was. Harriett Lake deserved tribute from that corner for being the most generous and wide-ranging patron of the arts Central Florida has ever seen, an avocation she took on when she and her husband, developer Hy Lake, moved from South Florida to Orlando in the 1970s. It was one she continued, singlehandedly, after his death in 2010, pouring tens of millions of dollars into cultural coffers, writing check after check from the kitchen table of her home to virtually every performing and visual arts troupe in town.

Many of the women at the funeral wore hats, clothing, jewelry or other accessories that once belonged to Harriett. But of course they did. Harriett was a clotheshorse—no, a clothes stampede. High-end flamboyance was her trademark—say, purple feathers and a matching, faux fur collar, with a Chanel scarf, perhaps, and one of the jewel-encrusted Judith Leiber handbags she loved so dearly. Over the years she accumulated a cornucopia of vintage ensembles, her Longwood home so jam-packed with Valentinos, Escadas, Dolce & Gabanas and Adrienne Landaus that she had a professional tailoring-shop conveyor system installed just to keep track of them.

Two years ago, she moved it all out to a warehouse and had everything sold off for charity.  Chances are you’ll have Harriett Lake to thank, in part, for the roof over your head the next time you attend a cultural event—say, a performance in the new home being built for the Orlando Ballet in Loch Haven Park, funded in part by her last major donation of $5 million. It’s also quite possible she’ll have had a hand in outfitting several of the ladies in the crowd.

But it’s not the stuff she gave us that’s important. It’s the stuff she was made of. When Rabbi Rubinger spoke, he keyed his remarks to a Hanukkah song that celebrates the heroes who arise, who are needed to arise, in every generation. I think it was his way of wondering how someone like Harriett Lake, who always liked to refer to herself as “a tough old broad,” can ever be replaced.

Good question. It reminded me of something she once said to me: “I can’t die. Too many people depend on me.”

After all the speakers paying tribute had finished their remarks, the mourners walked a few yards away to the gravesite. Some took a turn at the shovel to sift the dirt from a mound beside the grave onto the coffin. Rabbi Rubinger explained a tradition: If you wish to, you can flip the blade of the shovel around, spooning in the dirt upside down as a kind of mute protest against doing something you wish you didn’t have to do.

I have my own, private, more or less spontaneous traditions at a funeral. Once, twice, maybe more, I fix my attention on the one who is gone and whisper goodbye. And so last week, as people were still filtering into the enclosure, I walked up to the casket, squeezed a corner of the flag draped over it between my thumb and my forefinger, then leaned over and whispered: “Goodbye, Gorgeous.”

That was one of her words. That was what she always called people: gorgeous. Of course I couldn’t say it as well as she did. Somebody at the funeral remembered that the way she said it always reminded them of Barbra Streisand.

                                          See ya, Harriett. 

I should be so lucky.

 


10/23/25 09:57 AM #16405    

 

John Jackson

Harold, recently I read an article on why most of the people who look for extraterrestrial life with radio-telescopes think we should just listen, rather than actively send out messages hoping to get a response. Their reasoning is that the human race has only been capable of sending out messages like this for the past 30-40 years and given the vastness of the universe anyone who hears our message and becomes aware of our presence is unlikely to be exactly at our stage of development and is likely more (much more) technologically advanced than we are.  And if they come to visit us, our own history on earth provides ample examples of how it never goes well for the less advanced society when the two societies interact.

But I guess you know this and that’s why you’re concerned.

I’d like to give you a thumbs-up for your take on Trump, but I’m in a period of self-imposed radio silence on politics.

 

 


10/23/25 11:56 AM #16406    

 

David Mitchell

John,

I wonder if you recall a day in, oh maybe 5th grade, when I gave a report on a Walt Disney program that was about our space program. I think it showed Wernher von Braun and discussed the idea of our efforts to send a man to the moon.

In that year we had two very elderly nuns who split the day in half (if I recall correctly) because they were no longer healthy enough to teach a full day. One was Sister Antoinette (?), and the other was Sister Mary. It was sister Mary presididng over the classroom when I gave my talk.

As I finished, Sister Mary went into a rage, slaming her long blackboard pointer across her desk and breaking it in two. She went into a tirade about us children being fed this nonsenese about going to the moon in rocket ships.


10/23/25 01:01 PM #16407    

 

Michael McLeod

In my younger years people told me what to do but i got paid for it.

now that i'm old people tell me what to do and expect me to do it for free.

eff that.

 


10/23/25 01:04 PM #16408    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike McL.

Good eye on finding the Kissing Camels!

That is the most famous rock in Garden of the Gods park. 

Now, if you can identify the very sharp leafed plant in the foreground of that photo you can consider yourself an honorary Colorado Springer!

Joe G.

Thanks, the vistas and landscapes out here are stunning indeed. I just try to do them justice with a camera. And in that picture all I needed was my cellphone 📱!

Jim


10/23/25 02:56 PM #16409    

 

Michael McLeod

A poem for you enjoyment. That last line is just wonderful.

this is by Robert Hayden

It's called

THOSE WINTER SUNDAYS

You'll know right off why it's one I'd remember from my long ago English-major days. Hits close to home. Literally.

Sundays too my father got up early

and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,

then with cracked hands that ached

from labor in the weekday weather made

banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.

I’d wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking.


When the rooms were warm, he’d call,
and slowly I would rise and dress,

fearing the chronic angers of that house,

Speaking indifferently to him,
who had driven out the cold
and polished my good shoes as well.
What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices?


10/23/25 04:06 PM #16410    

 

David Mitchell

Jim,

Those photos look like "Garden of the Gods" - perhaps the most widley known scenery in all of Colorado - after Pikes Peak and Mt. Wilson near Telluride (where my wife and I lived during the summer of '72. 

When I was 9, we took a long family trip all over the west, visiting relatives and friends in New Mexico, California, Texas, and then back to Kansas City, begining with a week at a dude ranch just outside of Colorado Springs - (Paradise Ranch) in nearby Woodland Park, Colorado. I fell in love with a 21 year-old college girl who was the children's "activities coordinator". She took us riding horses every day.

I wonder if Paradise Ranch is still there?


10/23/25 04:29 PM #16411    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Dave,

Indeed that is Garden of the Gods.

Paradise Ranch was, I believe, up the Pass (Route24) near Woodland Park. It is no longer there. 

Jim


10/23/25 06:00 PM #16412    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

Beautiful photos of your beloved Colorado, Jim! Thanks for sharing.

 

I wish I could say that I took this photo of Barcelona but I found it posted online by a local newspaper. The unusual intense colors are caused by the particularly warm evening temperatures we are enjoying.

No camels though. :-)

 


10/23/25 07:41 PM #16413    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Donna,

What a gorgeous sunset!

There is nothing more photogenic than sunrises and sunsets in addition to the moods that they impart to our psyche.

We both live in beautiful places to enjoy the world!

Jim


10/23/25 09:18 PM #16414    

 

David Mitchell

Okay, so it's scenery you're after.

Well I don't have any mountians, but I do have the river in front of my house - the "May River" - said to be the inspiration for Johnny Mercer's Acadamy Award winning song, "Moon River".

Johnny Mercer lived in nearby Savannah and had a summer place here in Bluffton - on the river of course. The river - realy just a large estuary flowing behind Hilton Head island - is 50 yards from my front door and has two wooden docks reaching out into the water. My neighbors and I gather at the end of the day on the longer deep water dock and visit while we watch dolphins swim by. 

(I think I have mentioned this before, but Bluffton is also the backdrop for Pat Conroy's book - and movie - "Prince of Tides". Friends tell me the reason Bluffton is not mentioned by name in the book is that his local friends threatened to kill him if he gave out the name of this quirky little charming place - a well kept secret until recent years.)

The photo is from the dock in the summer months. Most nights the sunsets are phenomenal - but almost never the same, due to the changing tides.


10/23/25 09:24 PM #16415    

 

David Mitchell

Donna,

Are we seeing the famous Sagrada Familia in one of those taller lighted structures?


10/23/25 09:27 PM #16416    

 

John Jackson

Dave, I remember Sister Antoinette clearly but not Sister Mary.  Maybe it’s because during penmanship exercises one day Sister Antoinette looked at my paper and scolded  “A big boy like you and you can’t even control your pen!”  As you know, I wasn’t exactly a troublemaker so it made an impression. 

And I still have terrible handwriting.  But I think that’s true of most of us now because all our writing is on a computer.


10/23/25 09:47 PM #16417    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Sometimes Monochromatic Seems To Work

 

A very dark and almost spooky monochromatic (black and white) shot I made several years ago. I thought it might be appropriate as Halloween approaches.

But when I did some minimal tweeking (contrast adjustment) in my cellphone I discovered the light pattern of a crucifix in the left center background. Strange, but then this was in the Garden of the Gods.

Perhaps God is letting us know He is always present in our lives. He has certainly been with me through my surgery and as I continue to recover.

I'm sure we all have experienced His presence in our lives during stressful times.

Jim

 

 

 


10/23/25 10:07 PM #16418    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Dave M.,

Great sunset photo! Can't beat the colors of nature at dawn and dusk.

Jim


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