Message Forum

Welcome to the Watterson High School Message Forum.

The message forum is an ongoing dialogue between classmates. There are no items, topics, subtopics, etc.

Forums work when people participate - so don't be bashful! Click the "Post Message" button to add your entry to the forum.


 
go to bottom 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page      

04/15/22 04:16 PM #10981    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike B., I think you must be referring to post #10957 for the reference to men who wear "rugs". I am not sure if your post was meant to be in jest, but just to clarify, I can not apologize for a comment I did not make.

Mark, congratulations on your son's success.  I am quite certain filmmaking is a tough career to break into.  I wish him all the best.


04/15/22 06:11 PM #10982    

 

Michael Boulware

Yep, I thought I was being funny. I guess it was a weak effort. I guess I need to apologize.


04/15/22 09:42 PM #10983    

 

Mark Schweickart

Mike – Yes, my son's film played at several festivals last year, but as it turns out, a film is not taken into consideration for streaming unless it has had a theatrical release. So this was a big step for them.  Amazingly enough, they actually got some quality exposure on a local news program here in LA today, when the station's entertainment reporter at KTLA interviewed one of the cast members. They even showed a clip from the film, so that was pretty cool also (or as you would spell it "kewl").

And speaking of songs like the Sarah MacLachan one you linked us to, which help when one is  in the mourning process, I thought of a quite different song when I was thinking about how I was remembering two of my brothers who passed away, Tom in 2020 and Bob in 2021. I know this song was not intended to be eliciting these kinds of thoughts, in that it clearly was meant to be a reflection on losing a partner in a relationship separation, not to death, but to ...well, whatever drove them apart. I am referring to Alan and Marilyn Bergman's classic, "The Way We Were," made famous by Barbra Streisand, and by the movie of the same name starring Babs and Robert Redford. Nonetheless, it struck me that these lyrics can very much speak to one's sense of loss when grieving the passing of a loved one. Here's a cover version I did. Just take a minute to remove Barbra Sreisand's voice from your mind, in order to allow yourself room for my decidedly un-Streisand-like warbling to settle in.




04/16/22 01:11 AM #10984    

 

David Mitchell

Hey there! Whoa, back up. (been busy lately and just catching up)

Neither Mike nor Mary Margaret made the comment about "men wearing "rugs".

I was the one who said that. And it's true. I have alwasy had a "thing" about men with hairpieces. It just bothers the heck out of me. I just screams "fake" like a flashing red light.

There. I said it. now you can all re-direct your arrows at me. But it won't change my mind.

 

-------------------

Meanwhile - So Hunter got millions from an oil company. Now what's this about Jared getting $2 Billion from that creepy, scary Saudi Prince?

So who do I see about just a couple grand?


04/16/22 01:36 AM #10985    

 

David Mitchell

I have comlained about our utterly corrupt tax system before - ranting about our welfare for the rich culture - but here are a few fun facts to digest:

 

18 American Bllionaires received Covid relief checks.

In 2011, Jeff Bezons received a $4,000 child tax credits for each of his kids. He was only worth $18 Billlon back then.  

 

I would love to know about the finances of Senator Rick Scott fo Florida, who recently claimed that "the poor don't pay their fair share of taxes" - - huh?


04/16/22 11:29 AM #10986    

 

Michael McLeod

You make a good point about hunter/jared Dave. But it's also true they both profited as prodigies via proximity to presidents, which should be prevented as a matter of principle. And even if i am not making sense I am having fun with alliteration. 

 


04/16/22 11:36 AM #10987    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

"Reservations Required!"

It has been awhile since we have been to a National Park. Many of them now require making a reservation to visit them, including my closest and favorite, Rocky Mountain National Park. I was wondering if any one of us has been to an NP recently that has required this and how it worked out for them, or hindered them.

To make matters worse, Pikes Peak is in the final stages of completing a new Summit House that is unbelievably fantastic. But this morning's paper says that as of May one must have a reservation to park in the parking lot at the top. That was never the case with the old Summit House. 

By the way, thanks to Joe McC for cluing us in to getting those Senior Passes to the NPs a few years ago, which we did do. I understand they have stopped that program but have to honor those that have already been issued. Joe, is that true?

Jim

 

 

 


04/16/22 11:58 AM #10988    

 

Michael McLeod

I'm not one to glorify war.

But damn, this was a sampson-goliath knockout.

 

 

Prized Russian Ship Was Hit by Missiles, U.S. Officials Say

https://static01.nyt.com/images/icons/t_logo_291_black.png

 

WASHINGTON — The Moskva was the pride of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, a symbol of the country’s dominance of the region and a powerful war machine that had been used to launch precision cruise missiles deep inside Ukraine.

Despite claims by Russia that an accidental fire broke out on the ship, U.S. officials confirmed on Friday that two Ukrainian Neptune missiles had struck the vessel, killing an unknown number of sailors and sending it and its arsenal to the bottom of the Black Sea.

The sinking of the Moskva on Thursday was a grave blow to the Russian fleet and a dramatic demonstration of the current era of warfare in which missiles fired from shore can destroy even the biggest, most powerful ships. It was also the most significant combat loss for any navy since 1982, when Argentina’s Air Force sank a British guided missile destroyer and other ships during the Falklands War.

 

The Russian cruise missiles have been used to brutal effect on apartment buildings in Ukrainian cities, and the Moskva’s guns had fired on Ukraine’s Snake Island. The Kremlin’s most powerful missile platform is impossible to replace, and its sinking was a bold counterattack, retired military officers said.

 

The Moskva inspired awe in those who saw it — bristling with missiles and looming over the landscape — and was the embodiment of Russian power in the region for decades.

“It was a very impressive ship,” said retired Rear Adm. Samuel J. Cox, the director of the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington. “With those surface-to-surface missile launchers, she really looks dangerous. But apparently, she can’t take a punch.”

The vessel’s sinking has symbolic, diplomatic and military importance.

Russian ships have already been pushed farther off the Ukrainian coast, U.S. officials confirmed, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence assessments of the war. The remainder of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet is still within range to launch cruise missiles into Ukraine but is unable to support any sort of amphibious assault on the country’s coastal cities, according to former officials.

Naval analysts have worried for years that a new generation of ship-killing missiles would endanger large and important ships like the Moskva or the United States’ fleet of aircraft carriers. The sinking of the Moskva is a clear sign that the future has arrived.

 

The Moskva was itself designed as a ship killer. Construction of the ship, originally known as the Slava, began in 1976, and the vessel went into service in 1983. Built by the Soviet Union to sink American carriers, it was armed with missiles capable of striking planes, ships and submarines.

Upgraded many times over the years, the Moskva should have had defenses to shoot down the Ukrainian missiles. The ship was armed with a medium-range surface-to-air system that was thought to be effective within seven miles, and it also had other missiles designed to take out threats 50 miles away. In theory, its guns could have shot down a Neptune missile as well. But none of those defenses worked.

“Warfare is a brutal thing,” said retired Adm. Gary Roughead, a former chief of naval operations. “You have to make the investments to defeat the kinds of weapons that people are going to throw at you.”

Anti-ship weapons are not hard to build or field. Hezbollah struck an Israeli warship in the Lebanon war in 2006. Houthi rebels in Yemen fired multiple anti-ship missiles at a U.S. Navy destroyer in two separate attacks in 2016, which drew retaliatory Tomahawk cruise missile attacks in response. While the U.S. Navy has invested in antimissile technology for decades, American war planners have said that China’s missiles would pose a real threat in a conflict.

While symbolically painful for Russia, the loss of the Moskva also has practical effects on the ongoing war. Missiles that would have been fired at Ukraine are now at the bottom of the Black Sea, a blow to Russia’s war plans.

The Moskva would have played a primary role in any potential amphibious assault on the Ukrainian coastal city of Odesa. While other landing ships would have been used to bring Russian naval infantry to the coastline, the Moskva would have protected those ships and launched missile strikes on the city.

Now, Admiral Cox said, any amphibious assault on Ukraine will be much more dangerous for Russia, with its landing and amphibious ships much more vulnerable to attacks.

 

The farther Russian ships are from the coast, the more limited their support for ground assaults on Ukrainian cities will be. While the greater distance could make some attacks more difficult, it would not put Russia’s more powerful missiles out of range. Some of Russia’s sea-launched cruise missiles can reach 1,550 miles, while Ukraine’s Neptune missiles have a range of about 190 miles.

Before the strike on the Moskva, a senior Defense Department official said, the Russian Black Sea Fleet operated with relative impunity.

“They thought they could run around the Black Sea and go anywhere they wanted,” said retired Adm. James G. Foggo III, the dean of the Center for Maritime Strategy at the Navy League of the United States. “They found out otherwise.”

Preventing an attack on Odesa has been a priority of Ukraine’s military, which for weeks has been asking the United States and its allies for additional anti-ship missiles and other so-called coastal defense weaponry.

Senior Ukrainian officials have told the Pentagon that they need the anti-ship missiles and other weaponry to open a new front and turn back the Russian invasion, U.S. officials said.


04/16/22 03:19 PM #10989    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Football Follies

I just saw some of the rules that have been iinstituted for the new USFL football games. Sounds like something out of a Calvin and Hobbes comic strip.

Jim


04/16/22 03:23 PM #10990    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Jim

Sorry but I haven'tt checked lately. 

I've been side-tracked by the that the oldest Park Ranger retired at a spry 102 years young.

Joe

 


04/16/22 04:25 PM #10991    

 

David Mitchell

And Joe, wasn't she a woman park ranger?

------------------------------

Somewhere in old photo boxes I have (or had) a picture of two cute Navajo kids about 10 and 12, who were the children of the very first Navajo U.S. Park Ranger - Herman and Harriet Holiday - sitting on a tourist lookout wall overlooking Monument Valley (one of my favorite places on earth). 


04/16/22 07:22 PM #10992    

 

David Mitchell

I highly recommend you go see the new movie, "Father Stu", staring Mark Wahlberg. 

 

It is a true story about a foul-mouthed, street tough, low-life, boxer who's life story is a bizarre journey to become a beloved Catholic priest. 

It may shake you to the core!  

* (and I'm not giving away the weirdest part)

You have to sit through a withering and disturbing barrage of "f-bombs" and nasty arguments between Wahlberg and his father (Mel Gibson - a drunken loser who treats his son like dirt). Adults only.

 

WARNING: Kleenex may be required at the ending. I was caught completely unprepared and had to use my popcorn napkin. Don't ya jist hate when that happens?

I will see this again.

 


04/17/22 09:07 AM #10993    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Happy Easter.

https://youtu.be/-c6pl6CaiD0


04/17/22 10:59 AM #10994    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

I am so glad that I looked up as we walked down the street this morning.  Happy Easter from my ´hood to yours.


04/17/22 01:29 PM #10995    

 

Sheila McCarthy (Gardner)

Love it, Donna .... Thank you and Happy Easter! xo Sheila


04/17/22 01:38 PM #10996    

 

David Mitchell

RELIGION says, "I messed up. My Dad's gonna kill me."

THE GOSPEL says, "I messed up, I really need to call my Dad."

 

RELIGION says, "What do I have to do to get to God?"

The GOSPEL says, "What God already did for us to reach us."

 

 

(My bet still holds. Over 2,000 years and they still can't find the body.)


04/17/22 05:00 PM #10997    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Dear Dr. Jim,

Mea Culpa's.  I should have taken a few minutes and done the proper research before answering your question.

The answer is YES.  The question is "Are the National Park Senior Lifetime Passes (product 519537) still valid, and are they still available?"

I double checked using Bing, probably works in Goggle and Firefox,  The website is: Https://store.usgs.gov

Way back when I mentioned getting a Lifetime pass they were set to go up in price to $80.00, the price you can purchase one today.  A Senior still can obtain an ANNUAL pass for $20.00, but for sixty more you can purchase the Lifetime.

 

Dave, you are correct, Thee oldest Park Ranger is a woman.  She worked as a park ranger in the San Francisco Bay Are.


04/17/22 05:17 PM #10998    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Joe,

Thanks for that research and update. Glad I got mine before the price hike.

By the way, Janet recently ordered us some more wine from out your way (something she does a few times a year) and was told there would be some delays and substitutions due to a glass bottle shortage. It did finally arrive yesterday but her wine rep said many local people are coming to the wineries with their own bottles and buying it by filling those bottles directly from the casks. She mainly orders from Mondavi and V Sattui wineries. Have you heard of this shortage?

Jim


04/18/22 09:04 AM #10999    

 

Michael McLeod

Envious here about getting wine directly, Florida not being exactly wine country, though there are some tropical vineyards down here.


04/18/22 12:16 PM #11000    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

There has been numerous news articles recently about the bottle shortage.  Some even talk about the lack of storage for wine that wineries are unable to bottle.  Some have gone to the extreme of pouring it down the drain.

You and Mike's remarks on out of state ordering reminded me of a little incident when I was living in Pennsylvania.

A guy wanted to suprise his wife with some wine from an Italian winery, named the same as his wife's maiden name.  So he went to the state liquor store to buy some; Pennsylvania restricts liquor including wine, but not beer, to state stores.  They didn't have any but would order it for him; case lots only.  After three months he called to find out what was taking so long and was told it would be a little while longer.

About three weeks later he had to make a trip to Trento, New Jersey.  He passed aliquor store on his way to his business meeting so decided to stop on the way home to see what they had.  You quessed it, they had the wwine in stock, so he bought a case.  Unfortunately, he bought the wine.  When he crossed back into Pennsylvania he was stopped by the Highway Patrol.  While checking the back seat the Officer noted the wine.  When asked about it, the driver explained that he had just purchased the wine as a gift for his wife.  WRONG!!!

Pennsylvania has very strict control over alchol.  The coniscated the wine, AND his car for transporting the wine into Pennsylvania without a permit.

Be careful on what your state laws are concerning alchol purchases.

And last.  Many years ago I was purchasing some beer for my son-in-law who was visitng.  The nice friendly cashier asked for my driver's license.  After presenting it and being accepted the cashier proceeded to ring up the purschase.  I stopped her and asked her age dumbfounded she replied 17.  I asked for a manager.  When the manger arrived I informed him that by state law I didn't want to get the friendly cashier in trouble, but she was underage and could not legally be the person selling the beer.  The manager made a quick phone call,and after receiving asurprising response finsihed ring up the sale and thanking me for letting him know that the cashier and the store could have been fined.  Alcohol was a small part of the markets business.

 


04/18/22 12:33 PM #11001    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Joe, 

As you are well aware liquor laws are a state's responsibility and are very different across the country. We have been ordering California wines here in Colorado for decades and never had any issues. Strangely enough, we can have V Sattui wines sent to Ohio for gifts to family members but not wines from Mondavi. Whether that is a Mondavi or a state thing, I do not know.

Jim


04/18/22 10:51 PM #11002    

 

Michael McLeod

I have seen terrible terrible things in my day but pouring wine down a drain is an atrocity I cannot fathom.

While we are on the subject: I have no idea how to describe the taste of great wines in the vocabulary I have heard experts use to discuss them. I just know that wines to me are like people in the sense that some I have encountered have depth, they have subtlety, I want to be around them and linger with them and encounter them again soon - while others rate either yuck or meh. Would love to meet a sommelier who uses that vocabulary to address the subject but I am not holding my breath. I am, however, raising a glass. Salud!

 


04/19/22 12:25 AM #11003    

 

David Mitchell

Having gorged myself latley on news videos from Ukraine - mostly military and political - this video shows one of the less discussed and yet shocking sides of what is happening in Russian and Ukraine.

And along with the video below, google another one - "Russia's War in Ukraine leads to historic split in the Orthodox Church." (note: I think it is older - before this current conflict)

This one below is quite shocking. More toxic than our own spill-over between right wing politics and religion. To think of it - men of God (supposedly), taking political sides favoring, and even blessing, military mass slaughter. 




04/19/22 09:26 PM #11004    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

“I want government so small you can barely see it and so efficient you barely have to pay for it.” – Ohio State Rep. Vitale
“My favorite politician has become the one who’s on vacation. They cannot steal my money or take my freedom.” - Ohio State Rep. Vitale

04/20/22 10:45 AM #11005    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

What does all of this mean for the U.S. in the coming months?  Are we Americans prepared for more supply chain disruptions? 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/chinese-lockdowns-expand-raising-more-questions-about-beijings-motives-shutting-down


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page