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      

02/13/25 03:37 PM #15032    

 

Sheila McCarthy (Gardner)

Janie, Jeanine: The copy editor in me cries out for "T.Rump C.Anal..."


02/13/25 05:21 PM #15033    

 

John Jackson

Sheila, boy do I wish I’d thought of that!

In other news, RFK Jr (another of Trump's many unqualified/DEI hires) was confirmed today as HHS Secretary.

MAKE POLIO GREAT AGAIN!!!!!!!


02/13/25 05:37 PM #15034    

 

John Jackson

Today the totally benign and non-weaponized Trump Justice Department fired the U.S. attorney for Manhattan after she refused to drop the case against current New York City Mayor Eric Adams who was indicted for a years-long pay-to-play corruption scheme during his time as Police Commissioner and then as mayor.

The U.S. Attorney fired was a Republican and member of the right wing Federalist Society.  After law school,  she clerked for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.

The next two attorneys who were asked to drop the case also resigned in protest, and three more followed.

I can't believe how far and how fast this country has fallen.

MAKE CORRUPTION GREAT AGAIN!!!!!!!


02/13/25 05:54 PM #15035    

Joseph Gentilini

Sheila, THANKS!!


02/13/25 09:20 PM #15036    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Au contraire, 51% of Americans believe we are finally headed in the right direction. 


02/14/25 09:07 AM #15037    

 

Michael McLeod

forgive me for posting a cool paragraph below from todays news along with a beautiful poem from days gone . It's Robert Frost. As for the other thing I quote separately i know it's political - the paragraph - but that's not the only reason I posted it.I did so also because it's just so beautifully written. not taking sides. it simply appeals to the nerd writer in me. the combination of flat out fact with literary flourish.

I fell in love with words in english at watterson and in lit classes at osu. then i heard tell of something they called literary journalism. meaning news of the day written as stylishly as a shakespearean sonnet. and that suckered me right in to half a century of writing the news and features and trying to do it in a style that honored all the wonderful poetry and fiction i studied in school. my copy was amateur hour as compared to the prose of the pros i studied in school at watterson and then ohio dominican college and osu. but i did live out that robert frost couplet i'm sure i've talked about before about combining avocation with vocation. pretty much retired recently so i've been a bit more sentimental about it all lately.

I posted the poem above. It often comes to me when I see hard news written well, such as this recent and succinct paragraph with a bit of literary flourish to it. Notice how earthy and tactile it is. He makes you see it. He makes you feel it. I posted the news paragraph below. 

I just taught my last lit class so I'm afraid the teacher in me is still letting out steam but I promise there will be no quiz.

 

The consequences of the confrontation extend far beyond the fate of Mr. Adams. It has set up what promises to be a protracted and damaging battle over the integrity, independence and direction of a department that Mr. Trump views like a piece of captured battlefield artillery he is now able to turn against his attackers


02/14/25 09:28 AM #15038    

 

Michael McLeod

Two Tramps In Mud Time

Out of the mud two strangers came
And caught me splitting wood in the yard,
And one of them put me off my aim
By hailing cheerily "Hit them hard!"
I knew pretty well why he had dropped behind
And let the other go on a way.
I knew pretty well what he had in mind:
He wanted to take my job for pay.

Good blocks of oak it was I split,
As large around as the chopping block;
And every piece I squarely hit
Fell splinterless as a cloven rock.
The blows that a life of self-control
Spares to strike for the common good,
That day, giving a loose my soul,
I spent on the unimportant wood.

The sun was warm but the wind was chill.
You know how it is with an April day
When the sun is out and the wind is still,
You're one month on in the middle of May.
But if you so much as dare to speak,
A cloud comes over the sunlit arch,
A wind comes off a frozen peak,
And you're two months back in the middle of March.

A bluebird comes tenderly up to alight
And turns to the wind to unruffle a plume,
His song so pitched as not to excite
A single flower as yet to bloom.
It is snowing a flake; and he half knew
Winter was only playing possum.
Except in color he isn't blue,
But he wouldn't advise a thing to blossom.

The water for which we may have to look
In summertime with a witching wand,
In every wheel rut's now a brook,
In every print of a hoof a pond.
Be glad of water, but don't forget
The lurking frost in the earth beneath
That will steal forth after the sun is set
And show on the water its crystal teeth.

The time when most I loved my task
The two must make me love it more
By coming with what they came to ask.
You'd think I never had felt before
The weight of an ax-head poised aloft,
The grip of earth on outspread feet,
The life of muscles rocking soft
And smooth and moist in vernal heat.

Out of the wood two hulking tramps
(From sleeping God knows where last night,
But not long since in the lumber camps).
They thought all chopping was theirs of right.
Men of the woods and lumberjacks,
They judged me by their appropriate tool.
Except as a fellow handled an ax
They had no way of knowing a fool.

Nothing on either side was said.
They knew they had but to stay their stay

And all their logic would fill my head:
As that I had no right to play
With what was another man's work for gain.
My right might be love but theirs was need.
And where the two exist in twain
Theirs was the better right--agreed.

But yield who will to their separation,
My object in living is to unite
My avocation and my vocation
As my two eyes make one in sight.
Only where love and need are one,
And the work is play for mortal stakes,
Is the deed ever really done
For Heaven and the future's sakes.

02/14/25 12:16 PM #15039    

Timothy Lavelle

We all heard so many of those old sayings when we were growing up. I used to ignore them much of the time because they did not mak simple black n white sense. "A stitch in time..." type sayings left me clueless because I didn't sew or think past the words. 

Later, I began to think that these old sayings i would hear Leo or Big Sally use in our house sure had been around for a long time. "Wonder why?" I would pose to myself. I also wonderd if L and BS were maybe hillbillys from West-By-God...It took me going to VN to realize that between my 15th and 19th birthdays my parents had gained soooo much knowledge. I was lucky to be able to tell them that to their amusement.

AND NOW, A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR..."...prose of the pros..." ATTA DAMN BOY, MIKE MCLEOD. I'm buyin' what your selling.

...so I would wonder why some of these sayings would stick. ((I spent a LOT of time working alone overses. Lot's of time to wu...uhh...under Baby, as David Bromberg said)). "A fool and his money...". Nothing surer. "You can lead a horse...". Yep, people gonna do what people gonna do no matter what you show or tell them. "Colder than a well digger's..." yeah, well, nothing deep there, just the typical Ohio winter we grew up with. "There's a sucker born every..." or simply, why do people give their money away to con artists throughout history or follow others in a lynch mob mentality. I'm not telling you anything you don't know, just sayin'.

These days. "You CAN fool some of the people all of the time, and ALL of the people some of the time".

PT Barnum, just nother famous con artist who likely didn't run for office only because our elders had far far more common sense and far less electronic noise coming at them. More time to just think. 

"You know a man by the company he keeps". "Lay down with dogs, get up with fleas". 

If 100 people were coming at me and 49 of them wanted me at the end of a rope, I'd start runnin'.

 

 


02/14/25 01:27 PM #15040    

 

Janie Albright (Blank)

Sheila, are we talking Panama or Suez?! Hard to tell these days...


02/14/25 02:04 PM #15041    

 

John Jackson

Might makes right and we’re rich and powerful – we're chumps if we don't just take everything. 


02/14/25 02:09 PM #15042    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

 

Let me help you all out! 


02/15/25 12:22 PM #15043    

 

Michael McLeod

moving on to much more important matters: forgive me if I have mentioned this before but somewhere in the annals of humanity's great achievements and inventions there surely must be a mention of hagan das caramel cone ice cream.


02/16/25 01:04 AM #15044    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

End of an Era

After 14 years I have decided not to renew my Zenfolio online photography site, "Mountain Memories and More", which, as of today, is now terminated.

It was sort of my "toy" and I enjoyed it but it took a lot of time on the computer for me to create each of those galleries and I prefer to share some of my individual photographs with others, such as you, my classmates,  in more directed venues, like this Forum. Additionally, Zenfolio changed some of the ways that I would have to grant access to certain galleries, which would require more time and monitoring on my part. If I were a professional photographer that site is certainly a great place to post and sell photos, but that is - was- not my main motive.

So, although this body is less agile to approach some of the landscapes which I have accessed in past "forays into the mountains and forests" of Colorado, I hope to safely image some of God's handiwork hither and yon around this and other places and share them with you.

Stay tuned if you are interested,

Jim

 

 

 


02/16/25 10:47 AM #15045    

 

Mark Schweickart

Jim-- Of course we are interested. We love your photos. 


02/16/25 01:11 PM #15046    

 

Michael McLeod

I was going to post some old pictures of me being a little tiiddley on my birthdays and getting into a little cross dressing over the years when denise and I were with a pretty goofy crowd and it seemed kinda like a perfect joint exhibiton with Jim's outdoorsy snapshots. but then for some reason i thought better of it, the keyword in my thought process being "tasteless." 

And on another front and in all seriousness: you asked for a reaction on the foreign policy weirdness and I'll give you one, dave. I wouldn't call it policy. It seems to be a choice that is simply about pleasing his inner circle and his base. The most stunning move is the ethnic cleansing initiative to move thousands of arab families out of the gaza strip. I am still trying to sort it all out and find a rational and humane element in that strategy so please take that as an initial reaction.  i haven't read up on it as much as i need to, partly because it feels like work. Plus, you know, they're just arabs.

Speaking of work I can't break my habit of reading a variety of sunday newspapers. this from the los angeles times on another rich-dude-in-the-white-house initiative. 

Maricela Ramirez was at an education conference in Washington, D.C., at the end of January when she and other attendees heard the startling news: Federal funding for Head Start programs, which provide early-learning and nutritional support for low-income children nationwide, had been frozen.

Ramirez, chief education officer for the Los Angeles County Office of Education, quickly contacted colleagues and realized it was true. They had tried to make a routine withdrawal of millions of dollars in funding the day prior, but it hadn’t arrived overnight as expected.

Ramirez said “stress and panic” quickly began to set in, both in her office and among the conference attendees all around her.

 

“Our team had to assess whether LACOE would have to shut down its programs and to determine where LACOE could find funding to pay its employees if the system continued to be down,” Ramirez recently wrote in a legal filing. Pauses in federal funding could disrupt mental health services, counseling, health screening and nutritional support for up to 8,000 children, she added.

Ramirez’s account of the fallout and ongoing fear caused by the Trump administration’s sudden decision to halt billions of dollars in federal financial aid last month was one of more than 125 declarations of harm filed as part of a multi-state lawsuit challenging the freeze in U.S. District Court. At least 16 declarations came from California.


02/16/25 04:07 PM #15047    

Joseph Gentilini

Jim,  yes I am interested in your photos.  You are so good at it.  Joe


02/17/25 12:49 PM #15048    

 

David Mitchell

Break time. 

I did not see this live, but just captured it off YouTube.

Enjoy

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

Sorry - having trouble loading this - I'll keep trying

Try finding this yourselves - - google up  "Adam Sandler's song 50 years SNL 50"

It's worth a listen

 




02/18/25 08:49 PM #15049    

 

David Mitchell

I get so confused.

Could one of you please help this feeble minded old man figure out which is more - the number of New York U.S. attorneys who have resigned over this Mayor Adams "thing", the number of women Elon Musk has impregated - in, or out of wedlock (as of yesterday at least), or the number of Fox News employees who have publicly stated that they thought "Pole-dancing-Pete" was too drunk to go on the air. 

I just can't seem to keep up any more.


02/18/25 11:11 PM #15050    

 

John Jackson

Dave, there are so many outrages that we can’t pay attention to them all – and of course this is by design – lots of bad things can slip by when so much is going on.

Not to mention that Trump/Musk have fired virtually all the Inspector Generals of federal agencies – their job is to publicize and protect against waste, fraud, and abuse in their agencies.   And with his firings of top officials, Musk has kneecapped the agencies that regulate his businesses that have large contracts with the federal Government (Space-X, Starlink, and Neuralink).  Any concern for “conflict of interest” has been banished from the Federal Government, all under the guise of “efficiency”.

Interesting fact about USAID – it was the first agency attacked because Americans have a totally bonkers idea (fed by right wing media) of its size - a recent AP poll showed Americans on average think about 30% of the U.S. budget goes for foreign aid.  USAID is actually responsible for 0.7% of the total federal budget and the U.S. spends less on foreign aid (as a percentage of GDP) than virtually all other advanced nations.

A final outrage (though trivial in the great scheme of things) - Trump has banned the AP (Associated Press) from the White House newsroom because they continue to refer to the Gulf of Mexico by its proper name – the Gulf of Mexico.  Past presidents have complained about news coverage but they have never tried to discipline/punish the media.  What a mean, small and vindictive man we have as President.


02/19/25 03:06 PM #15051    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

If the Inspectors Generals were doing their jobs, we would not be seeing the depth of the waste, fraud and corruption that is finally being exposed. 

As for the funding of USAID....Milton Friedman offers this  "The goverment doesn't have any money. Only people have money. The government only gets money by putting its hand in your pocket and taking it out."  

https://www.foxnews.com/media/440-reporters-lose-press-passes-white-house-changes-requirements


02/19/25 03:59 PM #15052    

 

John Jackson

Sorry MM, I don’t trust the world’s richest man, whose companies are regulated by the Federal Governmnet and have major federal contracts, to solve the waste fraud and abuse problem - the phrase “the fox guarding the hen house” comes to mind...

When this is all done the federal agencies will be so depleted (and dumbed down with Trump appointees) that there will be no effective oversight.

We’re looking more and more like Russia where the fat cats, if they bend a knee to Putin, do pretty much what they want.  If you think waste, fraud and corruption was bad before, just wait...


02/19/25 04:01 PM #15053    

 

John Jackson

On a lighter note, I used to post things from The Onion, but have avoided it recently because so much on the site is in really poor taste.  But here’s one that is definitely non-political and G rated:

Heroic Dog Saves Family Of 5 From Herb-Roasted Chicken

TACOMA, WA—Operating on pure natural instinct while leaping into action to protect his beloved owners, heroic dog Snickers saved a local family of five from the threat of an herb-roasted chicken, sources confirmed Wednesday.

“It was a close call, but luckily Snickers could sense the golden brown skin of the chicken we’d just roasted for dinner, and his protective nature took over from there,” said Danielle Greco, mother and longtime owner of Snickers, detailing how the 4-year-old terrier mix snapped into action without a moment’s hesitation, quickly neutralizing the threat by clamping his jaws around the chicken’s succulent legs and thighs. “If it weren’t for Snickers, I shudder to think what would have happened to my family... 

 


02/19/25 04:12 PM #15054    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

House Calls

It is a very cold day here and, for some reason, it brings back some strange memories.

Dr. McCall had an office on a road somewhere off High Street in the northern part of downtown Columbus. He was my sister's and my pediatrician until each of us hit that teenage year of 13. I think Mom chose him as he also admitted patients to Grant Hospital from where Mom had once graduated nursing school.

I recall as a child sitting in his waiting room, looking through Highlights magazine and fearful that I might need a shot of some kind. But I was most scared when I might be sick in bed at home and need a "house call" ​​​​​​. Those almost surely would be worthy of a penicillin shot in the gluteal muscle.

I suspect that many of us were subjected to such house calls during our childhood years. Such in-home doctor contact has essentially disappeared in our modern society as getting to a docs office, ER or an Urgent Care building is more and quickly available. The old house call is now made by ambulance crews with paramedics and EMT's and maybe even mobile radiological equipment.

I know I am getting old since I do remember making house calls, not only early in my training but also - although rarely - when in private practice before my transition to Ft. Carson.

There was actually very little a lone physician could do in a patient's home but it always seemed to be comforting and appreciated by the patient and the family.

A couple of these I recall: 

It was a cold and snowy night ( how's that for an intro 😁) and an elderly lady lay in her bed in her south Colorado Springs home. She was in chronic congestive heart failure, beginning to retain more fluid and refused to come to our office or call for an ambulance to take to the hospital. My partner was busy but I had some time as a new doc my schedule was not yet full. I drove over to her house took out my "little black bag" that I always kept in the trunk of my car, and went to her bedside. She did have swollen ankles and some fluid in her lungs. Again, she refused to go to the hospital. I opened my bag, took out a syringe and a vial of IV Lasix (diuretic) but found the med to be totally frozen! O.K., time for practicing by the seat of my pants - or, at least the warming effect of my armpit - and successfully administered the med. 

Another cold night I was called by a local nursing home that a patient was very uncomfortable due to severe constipation, not responsive to usual therapy. The poor elderly man was in pain and just couldn't "go". The solution here required the gentle touch of a gloved index finger which was able to open things up to where nature could finish the job. Fortunately, I have long fingers.

During my career I helped train many first responders but I don't recall that procedure being a part of such training.

Remember, when emergency care is needed, and needed quickly, call 911.

Jim

 

 

 

 


02/19/25 04:34 PM #15055    

 

David Mitchell

Jees, I feel like a complete idiot!

I didn't know Donald Trump was the "father of in-vitro"


02/19/25 05:14 PM #15056    

Joseph Gentilini

Jim, your post on physician's home visit reminded me of my childhood also.  There were several times when my doctor came to our home to give me those damn penicillin shots or treated me for some other ailments that I can't remember.  Your using your long fingers to help that one woman relieve herself reminded me of a recent visit to my doctor. While I was there, I told him of a friend who is a nurse who requested that his doctor do a digital exam of his prostate as he had a friend whose doctor would not do one and he ultimately died of prostate stage 4 cancer.  My doctor told me all the reasons they do not do that examination (you would die of something else even if you did get cancer) and that they rely on the PSA examination.  I know that somehow it is not recommended anymore, but...it did bother me that he won't do it.  What's up?!  joe


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page