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03/24/25 08:29 PM #15299    

Timothy Lavelle

Mark,

Good eye dude. I had to go back again. If you look at the freq sheet you'll see there were no letters in the 8 or 9 column at all so I thought you must be mistaken.

But you were right, I mistakenly typed 49 instead of 44 in my encription.

And yeah, way back I was trying to sell you guys on birthdays with double digits as being "elevensys" and up for special gifts since they only happen very eleven years.

The code went 11 thru 17, 22 thru 27, 33 thru 37, 44 thru 47 and 55 thru 57 followed by 66 if there had been a "Z" used. 

Thank you for the catch and for allowing me to bore the crap out pf everyone again!!

4523 27

 


03/24/25 08:39 PM #15300    

 

Mark Schweickart

Tim -- You didn't answer my query. Is "elevensy" a made-up Tim word, or something in code-breaker-speak?


03/24/25 09:00 PM #15301    

 

John Jackson

You’ve probably heard that about a week ago the editor of The Atlantic found himself on a text chain with top Defense Department officials (who violated long-standing security protocols by using their personal unsecured phones) detailing plans for the U.S. to attack the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen.  It wasn’t just hypothetical – the attacks started two hours later.  

Just goes to show how chaotic, incompetent and unserious our current leaders are - what qualifies them for their jobs is undying loyalty to Trump rather than any expertise or experience in leading their departments.  But, as usual, the Borowitz report says it best:

Americans Demand Breathalyzer Be Attached to Pete Hegseth’s Phone

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Amid the outcry over the leaking of top-secret war plans, on Monday millions of Americans called for a breathalyzer to be attached to Pete Hegseth’s phone.

In an emotional apology at the Pentagon, Hegseth said that someone in his position “should never drink and text, and so I am giving up texting.”

According to national security experts, a journalist was given access to highly sensitive war plans that are normally available only to people using a public bathroom at Mar-a-Lago.


03/25/25 10:13 AM #15302    

 

Michael McLeod

 

here's a link to a story i wrote a long time ago.

it's colorful

but it's long.

no for short attention span folks.

 

https://www.sun-sentinel.com/1992/10/25/the-bud-man-and-the-dragon-lady-scandalous-sex-powerful-friends-corporate-intrigue-a-hard-drinking-beer-baron-and-his-ex-call-girl-wife-had-it-all-until-a-possible-murder-plot-led-to-a-spectacular-div/

 

 

 


03/25/25 11:30 AM #15303    

Timothy Lavelle

Yes, Mark, Tim word. As often confused with timward which we know is toward the tim.

Now, let it gooooooooooo.

4523 27


03/25/25 01:59 PM #15304    

 

Mark Schweickart

Tim-- I didn't mean to anoooooooooy you. Sorry, I was just curious. 


03/25/25 05:03 PM #15305    

 

David Mitchell

Can anybody help me recognize these kids?

I'd swear I know them from somewhere?

 


03/26/25 10:57 AM #15306    

 

Michael McLeod

ok this will perhaps sound like an out of left field observation.

But I'm noticing that my emotions are stronger as I age.

paricularly the positive ones, as in love.

and it strikes me as, well, ironic, tragic, poignant, whatever.

and it seems a rather simple, even simplistic, or at least obvious observation, too, as in "duh!" of course we are more thoughtful in retirement as we have time to mull things over and become, like it or not, more vulnerable. The image comes to me of something that is simmering - what's the term, a reduction of a sauce as it cooks and becomes more concentrated.... maybe that would make a good metaphor for how I feel about the people I love at this point in life and the quality and intensity of the love that I feel.

kind of embarrassed to be so touchy feely here but thinking on the other hand this is an appropriate target audience though I don't mean to pry.

 

 


03/26/25 12:53 PM #15307    

 

Michael McLeod

don't underestimate yourself mark. you could be both. 


03/26/25 01:00 PM #15308    

 

Michael McLeod

testing la tee dah.


03/26/25 04:16 PM #15309    

 

Mark Schweickart

Mike -- I don't know if you subscribe to Garrison Keillor's Almanac, in which he sends a post about various writers every day to your inbox, but if not, here's the one today I am sure you'll be intersted in.

It's the birthday of the poet who said: "The ear is the only true writer and the only true reader." That's Robert Frost, born in San Francisco (1874). After his father died of tuberculosis, Frost's mother moved the family to Lawrence, Massachusetts, where Robert's paternal grandparents lived. Frost went to Dartmouth, but left after a couple of months. He returned home and worked odd jobs, but he resented them all, believing that his true calling was to be a poet. After the publication of his first poem, he proposed to his high school sweetheart, Elinor, but she turned him down; she wanted to finish college. He made a surprise visit to her university to present her with a collection of his poems, but she asked him to leave. Contemplating suicide, he took a train south to the Great Dismal Swamp on the border of Virginia and North Carolina. But after walking 10 miles into the heart of the swamp, he met a group of duck hunters and paid them a dollar to take him out. Elinor graduated, he proposed to her again, and she accepted.
Frost enrolled at Harvard, but he had health problems that he mistakenly believed were symptoms of tuberculosis. His doctor recommended country living, so Frost left Harvard and moved with Elinor and their two children to a rented farmhouse. A year later, their three-year-old son, Elliot, died of cholera, and Frost blamed himself for not calling the doctor sooner. Frost was still worried that he had tuberculosis. His mother was dying of cancer, and he was unable to care for her. Their landlady was unhappy about their 300 White Wyandotte chickens, and when the Frosts got behind on their rent, she evicted them. Frost became seriously depressed. So behind her husband's back, Elinor spoke to Frost's grandfather. She asked if he would consider buying them a 30-acre farm in Derry, just across the New Hampshire border from Lawrence. It was a beautiful homestead, with a well-kept farmhouse, a barn, an apple orchard, pastures, and a big vegetable garden. The farm was a good bargain at $1,725, and the old man agreed.
When Frost's grandfather bought him the farm, he insisted that Frost accept a family friend, Carl Burrell, as a live-in farmhand. Burrell lived upstairs, milked the cows each morning, packed eggs, and tended to the apples. Frost was offended that his grandfather didn't trust him to farm on his own, and Burrell disapproved of Frost's tendency to sleep late, but the two men got along. When Burrell left after a couple of years, Frost did well enough to support his family, mostly raising poultry. He wasn't a very successful farmer, but then again none of his neighbors were doing very well either — it was a bad economy and the soil was poor. His neighbors thought he was lazy; he said, "I always liked to sit up all hours of the night planning some inarticulate crime, going out to work when the spirit moved me, something they shook their heads ominously at." On the other hand, when he took a trip to New York City to try to interest editors in his poems, he was too much of a farmer; he wrote: "I had mud on my shoes. They could see the mud, and that didn't seem right to them for a poet."
For the first few years, Frost farmed exclusively; then he supplemented his income with teaching. The children were homeschooled, and he spent a lot of time with them. They did farm chores together, or went for walks in the woods, where he tutored them in the names of plants and recited classic poems for them to memorize. The family played dominoes and dice, and read aloud. They didn't have much money, but they ate well — lots of eggs, as well as milk, fruit, bread, meat, vegetables, and maple syrup. Frost wasn't publishing, but he was writing constantly, often late at night at the kitchen table after everyone else was asleep. He liked to listen to the crickets, which reminded him of a metronome.
Frost sold the farm in 1911 and moved to England. Soon after, he published A Boy's Will (1913) and then North of Boston (1914), which sold 20,000 copies and made Frost famous. The majority of the poems from those two books had been written at the farm in Derry, and some from his third book too. He wrote in a letter: "The core of all my writing was probably the five free years I had there on the farm. [...] The only thing we had was time and seclusion. I couldn't have figured on it in advance. I hadn't that kind of foresight. But it turned out right as a doctor's prescription." Frost's other books include Mountain Interval (1916), New Hampshire (1923), A Further Range (1937), and A Witness Tree (1943).


03/26/25 08:11 PM #15310    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Why Did We Keep All That Stuff?

A leaky faucet can actually bring back memories. 

I actually try to stay away from fidelling around with more complicated plumbing and electrical problems that occasionally may occur  in our home. Sure, I can still do minor things but, as Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry once said "a man's got to know his limits." 

 Our kitchen sink's faucet leak was a little different from those in our bathrooms as the cartridge change was of a different type and accessibility. Of course, the cabinets under said sink had to be emptied so our plumber could adequately loosen the faucet and fix the problem. 

It is amazing what we had stored in those cabinets over the years. In addition to the usual cleaning agents and sponges were several glass flower vases from various floral gifts received for various occasions, spray cans of things we hadn't used in years and unused cans of solid Sterno. 

"Sterno?" I asked Janet. "What were those for?"

"Fondue." she replied.

Oh, yes, we do have a fondue set - somewhere. But I think we haven't used it since my years of wearing leisure suits.

I have mentioned in prior posts on this Forum that we are starting (very slowly) to downsize. Some of this "stuff" will need to go to places like the hazardous waste place in the south end of  town.

We are not hoarders but everyone gathers things that they think might be needed "later".

By the way, some of the vases are now in the recycle bin.

Now, if I can only find that fondue set..

Jim

 


03/26/25 08:55 PM #15311    

 

Michael McLeod

lucky for us that the houthis are just as dumb as our prez. plus how seriously can you take a group whose name looks like it rhymes with "cooties"? 


03/27/25 08:43 AM #15312    

 

Michael McLeod

all this dirty old man talk  reminds me of pretty girls in those watterson uniforms. 


03/27/25 03:53 PM #15313    

 

Michael McLeod

thanks so much for the frost info mark!


03/27/25 05:30 PM #15314    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mark,

Did Frost actually have tuberculosis? If so, he should have moved to Colorado Springs. But it sounds like he probably misdiagnosed himself since he lived many years after that self diagnosis. Do you know the cause of his death?

J im


03/27/25 09:09 PM #15315    

 

Mark Schweickart

Jim -- Accprding to a Google search --"His attending physician, Dr. Roger B. Hickler, said Mr. Frost died shortly after complaining of severe chest pains and a shortness of breath. The cause of death was listed as "probably a pulmonary embolism," or blood clot in the lungs."


03/28/25 02:20 AM #15316    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Thanks, Mark,

Certainly could have been a pulmonary embolism or a heart attack. Very few other, and much rarer, things are are on the list of possibilities.

Jim

 


03/28/25 06:15 AM #15317    

 

Michael McLeod

mark, jim, et al: 

My favorite Robert Frost poem. I know it by heart. The way that it builds to the very last, resonant word is like the tinkling sound you hear when you click a crystal wineglass with your fingernail. It's about hope, I'd say. Simply and beautifully about hope, and faith, without once using either word. 

 

The Onset

Always the same, when on a fated night
At last the gathered snow lets down as white
As may be in dark woods, and with a song
It shall not make again all winter long
Of hissing on the yet uncovered ground,
I almost stumble looking up and round,
As one who overtaken by the end
Gives up his errand, and lets death descend
Upon him where he is, with nothing done
To evil, no important triumph won,
More than if life had never been begun.

Yet all the precedent is on my side:
I know that winter death has never tried
The earth but it has failed: the snow may heap
In long storms an undrifted four feet deep
As measured again maple, birch, and oak,
It cannot check the peeper's silver croak;
And I shall see the snow all go down hill
In water of a slender April rill
That flashes tail through last year's withered brake
And dead weeds, like a disappearing snake.
Nothing will be left white but here a birch,
And there a clump of houses with a church.


03/28/25 03:46 PM #15318    

 

David Mitchell

JUST FIRE PETE ! 


03/28/25 04:05 PM #15319    

 

David Mitchell

Dear 77-year-olds,

 

I must have missd the memo about how much paperwork we would all be dealing with regarding aging and our health.

As a teenager, I did get the memo about not pulling out in front of 50 mile per hour traffic. 

I did not say I headed it - I said a got it.


03/28/25 04:34 PM #15320    

 

David Mitchell

Story Time.

 

This is from a short chapter I just wrote in my book, but only includes a "lighter" part of the chapter - the first part is rather inappropriate for this Forum.

 

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

 

MORTAR ATTACKS - A REGULAR VISITOR

 

On another of those occasions when they were aiming at the supply yard next to our hooch, we suffered no casualties, but we lost a valued member of the “Scout family”. 

 

There was a space outside our back door where we sometimes gathered in the evenings to relax and chat in the cooler evenings. When we returned from our mission one day, we found three ducks strutting around in this outdoor space and we fed them food crumbs and played with them. To our surprise and delight, they stayed – at least for a while.   

         

We created a small space just for them. We were able to salvage one half of a barrel-shaped engine shipping cannisters (from one of our little “Allison” Loach turbine engines). We sunk that into the ground and filled it with about fifteen inches of water. We also replanted a small nipa-palm tree – maybe five feet tall - and propped a large wooden box up on an angle for shelter from the rain. And someone managed to “requisition” a few small sections of very short garden fencing – supposedly from in front of the Officers Club. We never did find out who did that. We used the fencing to enclose the entire “complex” making about a 6 by 6 foot “home”.

 

Two of the ducks left in a few days but one of them stayed and stayed - maybe a month or two. We named him “Choy”. “Choy Duc” in Vietnamese means something like “Goddammit.”  Weren’t we clever?

 

We fed him and held him and played with him every day.

 

But on one of those mortar attacks – the ones dropping on that next door supply yard, Choy decided to relocate to a safer neighborhood. Our little buddy was gone. We never saw him again.

                        

 

    Me and our original three back-yard tenants (see lower right).  

 

The same backyard before new "tennants" ariived and we "real estate developers" got involved. Our Hooch back door to the right. The sandbags were back wall of our mortar "Bunker". The entire "Scout Platoon" - Eight of us - all  lived in that door on the right. 

 


03/28/25 05:40 PM #15321    

 

Mark Schweickart

Dave -- Great stuff. It's amazing that you have photos to go with your memories. I'm so glad you are working on your memoir. 


03/28/25 06:05 PM #15322    

 

David Mitchell

Thanks Mark,

Your comment is interesting in a way. I had a passion for photography from my early teens. I found this camera (a Canon FT-b SLR with 50mm lens) in my tiny ittle PX just days after I got to Vinh Long. And I am soo glad did!  There were two on the shelf and I grabbed one - went back hours later out of curiuosity and the other was gone. (years later in Denver had it stolen out of my car - replaced it with a beautiful Minolta - sold that - then later bought a Pentax)

I often took it with me in the cockpit for the day's mission. There were times when it got in the way on the floor of the cockpit, but often, I could record some interesting stuff. I only wish I had taken it every single day.

But we had soem guys who never carired or used a camera at all. And at a reunion I organized about 11 years ago at a hotel out here on Hilton Head, the difference beween those who had photos and those who didn't was noteworthy. Guys who didn't wished they had. I was so gratefull that I had carried a camera with me - even on limited days. And I was able to exchange about 30 of my own photos with one of the other guys who had his own unique selection of photos. 

The photos bring back memories (not all good) and help to verify some of the stories. 

 

More stories to come. 


03/29/25 09:09 AM #15323    

 

Michael McLeod

great stuff, dave. i second mark's opinion. let me know if I can help in any way..


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