Thursday, March 30, 2023

The Essential Weapon Against Tyranny

When, during George Washington's administration, some folks decided the federal government's whiskey tax was tyranny, they took up arms. Didn't work. Washington nipped that idea in the bud by personally leading an army to put down the "Whiskey Rebellion".

Those "Proud Boys" of the 1790s could have organized a political movement to change the law. That's what you do in a republic when you disagree with what your elected representatives do. Take up arms against our republic and you will either end up -- and rightfully so -- in jail or a coffin.


 

Today is historic.

He has finally been indicted. This evil man who, with the aid of the murderous Putin, among other criminals,  captured our unitary executive against the clear wishes of the majority of the people and then used thousands of lies, unrelenting demagoguery, blatant criminality, and incitement of violence to try to retain his power will face trial for paying off a porn star to seal his minority selection as president in 2016. 

The court system will do its duty. We do not know the final result. Even this vile man gets his day in court and enjoys a legal presumption of innocence. This is a solemn and important moment. No prosecutor in the nation would indict a former president without very strong evidence. He may or may not be convicted, but it is now plain that NO one is above the law in our -- flawed yes but -- beloved republic. 

I sincerely hope and expect that other indictments will follow because I believe that this despicable man has done more damage to our nation than any other individual in my lifetime. 

  • He was TWICE impeached by the House of Representatives
  • TWICE a majority of the US Senate voted to convict him -- even though the Senate did not reach the super-majority necessary to remove him. 
  • He is being sued by at least one of the MANY women who have accused him of sexual crimes.
  • The Mueller probe set out several crimes plainly. 
  • His misuse of classified documents after his term ended is plainly illegal. 
  • His efforts to overthrow our republic in the period during and after the 2020 election was made publicly plain through recordings in Georgia and through the investigation of the bipartisan January Sixth Committee.

I hope all of these will result in him being brought to justice. 


Monday, March 20, 2023

PTSW: i thank You God for most this amazing...

 i thank You God for most this amazing

day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes
(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun's birthday; this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings: and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)
how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any--lifted from the no
of all nothing--human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?
(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
- e.e. cummings




PTSW = Poem To Start the Week

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Wednesday, March 15, 2023

Grandkid Adventure Day 3


Rabbits along the Vista Nature Trail



The little creek along the nature trail is a torrent this visit!















School Day 

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Grandkid Adventure Day 2

Almost there.

Greeting the kids at Blackbird Dr.


One of my all-time favorite pictures! Ruckus, resting on the back of the couch was beating me with his tail, much to the entertainment of Clem and Ruthie.


Monday, March 13, 2023

Sunday, March 12, 2023

Saturday Song: Will Ye Go Lassie, Go

I think the concert Sheila and I attended was at Ga.Tech's Alexander Colosseum. That beautiful voice.

Saturday, March 11, 2023

Saturday Concert: Jubilation!

Harry's brother Tom, with help from Michael Mark (and sings one of my favorite songs of all time, a simple statement of the Great (two part) Commandment...

Jubilation!


 

Wednesday, March 08, 2023

First Asparagus Harvest of 2023

I cut enough asparagus for supper, right out the back door, and a few minutes later it had been rinsed and sauteed  and served with corn on the cob, broccoli, and baked salmon. Delicious.




Tuesday, March 07, 2023

Old Leaves: Red Suspenders

Nine years ago I posted this about one of the items in my political collection...

___________________ 

8-6-2014

It'll be fun to be a part of our state Democratic Convention this year. It's been a long time since my last turn as a delegate. I'm excited that in 2014, though we face tough races, we have two competitive candidates in Jason Carter (Governor) and Michelle Nunn (US Senate).

One of my prized political items (I collect them) is this ribbon and letter that were my "Daddy Shaw's" credentials for the Georgia Democratic Convention a few months before I was born. Of course, as the letter indicates, Talmadge evidently was pretty generous with credentials for the 1946 convention, and used them to drum up votes to defeat a measure he opposed. Talmadge would die in December and the next year would prove very entertaining as Georgia witnessed its famous Three Governors Controversy.

I suspect this document indicates that my beloved Daddy Shaw, one of the finest men I've ever known, would have, unfortunately, sided with ol' Red Suspenders' faction. 

Sunday, March 05, 2023

All Day at Armuchee Elementary

Armuchee Elementary had a special day of teacher meetings on Friday and asked me to do four 40 minute performances -- one for each of their four grades. Gym performances for large groups are definitely not my favorites, but the ARS kids were well-behaved and attentive and the staff were enthusiastic and helpful.

I was especially pleased to have the help of our newest Bonner program intern from Berry College, Lucy Hicks, as my assistant for the day. 

Unsure of what exactly to expect I took a large assortment of mounts, furs, and several live animals and set up a display on three folding tables. In the end I used the same story for the 4th, 5th, and 6th grade classes -- "Yellowtail" and showed off the corn snake to all three groups. For the third graders I used a baby alligator and told my "Trouble" story. 

My only disappointment of the day was that I did not get to see Emily Turrentine, one of my newest nieces-in-law who teaches there or Vivian Davis, my friend and fellow Arrowhead naturalist who also teaches there. they were in meetings while I was presenting.



 

Igloos and Snowmen

Today one of my nephews posted pictures online of a small igloo he and his wife and children built in their yard in New Hampshire. 


Meanwhile all the way across the continent California is also seeing a lot of snow. Today my son-in-law drove our three grandkids inland far enough to play in the snow. John reports: "We tried to go to Palomar Mountain but they blocked the road. So we wound up at William Heiss Park in Julian, CA."







The modern igloo pictures reminded me of this old ten minute film of a couple of Inuit folks building a real full size igloo.  I used to show this to my students when we studied Native Americans in fourth grade. 



27th Annual Azalea Storytelling Festival

Since librarian and storyteller Pat Gay, LaGrange College education professor Evelyn Jordan, and the assistant superintendent of Troup County schools Joyce Morgan got together (with advice from Donald Davis) in 1997 to organize the Azalea Storytelling Festival, it has grown from very modest beginnings to what may be the premier storytelling festival in Georgia. Sheila and I have enjoyed it many times in the last couple of decades. 
What a great line-up graced the stage this weekend. We had obligations on Friday and Sunday, so we set our clocks early and rose in time yesterday to drive the two hours from Rome to LaGrange and arrive at the Callaway Auditorium at LaGrange College in plenty of time for the morning session at 9:30.

 

Rev. Robert Jones opened up with "Good Morning Blues", inviting us to some call and response. This is his first time to the Azalea, but I'll bet he'll be back. He kept us laughing and reminiscing with him about present day travels and Cracker Barrel restaurants -- the CB wait staff wears stars to indicate their experience levels from "rising star" through four star experts. His story recounted a heart-warming experience with a "rising star" who was less than perfect in her attention to Robert and his wife, but for good reason. His monologue included several excellent musical impressions of musicians including Johnny Cash, George Jones, and others.

Next up was the Dean of American Storytelling who tells at Azalea most years -- Donald Davis. This time around he told about his 1953 "chemistry set". When his Mom would not allow him a chemistry set, he discovered hat their house had multiple chemistry sets. One was his mother's make-up collection. Uh-oh. 

One of the world's great emcees is -- when she isn't a featured teller herself -- Carol Cain. She sent us to a short break before the other two tellers took their turns.

After the break Alabama's spitfire Delores Hydock was first up. Delores grew up in Reading, Pennsylvania learning Roman Catholic catechism under the tutelage of Catholic nuns. But recently she says she has been learning a different "cat"-echism. Hers were the stories of a white cat (Finn), then a black cat (Jack), and finally a pair of striped cats (Ripple and Wink) who adopted her and changed her life. 

Adam Booth is about the age of my eldest daughter and one of the younger tellers on the national storytelling circuit. This is his first year at Azalea. He reminisced about his childhood in Huntington, West Virginia when he loved to watch Knight Rider on TV. 

David Hasselhoff and Knight Rider

Adam's older brother, "a bit of a rebel" bought a car that really did talk: "A door is A jar" or "Fasten. your. seat. belt". The brother decorated the car with "firebird trim" and Adam called it the "Fauxbird". Seven year-old Adam eventually was treated to a rocket launching misadventure in the "Fauxbird".

We had a nice long break for lunch and Sheila I did what we have often done for Saturday lunch at this festival. We drone up to Bellevue the gorgeous restored antebellum mansion of Georgia's Senator Ben Hill and had a delicious soup lunch with the storytellers and lots of Azalea audience members. Always a delicious assortment of soups and cornbreads prepared by volunteers and a special treat is the variety of homemade cookies at each table. We were pleased to discover that one of our table mates was a lady who had eaten with us at the very same table once before, Mrs. Enid Tate. (See the picture below.)

Mrs. Enid Tate is the widow of Methodist pastor Rev. Sidney Tate. Sidney was the son of another well-known Georgia pastor, Rev. John Tate. Enid knew my Mother and Daddy and knows my sister Joan and her husband Jim Turrentine. 


The afternoon session started with Delores. She talked about discoing a Polish festival in Lawrenceville, Georgia of all places which gave her an opportunity to remember her Polish immigrant grandmother and her delicious pierogis...

A photo of pierogis from the internet.

... and their experiences as immigrants through Ellis Island...

Another photo from the internet.

Next up was Rev. Robert Jones and his marvelous guitar again. The guitar is actually built from wood recycled from a demolished Detroit home on "
Trumbull Street". He played a song he wrote about it. Then he talked about how he got his first guitar. 

Adam told a couple of spooky stories in this set.

Donald David ended the afternoon session. Donald says you don't join the category of "dead" until no one is telling stories about you any longer. Donald decided to consider some folks from his experience who were in danger of joining that category if he didn't tell about them. Today he told us about the "town drunk" Kyper (sp) Moody -- but "town drunk" was far from the whole story of Kyper.

For our late afternoon break we decided to eat simple and leave time for a walk. So we ate waffles at a nearby Waffle House then drove back to the auditorium and parked there to walk LaGrange's "Thread".
Here we are near the west end of "The Thread".

The path is nicely landscaped with occasional benches and good signage.

The path meanders along Panther Way at the base of a hill  and below another street lined with what seem to have originally been identical craftsman cottages. Of course, humans are prone to individualizing their living spaces to their own preferences so these homes have been altered in many ways over the years. A picturesque neighborhood of lovely small homes.

Looking down from those houses you see more of the LaGrange College campus including the tennis cenyter, Callaway Auditorium, and athletic fields.

 The evening performances were top notch.  

Adam Booth opened with a story in tribute to Jay O'Callahan called "Smoke". It was a story that grew out of the glass factory that dominated the town where Adam grew up. One of the things I admire about Adam's storytelling is his use of sound effects. Whether the story involved percussion instruments or speeding emergency vehicles, or a working chimney sweep, or most anything else, he has worked at creating sound effects that add to without overpowering the stories. I liked the way the different parts of this story interweaved characters and images -- relatives, glass, smoke, the chimney sweep.

Donald Davis's Daddy treated Donald's childhood felonies and misdemeanors differently. Misdemeanors resulted in quick and relatively harmless paddling. But felonies elicited stories. Donald would much prefer a beating. One occasion that brought forth a story was the time Donald stole and smoked a cigarette in the family's barn. 

Delores recited a little piece of rhyme:

The circle of life goes round and round, 
Live long enough you'll find it's true
The student will teach; the teacher will learn
You become your mother 
And you mother becomes you.
The parallel phrasing in the tale of her own first day of first grade, and many years later, her mother's first day of retirement activities, illustrated the last two lines of the rhyme.

That brought her to a story I'd heard from Delores before -- but I still enjoyed. She told of driving the eight hundred miles from Birmingham to Reading, Pennsylvania to attend a "significant number" high school reunion.

Robert Jones capped the evening with a tribute to "Lead Belly" (Hudie Ledbetter) from his CD "An Evening With Lead Belly". Wow. The very last number was "Goodnight Irene". I sang it, off and on, for the two hour drive home.

The cover of Jone's Lead Belly album.


Happy Birthday, Debra!

Debra Malone is our accompanist at Trinity United Methodist Church. Her husband Kam is our long-time choir director. Today Kam was out of town and Debra filled in, on her birthday, not only playing beautifully but also mouthing the words or nodding her head or freeing one hand for a cut-off to direct our singing.

We started our choir time a few minutes early this morning so we could celebrate Debra's birthday with a delightfully moist and deliciously tasty apple cake still warm from her sister Sandy's oven! Sandy and another "Wager" sister,  Sharon, also sing in our choir. 


Debra with the cake and four of our altos: Stacey Harris, Sheila Shaw, Holly Bettler, and Sharon.


Debra with her cake.