Monday, December 31, 2007

Disgusting

I read this article today and just can't believe the nerve of some people! This is so disgusting!

Vandals rip into Robert Frost home

RIPTON, Vermont (AP) -- A former home of poet Robert Frost has been vandalized, with intruders destroying dozens of items and setting fire to furniture in what police say was an underage drinking party.

Homer Noble Farm, a former Frost residence that's now a historic landmark, was ransacked late Friday night during a party attended by up to 50 people, Sgt. Lee Hodsden said Monday.

The intruders broke a window to get into the two-story wood frame building -- a furnished residence open in the summer -- before destroying tables and chairs, pictures, windows, light fixtures and dishes. Wicker furniture and dressers were smashed and thrown into a fireplace and burned, apparently to provide heat in the unheated building, he said.

Empty beer bottles and cans, plastic cups and cellophane apparently used to hold marijuana were also found, according to Hodsden. The vandals vomited in the living room and discharged two fire extinguishers inside the building, located on a dead-end road off Route 125.

No arrests have been made, Hodsden said, adding that they've tracked down some partygoers and believe they are minors.

The damage was discovered Saturday by a hiker who notified police at Middlebury College, which maintains the site. The cabin's caretaker was last there at 10 a.m. Friday, police said.

Frost, a celebrated New England poet known for such verse as "The Road Not Taken" and "The Gift Outright," died in 1963. He summered at the home from 1939 to 1963.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Congratulations

Congratulations to the Warner Robbins little league baseball team. They just won the little league world series in extra innings with a walk-off home run. It is such a pleasure watching little league baseball on network tv. It is the sport at its purist. Way to go Warner Robbins. Congratulations also to the Japanese team who played an outstanding series. It is too bad that there has to be a winner and loser at the level because both teams played so well.

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

NASA Made a Good Bet

I gotta tell you - I was scared to watch the landing for the shuttle today. I did not have confidence in NASA's decision to bring the shuttle back without repairing the ding from the lift-off. Thank goodness they made it back safely! I think that was a billion dollar gamble, and THIS TIME, NASA won!

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

True Love?

I've noticed a lot of young male motorcyclists on my commute recently. First, I think it is pretty senseless to ride a "crotch-rocket" wearing shorts, and t-shirt, and no helmet. But what really bothers me is the number of these hot-shots that have their girlfriends/wives riding on the back with no helmet or protective clothing. If you truly love these women, why would you subject them to your non-sense? (yes, I know, the women have free will and don't have to get on the bike).

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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

One Year

On May 30th, I completed my first year in the internal audit department at TD Banknorth. I think I've learned quite a bit, but still have a long way to go to feel like I totally know what I'm doing. This is the first job I've ever done that I don't feel like I'm in total control of my environment - a great learning experience.

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Sopranos

I can't believe it's over! Almost all of my favorite TV series are over. At least Lost is still going to be around for a couple of more years!

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

File Under WTF?!

Sounds like the Bush administration is running the NFL!


Thomas' asthma medicine causes drug policy violation
By John Clayton
ESPN.com

The Saints suffered a big blow to their defense Tuesday when they found out defensive tackle Hollis Thomas, who is having a career year, is being suspended for four games because he violated the league's steroid policy due to asthma medication he takes.

Thomas has been challenging the positive steroid test and had the support of the Saints.

Thomas is a 335-pound defensive tackle who has struggled to keep his weight down and doesn't have the body that normally would be linked to steroids.

During his appeal, John Amoss, who is the Saints' team trainer and an assistant professor at the LSU Health Science Center, sent a letter to the league in support of Thomas. Amoss said Thomas has severe asthma problems and requires a high dose of inhaled steroids to breathe. According to the doctor, Thomas needs a long acting beta agonist and a short acting beta agonist to control his asthma.

During his August drug test, the defensive tackle was taking an asthma product called Advair twice a day while also using an inhaler four times a day.

"Advair contains both the steroid fluticasone and the long acting beta agonist galmeterol," wrote Amoss, who thought the possibility of a false positive might have happened.

After taking the information under consideration, the league ruled Thomas was in violation of the policy and he will be lost to the team for the remainder of the regular season.

If New Orleans makes the playoffs, Thomas would be eligible to play. He can be added to the active roster on Jan. 1, 2007, the day after the regular season ends.

Senior writer John Clayton covers the NFL for ESPN.com. Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Skowhegan Field Hockey

The Skowhegan Field Hockey girls have won their 6th straight Class A State Championship. Congratulations to Paula Doughty and the girls for another successful year!

Election Day!

We've heard for the last few months in Maine that we want a change - so what do we do? We re-elect the icumbent Governor. Way to go citizens of Maine! Apparently the vast majority of people that voted for Baldacci have some hidden stores of cash set aside to pay the absurd taxes we have levied upon us.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Long Time...

Wow, it's been a long time since I posted anything here. I've been enjoying my new job as a Staff IT Auditor with TD Banknorth in Lewiston, Maine. It's a whole new direction from anything I've done in the past. Still working on client web-sites, but haven't taken on any new customers for quite some time. Hoping to sell my house in Skowhegan in order to move closer to Lewiston. Right now I'm commuting 140 miles a day!

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Skowhegan Field Hockey

Sunday, April 30, 2006

FBI: Medal of Honor fakers outnumber true heroes

Is nothing sacred anymore?! This article appeared on MSNBC today. What satisfaction comes from claiming to have been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor? Plus, it is very easy to look up fakers!

CHATTANOOGA, Tennessee (AP) -- A proliferation of phony heroes is prompting such groups as The Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation to lobby for tougher laws to punish the impostors.

The organization reports that there are 113 living recipients of the nation's highest military award, but an FBI agent who tracks the fakes said impostors outnumber the true heroes.

"There are more and more of these impostors, and they are literally stealing the valor and acts of valor of the real guys," said Agent Tom Cottone, who also works on an FBI violent crime squad in West Paterson, New Jersesy.

Some fakers merely brag about receiving the award -- and that's not illegal -- but some impostors wear military uniforms and bogus medals. The FBI has about 25 pending investigations of such phony heroes, said Cottone.

Anyone convicted of fraudulently wearing the Medal of Honor faces up to a year in prison and a $100,000 fine. But there's no such penalty for other medals.

The Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation and other veterans groups are looking to change that. They've enlisted the help of U.S. Rep. John T. Salazar, D-Colorado, who is sponsoring the Stolen Valor Act to penalize distributors of phony medals and those who pretend to be decorated veterans.

Salazar's legislation would make it illegal to make a false public claim to be a recipient of any military valor award, such as the Medal of Honor, a Silver Star or Purple Heart.

"It is about more than punishing people," said Salazar. "It's about preserving the history and honor of those medals."

World War II Medal of Honor recipient Charles Coolidge of Signal Mountain, Tennessee, got flimflammed out of his medal -- at a military reunion of all places -- when someone offered to help recondition it and gave him back a fake version of the award.

Cottone tracked down Coolidge's real Medal of Honor from a man who was selling and trading medals in Ohio.

"It was a big surprise to me to get it back," said Coolidge, 84.

Coolidge received the Medal of Honor for leading an outnumbered section of heavy machine guns during four days of fighting against German infantry and tanks in France in 1944.

Cottone said he recovered two fake Medals of Honor at a New Jersey gun show. Both were made by HLI Lordship Industries Inc., a former government contractor for the Medal of Honor.

The company, based in Hauppauge, New York, was fined $80,000 in 1996 and placed on probation after admitting 300 fakes were sold in the early 1990s for $75 each.

"If we don't maintain the integrity of these military awards, the real ones won't mean anything," Cottone said.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Conspiracy Movie

I just spent the last hour and twenty minutes watching 9/11 Loose Change, 2nd Edition. It is a movie claiming that the US planned the attack on itself for money. I don't subscribe to their beliefs, but it sure did make an interesting movie. Check it out here: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8260059923762628848

Thursday, April 13, 2006

'Marlboro Man' Marine Describes Struggle With PTSD

'Marlboro Man' Marine Describes Struggle With PTSD

Marine Suffering From Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Tells His Story

By JAKE TAPPER, ROXANNA SHERWOOD and KARIN WEINBERG

LONG FORK, Ky., April 13, 2006 — You may know him from the iconic photograph, showing the exasperation and grit of a U.S. Marine.

He is Lance Corp. James Blake Miller from Jonancy, Ky., holler — a small valley between mountains — in the eastern part of the state named after his great-great-great-grandparents, Joe and Nancy.

To many Americans, this picture of a young American fighter has become a symbol of what is right with the nation. That may be true, but the deep, psychological wounds Miller has sustained in Iraq make him a symbol of something else, too.

Miller suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition he says the American people do not truly understand.

"I tried to explain to people that I was suffering from PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder], and they were thinking that this guy is a head case," he said. "That's the reason that I am doing this."

"I want people to understand what PTSD is and what it can do to you — what it can do to your life. There's no real way to actually correct it, but I mean with the support of friends and family, and actual psychiatrists and things like that, it's something that can be dealt with," he said.

Miller's story is not unique. A recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association indicates that more than one in three troops back from Afghanistan or Iraq sought professional help for mental health problems within a year of returning, with one in five reporting PTSD or mental trauma.

Miller joined the Marines as a high school senior in November 2002, driving almost an hour to the Pike County seat to enlist.

He was following in the footsteps of his grandfather, a Korean War veteran, he said.

"I can remember my grandmother talking about him and stuff like that, and just talk about the type of person you know it changed him into," he said. It made him a man, she would tell him.

6½ Packs a Day.

After basic training in Paris Island, S.C., Miller went to Iraq in June 2004. His cigarette habit, which began when he was 12, went from a 1½ packs a day to 6½ packs a day.

He was a radioman with the First Battalion, Eighth Marines, Charlie Company, when he and his unit were caught in a nightmarish firefight in Fallujah in early November 2004.

They started taking fire from every direction, he recalled.

From a rooftop, Miller called in two tanks, which fired at an enemy location.

"It was actually right inside the building where we were at, and it was nuts," he said. "It was like you could feel your heart, like it just felt like it was coming out of your chest. It was insane."

After the battle, an embedded photographer — Luis Sinco from The Los Angeles Times — captured Miller grabbing his first moment of peace.

"I was watching the sunrise, and I was just. … I was so amazed," he said. "I was just like, here I am 20 years old. I got my whole life ahead of me. You know, I hadn't really done anything. In the 20 years I had been here, what had I actually done?'"

"And, you know, thinking this is so beautiful just to watch the sunrise and wondered if I was ever going to get the opportunity to see that again."

Miller said he didn't like looking at the photo, however.

"I don't care much for it," he said. "I mean, if it made one person here in the states stop and think for one second at how grateful they should be, you know, just for what they do have and the freedoms that they do have, then it was worth it."

Within a day, the photograph appeared in at least 100 newspapers around the world. Many called him the "Marlboro Man," because of the cigarette he's seen smoking.

To his surprise, he learned his superiors considered pulling him out of combat and sending him back to the states because of the publicity he'd received, but Miller resisted the idea.

"I was like no way," he said. "I mean I came in here with the guys that I am with, and some of them aren't even able to get back out of here."

Miller came to hate the photograph also because he is smoking in it. Today, he's down to 1½ packs a day.

The Philip Morris Co. wanted to pay Miller to use his image on a commemorative cigarette case with a desert camouflage design, he says, but he declined, saying it wouldn't be fair to his fellow Marines — especially those left behind after being killed in Fallujah.

For Miller, Marlboro conjures vivid and warm memories of watching the movie "Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man," starring Mickey Rourke and Don Johnson, with his father, who raised he and his two brothers as a single parent. Because of his nicotine habit, Miller was called "Smokey" as a kid. He even has a tattoo of a Marlboro Red cigarette on his left forearm, but he's now trying to quit altogether.

Stateside, but Struggling With Aftereffects of War

After almost eight months, Miller's tour in Iraq ended. His unit was sent to the Gulf Coast to help with safety and security during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. He says it was another wrenching assignment — one that reminded him all too much of Fallujah.

Miller had already begun to show serious signs of strain — extreme irritability and nervousness.

Even though he was back home, he suffered though sleepless nights, exhaustion, blackouts, nightmares, and uncontrollable body movements.

"In my sleep, I'd pull my trigger finger," Miller said.

Visiting his girlfriend — now his wife — Jessica at her dorm at Pikeville College, he imagined that he saw a dead Iraqi civilian.

The breaking point came when Miller and his unit were put on the USS Iowa Jima with Hurricane Rita about to hit land.

Someone onboard, a Navy man, made a whistling noise, like the sound of a mortar.

"I think they were trying to aggravate the Marines onboard, and when the guy had made the sound, I don't remember anything other than hearing it at the beginning. And after that what I suppose happened was that I had grabbed him, put him against the wall, slammed him to the floor, and I was on top of him and I had no recollection of doing it."

Bringing Attention to a Misunderstood Affliction

Doctors examined him and quickly diagnosed him as suffering from PTSD. Last November, exactly one year after his iconic photograph was first published, Miller received an honorable but early discharge, because of his disorder.

Today, he drives a couple hours to the Veterans Hospital to talk to a psychiatrist several times a month.

Miller said he found people did not want to hear about PTSD.

"People don't understand that you can get PTSD from anything. It's a near-death experience and being able to escape that and just to be able to relive that," he said.

He still worries his PTSD may one day trigger another violent outburst.

"If I was to act out, I don't know what I'd do. I was really scared at first when I found out that this was actually what it was, that what if I had done something to my wife or to someone I cared about or loved?"

"And that tore me all to pieces. I had no idea how to deal with it."

Nevertheless, Miller is trying to move on with his life — and to quit smoking for good.

He's trying to deal with it now, but he's become an icon for an altogether different kind of struggle.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Controversial group barred from school grounds during funeral

Another group claiming to do the work of God! It makes me sick. Thank goodness for the Patriot Guard Riders! For more information on the Patriot Guard Riders, visit their website at: http://www.patriotguard.org/

The Associated Press

NORWAY — A Kansas-based church that has disrupted the funerals of U.S. soldiers in other states will be barred from the grounds of Oxford Hills Comprehensive High School during the funeral Saturday of a soldier from Norway who was killed in Iraq.

The Westboro Baptist Church, of Topeka, Kan., said it plans to send delegates to Sgt. Corey Dan's funeral to express its belief that American soldiers are being struck down by God as retribution for the nation's tolerance of homosexuality.

The superintendent of SAD 17 said that if the protesters want to demonstrate, they will have to do so off school property.

"We do not have an open forum that allows open demonstration and there's no provision for that," Mark Eastman said. "If (the protesters) want to demonstrate, they have to demonstrate off school property."

Local police departments were prepared to keep order Saturday in the event the protesters show up, Paris Police Chief David Verrier said.

"We'll have a strong show of force," said Verrier, noting that Oxford and Norway officers would also be present. The Oxford County Sheriff's Department agreed to provide deputies, if necessary.

Members of the Patriot Guard Riders, a national motorcycle riders' group formed in response to the church's demonstrations at soldier funerals, received an invitation to the service from Dan's family and planned to attend.

"We're expecting at least 30 motorcycles," said Asha Lamy of Naples, a ride captain in Maine. She said members of other other motorcycle clubs, including the Maine and New Hampshire chapters of Vietnam Veterans, expected to show up.

Dan, a 22-year-old Oxford Hills graduate, was killed March 13 when his Humvee was attacked by a roadside bomb and small arms fire while he was serving with the 101st Airborne Division.

Dan had planned to become a police officer after he got out of the service. A scholarship fund has been established in his memory to benefit an Oxford Hills senior seeking to pursue a career in law enforcement.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Headlines From the Year 2034

  • Ozone created by electric cars now killing millions in the 7th largest country in the world, Mexifornia formally known as California.
  • White minorities still trying to have English recognized as Mexifornia's third language.
  • Spotted Owl plague threatens northwestern United States crops and livestock.
  • Baby conceived naturally - Scientists stumped.
  • Couple petitions court to reinstate heterosexual marriage.
  • Last remaining Fundamentalist Muslim dies in Bushra; the American Territory of the Middle East (formerly known as Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Lebanon).
  • Iran still closed off; physicists estimate it will take at least 10 more years before radioactivity decreases to safe levels.
  • France pleads for global help after being taken over by Jamaica.
  • Castro finally dies at age 115; Cuban cigars can now be imported legally, but President Chelsea Clinton has banned all smoking.
  • George Z. Bush says he will run for President in 2036.
  • Postal Service raises price of first class stamp to $17.89 and reduces mail delivery to Wednesdays only.
  • Average weight of Americans drops to 250 lbs.
  • Japanese scientists have created a camera with such a fast shutter speed, they now can photograph a woman with her mouth shut.
  • Massachusetts executes last remaining conservative.
  • Supreme Court rules punishment of criminals violates their civil rights.
  • Average height of NBA players now nine feet, seven inches.
  • New federal law requires that all nail clippers, screwdrivers, fly swatters and rolled-up newspapers must be registered by January 2036.
  • Congress authorizes direct deposit of formerly illegal political contributions to campaign accounts.
  • Capitol Hill intern indicted for refusing to have sex with congressman.
  • IRS sets lowest tax rate at 75 percent.

Friday, March 10, 2006

STOP! . . . Humor Time

For those with no children - this is totally hysterical...
For those who already have children past this age, this is hilarious.
For those who have children this age, this is not funny.
For those who have children nearing this age, this is a warning.
For those who have not yet had children, this is birth control...

The following came from an anonymous Mother in Austin, Texas:

Things I've learned from my Boys (honest)...
  1. A king size waterbed holds enough water to fill a 2000 sq. ft. house, 4 inches deep.
  2. If you spray hair spray on dust bunnies and run over them with roller blades, they can ignite.
  3. A 3-year old Boy's voice is louder than 200 adults in a crowded restaurant.
  4. If you hook a dog leash over a ceiling fan, the motor is not strong enough to rotate a 42 pound Boy wearing Batman underwear and a Superman cape. It is strong enough, however, if tied to a paint can, to spread paint on all four walls of a 20x20 ft. room.
  5. You should not throw baseballs up when the ceiling fan is on. When using a ceiling fan as a bat, you have to throw the ball up a few times before you get a hit. A ceiling fan can hit a baseball a long way.
  6. The glass in windows (even double-pane) doesn't stop a baseball hit by a ceiling fan.
  7. When you hear the toilet flush and the words "uh oh" it's already too late.
  8. Brake fluid mixed with Clorox makes smoke, and lots of it.
  9. A six-year old boy can start a fire with a flint rock even though a 36-year old man says they can only do it in the movies.
  10. Certain Lego's will pass through the digestive tract of a 4-year old boy.
  11. Play dough and microwave should not be used in the same sentence.
  12. Super glue is forever.
  13. No matter how much Jell-O you put in a swimming pool you still can't walk on water.
  14. Pool filters do not like Jell-O.
  15. VCRs do not eject "PB & J" sandwiches even though TV commercials show they do.
  16. Garbage bags do not make good parachutes.
  17. Marbles in gas tanks make lots of noise when driving.
  18. You probably DO NOT want to know what that odor is.
  19. Always look in the oven before you turn it on; plastic toys do not like ovens.
  20. The fire department in Austin, TX has a 5-minute response time.
  21. The spin cycle on the washing machine does not make earthworms dizzy.
  22. It will, however, make cats dizzy.
  23. Cats throw up twice their body weight when dizzy.
  24. 80% of men who read this will try mixing the Clorox and brake fluid.
  25. Women will pass this on to almost all of their friends, with or without kids.