Sunday, December 9, 2007

Lauren Armistead


This is tough to write about. Lauren was a friend from Vanderbilt. An intelligent, driven, extremely caring and chill girlfriend of a very good friend, Chris Lloyd. I didn't stay in touch with her after Vandy, but I miss her anyway and feel much heartache over her family's loss.

Original Articles:
http://v1.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=123877§ion=localnews
http://www.newsobserver.com/102/story/525007.html

It makes me so sad to think about this, but I don't shy away from it. It should make me sad. It feels right being torn up when I see her smiling face. I guess I think it's honoring her and her family. I doubt there was ever a person that met Lauren and didn't like her. Thinking about her and they way she lived her life makes me want to smile more often. It makes me want to tell the people I love that I love them more often. It makes we want to be thankful for each day. It makes me want to be closer to my family.

This tragedy happened last year at this time. I'm writing about this now because Chris and Stephanie, one of Lauren's best friends, put a tribute video together and put it on youtube. Chris's email says the rest best:

In honor of Lauren’s birthday three days ago, I decided to put her slideshow on Youtube. The following is a four part compilation of photos put together by Stephanie Beatrous in tribute to the memory of everyone's friend Lauren Armistead. Steph really did a great job with this so a big shout out to her. The slideshow is in parts because Youtube has a 10 minute time limit and the total slideshow is about 30 minutes. Be sure to turn up the volume because the video has sound. I'm sure when you watch this you will notice Pete is nowhere in the slideshow. That's not a snub to Pete at all. When Steph flew up to Charleston to help Pete with Lauren's things, she asked if she could keep some pictures and he gave her every picture that wasn't of the two of them. Steph didn't know at the time she would make a slideshow so she didn't ask for any with that in mind. When she finally decided to make it, she just worked with what she had. I'm sure when you watch this, you'll see she had a lot to work with and did a fantastic job. The slideshow is great and I've watched it many times. As sad as I still am, I can't help but smile that I was lucky enough to know Lauren. She really was amazing.

Please forward this to anyone I left off the list or anyone that cared about Lauren. I’m sure they will appreciate the slideshow. Thanks again Steph!

The beginning of the slideshow has a picture and a quote that goes too fast for you to see it so I just thought I’d put the quote here before you begin the slideshow.

“The world is full of people who will go their whole lives and not actually live one day. She did not intend on being one of them.”

Part 1:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8f55wPv1ec

Part 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8stG51NB3es

Part 3:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7WwlwvjrPQ

Part 4:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HdZJ-w5kuhg

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Music

I love buying music on itunes. It's so frickin easy and fast. I just went through a recent wave of clicking the "buy" button on lot of stuff in rapid succession. You should try it. It's fun. Anyway, I thought I'd post what's new in my possession and if you'd like a listen, well, you just let me know.

Rufus Wainwright (man I love this guy's music) Recent Album Purchases:
~Release the Starts (2007)
~Alright, Already [Live In Montreal] (2005)
~Poses (2002)
~Want One (2003)
~Want Two (2004)

Spoon Recent Album Purchases:
~Girls Can Tell
~Kill the Moonlight

Billy Bragg & Wilco Recent Album Purchases:
~Mermaid Avenue
~Mermaid Avenue Vol. 2

Radiohead Recent Album Purchases:
~Rainbows

Arrested Development Recent Album Purchases:
~Since the Last Time

And 'yes', Arrested Development did put out a new album. It's decent. There are probably 3 songs I really like a lot. If I fall in love with a new song on an album I just bought, I tend to listen to it very frequently. A few such songs from these recent albums for me are:

~"Sanssouci" by Rufus Wainwright on Release the Stars
~"The Way We Get By" by Spoon on Kill the Moonlight
~"All I Need" by Radiohead on Rainbows

The Spoon purchases were brought on by watching Stranger Than Fiction last night. It's Will Ferrell's drama where someone is narrating his life. The movie was actually much much more than I expected. And I really enjoyed it. It might have even moved me. I actually had a Spoon album from a friend (Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga). I've listened to it maybe 5 times. I liked it alright. But anyway, "The Way We Get By" was in the movie. So today I looked up the soundtrack. I also really enjoyed the song Will Ferrell played on the guitar in the movie. It was also a really sweet point in the movie, so that added to my interest. Turns out it's called "(I'd Go the) Whole Wide World." It's played and sung by Will Ferrell in the movie. The rendition on the soundtrack, though, is by Wreckless Eric, whoever the crap that is. I read a bit more and found that it's originally a song by The Monkees, so that's the version I bought.

From my four stellar years of studying French, I knew 'sans' means 'without', so I looked up what 'sanssouci" meant. It means carefree, if you didn't know already. Wikipedia taught me more in the process

Friday, October 26, 2007

D'OH



hmm... I did not anticipate the issue of terrorists using Google Earth. It certainly makes sense. It reminds me of how Bush confirmed that he used "the google" and he said he liked to pull up images and maps of his ranch. Now, I don't like the guy, but I sincerely hope you can't get too much detail on locations like that. But then again, that is Israel's very issue.

http://mashable.com/2007/10/25/missile-attacks-israel-google-earth/

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Wells Fargo Receives EPA Green Power Partner of Year Award

For those of you concerned about your carbon footprint, take a look at some of the progressive things Wells is doing. I think it's pretty cool to work for a company who is interested in wind farms, solar projects and other green power. I hope their efforts help and I hope more and more companies begin to substantially contribute.

read the full story here:
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/071023/aqtu168.html?.v=20

Monday, October 15, 2007

3 days of methane rain to start your morning, eh?



When dawn comes on Titan it's nearly 300 degrees below zero with a steady drizzle. And the drizzle is methane — an explosive gas on Earth that is chilled into a liquid on that moon of Saturn. They reported that the drizzle seems to dissipate after what would be about 10:30 a.m. Titan time, if the day there were divided into 24 hours. However, because Titan takes 16 Earth days to rotate once, the drizzle continues for about three Earth days after sunrise.


So, um, when can us Earthlings move there? Sounds great!

the story

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

No really, it's up to you

You may have heard already. Radiohead is releasing a new album soon. The relevant detail is that they never re-signed with EMI and have not signed with a new record label. What does that mean? For starters, they are distributing and selling the album themselves over the internet. Pretty revolutionary step in the music industry! A step that record labels must be hoping fails.

What makes this even more interesting is the fact that you are able to name your price for the download! Did I mention this is a double-disk album? And did I mention that you can pay $0.01 for it if you want? I'm almost too excited to even consider what I will enter as my purchase price. I mean, on the one hand, I don't want to be a dick and pay a penny. On the other hand, would I get a copy of it from a friend anyway?

buy it here:
http://www.inrainbows.com/Store/Quickindex.html

read some nytimes commentary here:
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/10/01/radiohead-album-price-tag-its-up-to-you/?hp

Pretty exciting stuff!

Saturday, September 22, 2007

header

I completely thought the title of this youtube clip, "after 100 times its still funny!" was going to doom itself. But I have to admit, I've watched it a dozen times now and it IS still funny...

Friday, September 21, 2007

Thursday, September 20, 2007

"Forget the rest. Just work with the best! Wooooo"

Now that the housing bubble burst and some lenders have closed their doors (or had their doors closed for them), competition between mortgage brokers and banks is fierce. I mean, how am I supposed to compete with this and the simple 4 figure process???

Monday, September 10, 2007

The CLAW is good luck!


I'm right there with you, JonJan. Well, kind of. Your injury must simply be heartbreaking (and a lot more painful). But I have no doubt you (and I) will make off the field contributions to the Redskins throughout the season! Hang in there, buddy.

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

This is what happens when you lend money to poor people

Michael Lewis produces a hilarious opinion piece here. The author of "Moneyball", "The Blind Side" and "Liar's Poker" chimes in with his take on the subprime mess that has put the U.S. economy in the toilet.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a5lhZkEauCu8

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Nipples Are In


I don't even know where to begin with this... brain hurts... so many directions to take this...

Think about 100 of these will make a good halloween costume?

Thursday, August 16, 2007

S-M-R-T

ROCHELLE, Ga. -- A woman was arrested after she called local police to help "get her money back" after she was unhappy with the crack cocaine she purchased.

You mean the police didn't help her??? What kind of civil service are these officers performing exactly?

No mugshot, unfortunately.

http://www.cbs46.com/news/13878002/detail.html

Monk-E-Mail


I hope this doesn't insult or offend anyone. I mean, afterall, it's just one monkey's opinion! And it's perfect and hilarious!

http://www.careerbuilder.com/monk-e-mail/Default.aspx?mid=22960571&cbRecursionCnt=3&cbsid=4ef91058db304283b3eb39299ff941e7-240575617-KC-5

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Orioles 12, Yankees 0


Man, that's just a thing of beauty isn't it? GoodGuys 12, EverythingThatIsEvil 0.

So I went to see the Orioles play in the Bronx last night and man was it fun. Especially since I was there with 3 Yankees fans. The offensive onslaught got me to thinking. I haven't been to tons of Orioles games in my life, maybe 10 or 15. But I don't think I've actually seen them win all that often. Yeah, that's depressing but it made last night that much more awesomer!

We were sitting in the lower part of the right field upper deck, by the foul pole, in foul territory. Aubrey Huff's 3rd inning grand slam landed so close to us! It landed 3 rows in front and about 10 seats away. I've never been anywhere near a homerun before! AND I've never seen a grand slam.

Man, last night was sweet. And whatever Daniel Cabrera did before last night's game, please make him do it before every start. He actually started the game on solid ground, instead of walking and hitting batters for the first 3 innings as usual. He did end up walking 6, which is unacceptable. But he was unhittable, only giving up 2 in 6 and 2/3 innings. Good work, Daniel. You're [temporarily] off my shit-list.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Faceball




So, um, this game looks amazing. Can you imagine the perversive joy you'd get by playing this at your office? Oh man!

www.faceball.org

Friday, July 13, 2007

Cat Wrestling

Leo Peo's drop and boot to the face is a truly impressive maneuver. If you enjoy cats and their craziness, this is definitely worth the 5 minutes!

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

James Coldwell = S-M-R-T


Wow, James. You clearly are a true criminal mastermind. I mean, you could have at least used a stocking AND the tree disguise to rob the bank. Dumbass.

Read the story here:
http://www.boston.com/news/odd/articles/2007/07/09/robber_disguised_as_tree_hits_nh_bank/

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Ahh yes, boogers!


hahahah If I ever see this sign... I'm pretty sure I will wipe boogers on it.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Magnum Festival

No, this post is not a Zoolander joke...

This photographic exhibit on Muhammad Ali sounds really interesting.
Curated by his daughter Maryum 'May May' Ali and long-time manager and friend Gene Kilroy, the exhibition mingles iconic images of the Champ with rare glimpses of the man behind the myth.

It's located at 401 Projects in the West Village, 401 West Street (at Charles Street) and is running from June 13 - July 29. In fact, the whole Magnum Festival sounds really cool.

Now who wants to go and who is interested in carpooling? Electronic-mail me.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

A Tribute to Abby


Abby, one of Elise's two dogs, passed away on Sunday. So sad. So very sad. I loved Abby so much. Seeing her and playing with her was one of my absolute favorite parts about going home to Bethesda. I feel so sorry for my sister right now.

I've loved dogs my entire life. I always had them, always excited to see friends' dogs and always loved playing with or petting any dog I met. I can't wait to own one of my own. Many of us have probably had a dog (or pet) that was so special to us, that it was just beyond comparison. I can honestly say that I think Abby was the ideal dog. She was so sweet, so affectionate, obedient, very playful, smart, well behaved and unconditionally loyal. I can't think of one thing I would have changed about Abby.

I don't know what to say. Abby was perfect and I loved her so much. I miss her so much already and I know my entire family does as well. She had this wonderful habit of walking up to you, turning herself around and sitting directly on your feet, all in one smooth, loving, "please pet me and love me" motion. She was so special, we all loved her and we will all miss her. Goodbye, Abigail.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Note to Self


Using a can of spray paint to paint your body is a really really bad idea. I think I even tried using the rough part of a sponge to get the gold off my chest. If I recall correctly, which I probably do not, I had a gold 'U' on my chest for a week. Great idea, Captain Rock!

COU-LI-BALY
clap clap clapclapclap
COU-LI-BALY
clap clap clapclapclap
COU-LI-BALY
clap clap clapclapclap

I can still hear Rock starting the chant and Memorial Gymnasium joining in.

For those of you unfortunate enough not to have ever watched Darius Coulibaly on the basketball court, let me tell you that he was truly an inspiration. Besides providing constant crowd entertainment, the 7'1" center was easy to spot riding his bike around campus. Have you ever seen a 7'1" person riding a bike? It's hilarious.

After I did a current internet search for him, I found this.
One recent graduate [of The Graduate Program in Economic Development at Vanderbilt University], Darius Coulibaly of Cote D’Ivoire, has founded a non-profit organization, Empowering the Poor, Inc., focused on the eradication of malaria.

Well, that's pretty cool, Darius. For those interested, here is the link:
http://www.empoweringthepoor.org/
COU-LI-BALY
clap clap clapclapclap
COU-LI-BALY
clap clap clapclapclap
COU-LI-BALY
clap clap clapclapclap

Monday, June 11, 2007

Sans Department & Director

The below article from the Huntsville Times is as good an article as you'll ever read on the controversial athletic system in place at Vanderbilt.


Commodores succeed without a traditional athletic department
Monday, June 11, 2007
Huntsville Times


The clannish, insular world of big-time intercollegiate sports gasped when Vanderbilt chancellor Gordon Gee decided to disband the traditional structure of the university's athletic department nearly four years ago.

First, they gasped. Then chuckled. Then guffawed.

Many onlookers, including a sizable percentage of Vandy alumni and supporters, thought it was the craziest idea they'd ever heard. Gee was called everything from an out-of-touch egghead to an outright nitwit. In the view of the critics, his vainglorious and impractical notions were as quaint and outlandish as his collection of bow ties.

"Vanderbilt has a hard enough time winning as it is,'' bemused commentators hastened to point out. "Now they're eliminating the athletic department? And the AD job? So much for Vandy athletics.''

Gee was stubbornly undeterred. He insisted that "nothing short of a revolution'' will stop a growing crisis of faltering conscience and slipshod integrity within the framework of college athletics. He said a pervasive culture of win-at-all-costs has increasingly undermined the fundamental mission of higher education across the country, creating a malignant climate "where responsibility is diffuse, the potential for abuse considerable, and the costs - both financial and academic - unsustainable.''

His decision to perform "radical surgery'' on the Vanderbilt athletic department in no way lessened the school's commitment to varsity athletics, declared Gee, but he pointedly added: "We intend on competing consistently according to the values of a world-class university.''

Not surprisingly, the scoffers were loud and numerous.

"People were laughing at us,'' Gee said in an interview during the recent Southeastern Conference Spring Meeting in Destin, Fla. "People were writing my obituary. People were writing Vanderbilt athletics' obituary.

"Well, guess what? We're both still alive and well.''

As part of his long-range plan to reorganize Vanderbilt athletics, Gee recruited an old friend and ally from Ohio State, David Williams II, and installed him as Vanderbilt's vice chancellor of student life and university affairs in 2000.

For more than two years, Gee and Williams, a nationally respected educator with salt-and-pepper hair and mustache and boundless energy, quietly planned their makeover of the athletic department.

Andy Geiger, the athletic director at Ohio State, had reported to Williams during the time Gee was OSU's president. When Gee came to Vanderbilt from Brown University, Williams was one of his first hires.

"We both knew we wanted to do something with athletics,'' Gee said, "but I didn't have anything specific in mind. All we knew was, it would be something dramatic and something meaningful and something that would work.''

Williams, said Gee, "is the architect of the whole thing - the one who put it together and the one who's making it work. But our philosophies about the program are one and the same.''

Essentially, what Williams did was integrate the athletic department into the university as a whole, combining varsity sports with intramurals, student recreation and community sports programs under the umbrella of a new Office of Student Athletics, Recreation and Wellness. Various athletic responsibilities were divided among four other vice chancellors.

The athletic director, Todd Turner, eventually moved on to the AD job at the University of Washington, but most of Vanderbilt's varsity coaches decided to stay. In addition to their usual duties, every coach is required to become actively involved in some other aspect of campus life. Admissions, for example. Or facilities. Or student government.

In much the same way, athletes on scholarship at Vanderbilt are expected to participate regularly in activities outside their varsity sport. Like the student council. Or honor council. Or dorm council.

"I tell our student-athletes that when you go out on campus, you need to make sure people see you as more than an athlete,'' said Williams.

By the same token, the coaches are asked to be seen on campus as something more than a coach. According to Williams, all the coaches have enthusiastically embraced the concept, including the head coaches in football (Bobby Johnson), basketball (Kevin Stallings) and baseball (Tim Corbin).

What it has done, said Williams, is establish a stronger, more positive relationship with the rest of the campus.

"That's important anyway,'' he said, " but in our case, it's very important. Because in our case, there's absolutely no way, under our configuration, that athletics at Vanderbilt will ever produce enough money to be self-sufficient.''

Even if Vanderbilt's football team was the best in the country, Williams said, the school would have to charge three times the price everybody else charges to make money because the stadium seats only 39,000, less than half the capacity at of such SEC rivals as Tennessee, LSU, Alabama, Georgia, Auburn and Florida.

"We're a private institution with about 6,400 students,'' Williams noted, "and we're very cognizant of the fact that we're subsidized by the university, and on any given day I can walk across the campus and have a hundred different people tell me how they can better use that money.''

That reality makes it all the more important, he said, that others on campus know and understand what Vanderbilt athletics is about: credibility and integrity, financial conservatism, and running a clean program.

And something else, too - the most important thing.

"They need to know that we view the central mission of the university to be academics,'' Williams said. "Above athletics comes academics. Always. So when there's that call between the two, it's not going to be them against us. It's going to be us, together.''

For Williams, a former athlete and coach who later oversaw the country's largest athletics program when he was at Ohio State, it has always been a matter of focusing on the right priorities. Frankly, it's easier to underscore that focus at a place like Vanderbilt.

"Gordon and I first started formulating these ideas when we were both at Ohio State,'' Williams said. "We saw the opportunity put them into practice at Vanderbilt because the school is smaller and athletics at Vanderbilt, while very, very important, certainly did not have the same status that it did at Ohio State."

All about integrity

Has it worked?

Will Gordon Gee have the last laugh?

"We already have,'' Gee said. "We've had seven teams ranked nationally over the last few months, and that's pretty damn good.''

It's a point well taken. Football, the kingpin sport, is still trying to turn the corner under Johnson, but most of Vanderbilt's other teams are not only thriving, but excelling.

The baseball team was ranked No. 1 in the nation for most of the season, and star pitcher David Price was chosen by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays as the No. 1 pick of the major league draft. The men's basketball team advanced to the Sweet 16. The women's basketball team won the SEC Tournament. Sophomore Jon Curran finished eighth in the NCAA men's golf championship.

In April, the women's bowling team, coached by former Ole Miss football player John Williamson, won Vanderbilt's first national championship in any sport.

Do Gee and Williams feel vindicated after all these giddy headlines?

Absolutely.

"A lot of people thought Gordon had lost his brain," Williams said, "so I'm sure he takes a certain amount of pleasure in what's happening."

Williams admits he does, too.

"When we first did this,'' he said, "I was always having to tell people, 'No, we're not de-emphasizing athletics. No, we're not leaving Division I-A. No, we're not leaving or getting kicked out of the SEC. No, Vanderbilt athletics isn't going to be all about intramurals."

Yet Williams fully understands why the decision was so widely ridiculed and why many thought the Vanderbilt administration had gone off the deep end.

"What happened was, people didn't take the time to understand it,'' he said. "Things were being written and said that just weren't true. They were saying, 'Vandy's going to intramurals.' That wasn't true. 'They won't have an athletic department.' That wasn't true. 'The coaches will leave.' They didn't. 'Kids won't come to school there.' They still come.

"So, yes, I guess there's a certain satisfaction in knowing we were right and they were wrong. Some have even called to say they were wrong. I appreciated that.''

Part of the satisfaction, Williams said, comes from the knowledge that Vanderbilt has done it the right way.

"It's easy to have integrity when you lose,'' said Williams. "But when you win, it's a lot harder.''

He mentioned that one of the key baseball players "had a little hiccup'' just before the SEC baseball tournament. Corbin benched him.

On another occasion, men's tennis coach Ian Duvenhage called Williams one day and said: "I've got a problem. One of our kids broke team rules and I'd like to sit him down for a match. But I need to explain to you two things. We've only got the minimum number of players. If I sit him down, we'll have to automatically forfeit a doubles and a singles. So it'll be very hard to win.''

"OK,'' said Williams.

"The other thing is, we're playing Tennessee,'' Duvenhage said.

"I told him, 'Sit him down,' " said Williams. "So he did, and he takes those kids up to Knoxville and we win 4 to 3.

"That's integrity. I've had kids come to me and say, 'Thank you for hiring our men's tennis coach. He has taught me more about life than I could ever learn about tennis.' Winning is bigger than what the score is at the end of the game. But when you win that bigger thing, you've also got a good chance to win the other.''

What about football?

All the early negativity has made the recent successes in the various arenas of competition that much sweeter for the students and faculty at Vanderbllt's picturesque Nashville campus.

For Commodore fans, it's refreshing to have something to brag about other than the typical Vandy student's grade point average.

"I can't tell you how much winning the national championship in bowling meant to us,'' Williams said. "Not only was it our first, but it re-energized the entire athletic staff. For a long time, we all sat around trying to figure out who'd be the first coach to win a national championship. Would it be Tim? Would it be (women's basketball coach) Melanie Balcomb? Would it be (women's tennis coach) Geoff MacDonald? Would it be Martha (Freitag) in women's golf?

"Everybody was happy for John Williamson to be the one. Now the question is, who's next?''

When Balcomb's team won the SEC Tournament, the first two text messages she received came from Tim Corbin and the women's soccer coach, Ronnie Coveleskie.

When the bowling team returned from winning the national championship in Apopka, Fla., Bobby Johnson was among the revelers who greeted the bus. Kevin Stallings, the basketball coach, has been known to provide color commentary on Vandy's baseball radio network.

"After she won the SEC championship,'' Williams said, "I was talking to Melanie and she said, 'You know, I don't know if I'd feel that kind of support at a big athletic school. I don't know if I would've gotten an e-mail from the baseball coach and the soccer coach.' ''

Gee, Williams and Commodores everywhere understand, of course, that winning in basketball, baseball, tennis, swimming, golf, track and field, lacrosse and bowling is nice. But ultimately and most of all, Vanderbilt needs to start winning in football, too.

Football has always been the steepest hill to climb. Vanderbilt hasn't had a winning football season since 1983. Only one Vandy coach (Steve Sloan in 1973-74) has managed an overall winning record in the last 55 years.

Johnson, who compiled a fine record at Furman, has enjoyed a few shining moments, including an upset victory at Georgia last season and a stunning win over Tennessee the year before. But the bottom line is, Johnson is 2-10, 2-10, 2-9, 5-6 and 4-8 in his five years at Vanderbilt.

"I do think we're getting close,'' Johnson says, and that may be. Last year, the Commodores lost by a field goal to Alabama (13-10), a touchdown to Ole Miss (17-10) and a touchdown to eventual national champion Florida (25-19).

Despite the record, Johnson - who was given a long-term contract extension after his third season - has the full support of both Gee and Williams.

"We have the absolute right coach for who we are,'' Williams said. "We understand it's a building process. I never like to predict things, but I think Bobby has been right on schedule as far as developing his program.

"Our program is going to continue to improve. I like going to bowl games, and I haven't been to a bowl game since leaving Ohio State. I'm about ready.''

Making progress

Williams and Gee are familiar with the old put-down about Vanderbilt athletes ("Vandy will always be Vandy.")

In the academic sense, they hope the slogan lives forever. In the athletic sense, they hope and believe it's beginning to go away.

"People who've recruited against Vanderbilt,'' said Williams, "have always told recruits, 'Why do you want to go there? It's too hard?'

"We tell our coaches, 'Sell 'em on who we are, not who we're not.' Football's hard. Basketball's hard. Life is hard. We're going to prepare you for that. We tell parents, 'If your kid's looking to do one year of college and then go to the pros, we're all wasting our time. But if you want to compete in the toughest conference, at the top level, and get an outstanding education, then you need to look at us.'

"I always tell people I'm very happy Matt Frieje got a chance to go play for the Miami Heat,'' Williams said. "I love the fact that Jay Cutler is going to be the starting quarterback for the Denver Broncos. I'm anxiously awaiting to see where Derrick Byars is going to be playing in the NBA. David Price will be a star in the big leagues some day.''

But his proudest moment, said Williams, will be this time next year when he goes to the law school graduation and watches former Vandy basketball player Russell Lakey, whose career was cut short by injuries, receive his degree.

"I'm thankful he came here, but Jay Cutler would've been an NFL player wherever he went to school,'' Williams said.

"I believe Russell Lakey could've only been a law graduate because he came to Vanderbilt.''

Like Williams, Gee has no illusions that the other schools in the SEC will follow Vanderbilt's lead in its new approach to athletics

"We couldn't have done this at Ohio State,'' Gee said. "I couldn't have done it when I was at Colorado. Or West Virginia.

"I really don't expect our structure to be widely followed. We do hope the philosophy will have some positive influence. A lot of my colleagues are very much kindred spirits in that regard. Unfortunately, many of them have problems similar to what we saw at Colorado and Ohio State.''

Said Williams: "I hope other schools will adopt at least some aspects of what we're doing,. There'll be some reluctance by some people, but you already see some others who're picking up some things. I had a discussion (in Destin) with the ADs about some of the philosophies we've put into place as relates to summer school and things like that.

"They don't talk much in large groups,'' Williams said. "But they'll talk to me one-on-one. I imagine Gordon gets the same thing.

"To me, that's progress.''


Contact John Pruett at john.pruett@htimes.com or visit his al.com blog at http//blog.al.com/pruett



© 2007 The Huntsville Times
© 2007 al.com All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Urgent and Horrifying News Story

Ladies and gentlemen, can I please have your attention. I've just been handed an urgent and horrifying news story. I need all of you, to stop what you're doing and listen...

I've discovered that I really REALLY like thousand island dressing on sandwiches. See exhibit A, where I am enjoying it on a Reuben panini.
But I find this realization strange because I would never dream of putting it on a salad. And after all, I believe it is classified as a salad dressing. But on a sandwich? Yes please. I don't think I've had it on a burger since the last Big Mac I had, which could easily have been in 1985. However, I contend that it wouldn't disappoint in the deliciousness department. But where in the world did it get its name? Did Mr. Island and his thousand person R&D team invent it?

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Soda Pop, no!



I don't know where exactly Paw Paw, Michigan is, but consider myself noted to never drive my wheelchair around there. Yowsers!

http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/06/07/wheelchair.truck.ap/index.html

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Amateur Planet Earth

If you enjoy Planet Earth and other similar nature and animal shows, you'll find this video as fascinating as I do. Fascinating and crazy! I'm impressed the photographer stuck around for all of it. I think I may have floored it. Supposedly, it is incredibly rare to witness a hunt or kill in person on a safari. And man, did these people get a show!

I know this video is 8 minutes, but you really have to watch the entire thing. The plot does NOT flat line after a few minutes like you think it may...

Friday, May 18, 2007

Get well soon because...


Now I'm not all about free plugs for other outlets or anything. Although, if you ask me to sing an Applebee's song in Gabe's presence, I certainly will oblige. But a co-worker sent me a link to the someecards site yesterday. Holy crap are there some gems on there. Here are a few of my favorites. And beware, clicking through will basically devote an hour to reading each and every one. May I recommend the Mothers Day subcategory under Holidays?



SEC Champs!



Last night David Price, the consensus Pitcher of the Year, struck out 15 and Vandy won its first regular season crown since the SEC started recognizing a regular season champ in 1980.

I believe the SEC finals are televised on Saturday. The Nashville Regional may be on TV as Vandy is the likely overall 1 seed (they're currently #1 in all 5 polls). The Super-Regional and College World Series are both on ESPN/ABC.

YEAH VANDY!

Full story -> http://vucommodores.cstv.com/sports/m-basebl/recaps/051707aaa.html

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Yeah Vandy!



Not that we're dissapointed with the women's bowling championship the Commodores earned a few weeks ago. We're not. Or that it doesn't mean anything. It does. A) because bowling is awesome and B) because it was the first NCAA championship in school history. This historic victory came a few years after chancellor Gordon Gee disbanded the athletic department in a move that had many rolling their eyes and laughing at the future state of Vanderbilt's sports teams. Nevermind that the women's bowling team is the sport that replaced our beloved men's soccer. Yet Vandy's men's baseball team has a very strong chance to add another title to the school's resume in the coming months.

You like apples?

The Commodores have positioned themselves for the top seed in the SEC tournament later this month in Hoover, Ala., as well as the No. 1 national seed in the NCAA Tournament. Vanderbilt took two of three games this weekend at Georgia, a College World Series participant a year ago, and has won nine of its last 10 games.

The Commodores have the player many consider to be the No. 1 selection in June's amateur draft (left-handed pitcher David Price) and the player who might be the No. 1 pick in 2008 (third baseman Pedro Alvarez). Throw in senior Casey Weathers, the top closer in college baseball and another possible first-round draft pick next month, and left-handed pitcher Mike Minor, one of the country's top freshmen, and Vanderbilt has the ingredients to make a serious run at winning next month's College World Series in Omaha, Neb.

How about them apples?

Read the full ESPN article

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Journalism, Marketing or Deception?

I have been getting more and more frustrated with journalism lately. It just seems like there are so many articles out there that say the same exact thing. You can read the same story almost word for word on ESPN, Yahoo! Sports, SI and CBS Sportsline. They all use the same quotes too and pretty much use the same headlines as well. I'm sure media outlets feel an immense amount of pressure to break or cover any store that is out there. But it's just frustrating from a reader's standpoint. I think I see it most in sports journalism, but perhaps that's just because the majority of news that I read is sports related.

Another point of contention I have is how misleading headlines can be. This is for an Associated Press article published this afternoon:

ESPN headline: McNabb 'shocked' Eagles took quarterback in draft
Yahoo! headline: McNabb was 'shocked' Eagles took QB Kolb

When clicking through, ESPN titled the article "McNabb downplays he's upset Eagles drafted Kolb" (while Yahoo! titled the article "McNabb breaks silence on Eagles drafting QB").

Hmm, that isn't quite the tone that was set by the headline I clicked on... let's read the article.

The first quote from Donovan McNabb these "journalists" provide us with is a complex one. It reads, "'It was shocking,' McNabb said Tuesday in an interview on WIP-AM radio." About half way through the article, after the journalist has tried mightily to stir controversy, we get a bit more from Mr. McNabb:

"'When you draft somebody at the position you're in, of course you have questions of 'What does that mean?' McNabb said. 'The most important thing for me is to make sure I'm healthy and 100 percent and get back out there competing and do the right thing on the field.'"


I'm thinking... this all sounds pretty reasonable. It sounds like he's trying to be very open and honest. It doesn't really sound like he has any animosity like the headline lead us to believe. Then it's not until the second to last paragraph that we get a little bit more about McNabb's supposed "shocked" feelings:

"I think Kevin Kolb is going to do an excellent job for us," McNabb said. "I'm going to try and help him as much as I can. I'm sure he's going to do great. I look forward to working with him this weekend."


Wow. Well... I really don't think "shocked" is an accurate portrayal of what McNabb was trying to convey to his interviewer and audience. In fact, I'd say it is very misleading. Just because McNabb uttered those words, which the AP so proudly lead with as McNabb's first quote of the article, doesn't mean that represents the story. It was certainly a leading question to begin with, one meant to hopefully get the athlete to say something controversial. McNabb simply answered the question honestly.

I don't know if the headline was actually taken out of context, but it is certainly rife with deception. It just seems like such a lame and pathetic level of journalism to stoop to in an attempt to get another click through, another set of eyes on your site, another unique visitor to up your CPM. It's like Fox News last night after 24... "Chloe tells all about having a love affair with Jack." Then after the commercial break, Chloe is on camera answering the question with "No way, that would never happen." Good reporting, Fox News. Bravo, AP.

That is all.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Best Sports Headline of the Year - Period



I mean... wow. I can see this being approved at the NY Post, but am pretty surprised the envelope is being pushed at this local tv news station's website. But I applaud you, WSOCTV 9 Eyewitness News. I do believe you have authored and published the best sports headline of the year. Amazing!

I took a screen shot of it in case it's removed from the site later.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Kitty Spa

I'm not quite sure 'spa' is the right word. I think it looks more like a microwave. But who cares. This is hilarious. I know, I know, I'm a meanie. But come on... Cats need to be cleaned too!



I don't think I am embedding this thing correctly, so here is the link.
http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1738258

Thursday, April 26, 2007

You won't be disappointed

I guarantee you won't be disappointed if you click this link.

In fact, I'll prove it with these two amazing gems.





Whoever did this...... thank you

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Logical Drunk Logic



If you ask me, this man displayed a high degree of logical drunk-logic. Hilarious. Just looking out for his well being, and, the well being of little Sammy too. Here is the story from www.Metro.co.uk

Thursday, April 19, 2007

For Real?


Anyone know if this picture is for real? Holycrapballs!

(from deadspin)

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Extreme Skydiving

wow... this is insane. This dude could have flown face first into a mountain!

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Elevator Forecast


OK... This only pertains to those of us that ride elevators 2-4 times per day. But what percentage of conversations that you have in the elevator or that you hear while in the elevator are in some way related to the weather? Current weather. Upcoming weather. Yesterday's weather. Last weekend's weather. Doesn't matter. Oh, and global warming counts too. It's astonishing! Let's take a poll! ....And if you care to weigh in on the weather in your city (or in your elevator), feel free!


What percentage of conversations that you have in the elevator or that you hear while in the elevator are in some way related to the weather?
It doesn't happen
1 - 10%
11 - 25%
26 - 50%
51 - 75%
76 - 95%
96 - 100%
  
pollcode.com free polls

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Henry Hudson, $24 and mad hatters

On to the interesting tidbits of the history of Manhattan's settlement:


  • Do you know how Henry Hudson died? He was on a voyage in 1610 searching for the northwest passage to the West Indies. He was driving his crew very hard. Their sails were frozen. They were no longer finding bears and seals to eat on the ice. The food they brought was long gone. Their toes were falling off from frostbite. Their gums were bleeding and their teeth were falling out from eating moss... Henry Hudson froze to death. Not because his ship was stuck in the ice but because his crew turned into mutineers. They were fed up with the voyage and did not share the same conviction for discovery that Hudson had. As he woke up one morning, his crew tied him up and lowered him and his young son, John, into a small row boat. His crew sailed back to London and left him there to die in Hudson Bay. Certainly an ironic end for one of history's great explorers, the man who sailed into New York Harbor flying the Dutch flag, navigating all the way up the Hudson River to Fort Orange (Albany is the name the English later gave it)...

  • It is somewhat common knowledge that the island of Manhattan was purchased for $24. But this isn't quite accurate and is actually very misleading. Peter Minuit (pronounced Min-wee) purchased the island from a group of local Indians in 1626 for 60 guilders worth of goods. It was the 19th century historian, Edmund O'Callaghan, who calculated it to be $24. Was this really the ruthless and conniving Europeans ripping off the naive Indians? Would the Indians really sell what was most precious to them for $24? No, not really. First of all, the Indians had a much different concept of land ownership and also didn't really have property transfer. They saw the "transaction" more as a land rental agreement and a new defensive alliance. It's not as if they vacated the land after the sale. They fully intended to continue to use and live on the land, and they did. Secondly, the $24 figure dates to the mid 19th century and isn't relevant to buying power 200 years earlier. 60 actual guilders would have been completely useless to the Indians because they had no use for money. The price paid was 60 guilders worth of goods. But again, you have to think about relative worth. As Shorto points out, a steel knife would be worth very little to people in Amsterdam, worth more to a settler living in primitive conditions and worth much much more to Indians living in relative wilderness. Shorto continues to show that, while land in the new world was indeed cheap, the Manhattan transfer was in line with other documented land sales and trades of goods between settlers.

  • Do you know where the term "mad hatter" comes from? Beaver fur and skin was one of the most prevalent goods traded between Dutch settlers and Indians. Beaver skin was shipped back to Europe to make into felt. Hat makers used the skin to make felt hats and were subsequently exposed to a high level of mercury during the production process. This lead to mercury poisoning, which led to crazy hat makers, which lead to the term we all know today.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

The Island at the Center of the World



I am simply fascinated by this book. It merits earmarking and underlining on basically every page. It's about the somewhat ignored settlement of Manhattan, specifically by the Dutch. And I would absolutlely insist you read it if you live in New York, love NY or just love history. I actually don't even love history. I love bacon. Go figure. But that's neither here nor there.

Anyway, I want to post more frequently about what I'm reading. Just tidbits here and there that I certainly didn't know and I'm guessing you didn't either. Unless of course, gBer gave this book to you. Thanks, Dude. I love it. Tidbits to follow...

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Favorite Photos

Originally named Breuckelen by Dutch Settlers in 1646, Brooklyn is NYC’s most populous borough, with over 2.5 million people calling it home. I thought that another good place to start was with some of my favorite photos...






Saturday, February 17, 2007

Might as well

I might as well start my blogging career with a post about music and about the title of this blog... I don't know what my plans are for this blog. Entertainment. Publishing of photography and literature. Discussions. Opinion. Awesomeness. All seen through my eyes.

Here are the lyrics to one of my more recent favorite songs. I really could (and have) listen to it continuously.

Jackson Browne > Doctor My Eyes


Doctor, my eyes have seen the years
And the slow parade of fears without crying
Now I want to understand
I have done all that I could
To see the evil and the good without hiding
You must help me if you can
Doctor, my eyes
Tell me what is wrong
Was I unwise to leave them open for so long
cause I have wandered through this world
And as each moment has unfurled
Ive been waiting to awaken from these dreams
People go just where there will
I never noticed them until I got this feeling
That its later than it seems
Doctor, my eyes
Tell me what you see
I hear their cries
Just say if its too late for me
Doctor, my eyes
Cannot see the sky
Is this the prize for having learned how not to cry