Preble News & Opinion

Friday, May 30, 2003

Just a flashback for no particular reason.

It was 1970 or so and I was working at a formica fabricating shop on N. State Street. It is now the home of the Catholic Shop, which if I were to tell you some of my other memories you would find that really funny. I digress. Across the street and up a half block on Butternut Street stood a church with a tall steeple. Lighting struck the steeple and blew bricks across Butternut Street into the Marine Midland parking lot. A few days later they decided they had to demolish the steeple. A crew with chain-saws worked all day and those of us in the shop watched their progress on and off during breaks. Late in the afternoon a tall crane came on the job but the top of the crane was not as tall as the steeple. They put a cable around the steeple and started to draw it tight. I saw this and from my vantage point it didn't look like it was going to work. It looked like the steeple would turn upside down and fall as soon as they tried to pick it up. But they must know what they were doing, they must have known this possibility and must have made provisions right? As the line tightened I called the guys in the shop to come watch... Just in case. We watched and sure enough as soon as the steeple came free from the building it turned upside down and fell out of the sling and crashed to the ground with a huge boom and a cloud of dust. We later learned that it also broke through the $20,000 stained glass window of the church.


This taught me that sometimes people only look like they know what they are doing.

Thursday, May 29, 2003

Odd things afoot at Song Mountain...

I'm looking into something very odd that has to do with Song Mountain being rezoned commercial. What's odd is why it's being considered at all and what's even odder is who is pushing it. If it were ever to happen then anything could be done on the mountain, "Even a gas station" as Dan Dineen told me the other day. There would be nothing stopping Song from doing anything commercial it wanted. Hotel, amusement park, race track, arena... As a matter of fact they even contacted Betty Pitman about holding a concert there, but nothing definate yet. But back to odd. This is an election year and all 5 on the town board are up. What's odd is why they would even consider pissing off so many voters 6 months from the election? As I said I'm looking into it and expect to have all the details very soon.

And I thought the town wanted to do stuff that would bring everybody back together too.

Stay Tuned...

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

Seeing through the 'invisible' Web

With dozens of search sites vying for superiority, searchers may wonder why it's still so hard to find what they're looking for on the Web.

And I used to think Google was great.

Monday, May 26, 2003

Memories...

Fox news occasionally runs pictures of our service men and women who were killed in Iraq accompanied by solemn music with the words at the end "Never Forget". The images of those brave men and women, some smiling, some serious, proud in their uniforms were on my mind when I drifted back 36 years to a summer evening in Oneida. It rained earlier and the air was damp but warm. I was walking in the business section lugging the box with the Kirby vacuum looking for the address of my next demonstration. Between two businesses I found the door and went up the stairs to the second floor apartment. It didn't look like a possible sale to me because the Kirby was expensive and this didn't look like an expensive apartment. My next appointment wasn't for two hours and the boss gets mad if I didn't make the effort. I knocked on the door hoping there wouldn't be an answer. An old woman opened the door and was very glad to see me. She escorted me into their living room and along the way I couldn't help but notice there were no carpets, only tile. Why did these old people go for a demo of a Kirby with no carpets? The old woman's husband waited for us in the living room and he too was very happy to see me. I kneeled down on the floor and opened the Kirby box and started the demo. Usually it takes most of 90 minutes to do a demo but with no carpets the time was cut in half. At the end I half asked if they wanted to buy it and to my amazement they did. I filled out the paperwork and got their signatures. The old woman asked me if I wanted to see something and I said sure. I had time to kill before my next appointment, so better to spend it here than in a dinner sipping a cup of coffee. I followed her into a back room and there on the wall were pictures, medals, ribbons and other mementos of their two sons, their only children, both killed in Vietnam. I was about their age. I looked at the display, the shrine in awe with a creepy feeling coming over me. Was this the reason I was here? Was this why they were so happy to see me? Why they bought a vacuum cleaner they obviously didn't need? I was too young, too inexperienced to know the answers but I was profoundly moved. All their dreams, dreams of grandchildren and happy visits, letters, phone calls, holiday dinners were gone, replaced by this shrine. There on the wall were the framed letters, signed by President Johnson about their sons. There was the medals pinned in their velvet lined boxes. Pictures of them as little boys on their bikes. The room was stark with harsh lighting and linoleum floors. Yet it had a certain glory. Even now, 36 years later it affects me.

On Memorial Day we honor the dead but I think the living left behind should be honored too.

God Bless America