Town vs. Gown in Tucson

“The year was 1885 and the mood was mean. The cities and counties needed money and the territorial legislature controlled the purse strings. To make matters worse the members of the 13th Territorial Legislature were known to make decisions, often, for less than ethical reasons. They had earned the nickname, ‘The Thieving Thirteenth’.

There were two major prizes to be won from the legislature that year. Phoenix and Prescott came out on top. Phoenix was given the asylum for the insane and Prescott kept the state capital. Tucson received an unwelcome consolation prize of The University of Arizona, and with it, a measly $25,000 appropriation, just one quarter of the amount Phoenix received to build the insane asylum.

C.C. Stevens was the man sent to Prescott to win the state capital for Tucson. He came home with what he hoped would be welcomed as good news about the University. Instead of celebrating, Tucson responded angrily. Some reports say the people of Tucson greeted him with a shower of ripe eggs, rotten vegetables, and a dead cat.”

UA History

Compared to Albuquerque

  • The cost of living in Denver is 8.3% higher.
  • The cost of living in Portland, OR, is 9.2% higher.
  • The cost of living in Washington, DC, is 24.0% higher.
  • The cost of living in San Francisco is 81.3% higher.
  • The cost of living in Fort Myers is 0.8% lower.
  • The cost of living in Tucson is 1.3% lower.
  • The cost of living in Rapid City is 2.9% lower.
  • The cost of living in Tulsa is 8.7% lower.

Salary.com

Labor Day weekend

  • More than 146 million Americans age 16 and over are in the nation’s labor force. That includes more than 78 million men and more than 68 million women.
  • The annual median earnings for male and female full-time, year-round workers in 2001: $38,275 and $29,215 respectively.
  • Average annual pay in the San Jose metropolitan statistical area: $65,926. San Jose has led all metro areas in this category since 1997.
  • More than 16 million workers across the country belong to a labor union. That amounts to 14 percent of all wage and salary workers. The rate, of course, varies a lot by state — New York having the highest rate at 27 percent; North Carolina having the lowest rate at 4 percent.
  • Growth this decade in the number of people employed as computer applications software engineers: 100%. Forecasters expect this occupation to grow at a faster rate than any other.
  • Projected increase in the number of combined food preparation and serving (e.g., fast food) workers during this decade: 673,000. This occupation is expected to add more positions than any other.

U.S. Bureau of the Census

MTV mouth-to-mouth resuscitation

“Thursday’s big make-out scene [at the MTV Video Music Awards] between Madonna and Britney Spears (and Christina Aguilera, which, tragically, didn’t get the same coverage) lasted only about a half-second. In that short time, men all over America lurched from their chairs. Mothers moved to shield the eyes of youngsters. Frat boys high-fived. Fathers reached for their TiVo remotes.” Tony Hicks in the Contra Costa Times.

Hard Rock

“Rap metal is nothing but affirmative action for white people.” Chris Rock hosting the MTV Video Music Awards.

Rock on “American Idol”: “Having Paula Abdul judge singers is like having Christopher Reeve judge a dance contest.”

Country lyrics

  • “Cause he’s gonna live forever if the good die young” — Tracy Lawrence
  • “You can’t help how you don’t feel” — Lonestar
  • “I’ve always been crazy, but it’s kept me from going insane” — Waylon Jennings
  • “I’m much too young to feel this damn old” — Garth Brooks
  • “I’m a little past Little Rock but a long way from over you” — Lee Ann Womack
  • “It’s too hot to fish, too hot for golf, and too cold at home” — Mark Chesnutt
  • “She said: ‘I’m gonna’ hire a wino
    to decorate our home,
    So you’ll feel more at ease here,
    and you won’t have to roam.
    We’ll take out the dining room table,
    and put a bar along that wall.
    And a neon sign, to point the way,
    to our bathroom down the hall.'” — David Frizzell

If Microsoft Headquarters was in Alabama…

  1. Their #1 product would be “Microsoft Winders.”
  2. Instead of an hourglass icon, you would get an empty beer bottle.
  3. Occasionally, you would bring up a winder that was covered with a Hefty bag and duct tape.
  4. Instead of “Yes,” “No,” “Cancel”, dialog boxes would give you the choice of “Aww-right,” “Naw,” or “Git.”
  5. Instead of “Ta-Da!”‘, the opening sound would be “Dueling Banjos.”
  6. The “Recycle Bin” in Winders would be an outhouse.
  7. Whenever you pulled up the sound player you would hear a digitized drunk yelling “Freebird!” and “Roll Tide.”
  8. Power Point would be “Par Pawnt.”
  9. Microsoft’s programming tool would be “Vishual Basic.”
  10. Winders Logo would incorporate the Confederate flag.
  11. Hardware could be repaired using parts from an old Trans Am.
  12. Four words: Daisy Duke Screen Saver.
  13. “Flight Simulator” would be replaced by “NASCAR Simulator.”
  14. Microsoft CEO: Billy-Bob (aka “Bubba”) Gates.
  15. Direct link to WWW (World Wide Wrestling) Home Page.

Slightly revised from list found on the ‘net.

Yeah, but what’s the statute of limitations on theft?

The Chosen People, a group of Egyptian scholars said they would sue “world Jewry” for fleeing Egypt during the Exodus with stolen “gold, jewelry, cooking utensils, silver ornaments, and clothing.” Dr. Nabil Hilmi, a dean at the University of Al-Zaqaziq in Cairo, said that over 5,700 years, the value of the gold and other items had risen to an “astronomical” level. Source: The Week Magazine.

What do you think prompted this?

A Tennessee community has adopted a new policy requiring all city employees to smell good while on the job. Murfreesboro’s “good hygiene” policy states that “no employee shall have an odor generally offensive to others.” City Councilman Toby Gilley said the rule will not be difficult to enforce. “We’ll know it when we smell it,” he said. Exceptions will be made for those who work outdoors. Source: The Week Magazine.

Rain

You can seed the clouds. You can do a rain dance. But the only surefire way to bring rain is to wash your car. Which I did today. Tonight a gentle rain is falling*. It’s not much, but then when it is only the 13th day out of the past 156 with measurable precipitation, it’s nice. As of an hour ago Albuquerque had recorded 1.10 inches of precipitation since March 25th. (By comparison, that’s just a bit more than the Washington, DC, area had Tuesday!)

*My car sleeps indoors. It was rained on when it was out and about this evening.

Vacations

By Jill [published with permission of the author]

Every summer our family took a long vacation across country. The destinations we visited, and the routes we took, varied from year to year. However, one thing never changed: we always went by car. I suppose that a family of six really had no choice, considering the prohibitive cost of air travel. But we kids held out hope, year after year, that this summer would be the one where we’d finally get to see the inside of one of those shiny metal flying machines. (Planes held the same mystical fascination for us that space ships must hold for other children.) Alas, that rosy day never came and, well into our teens, we spent our summers strapped into a beat-up station wagon topped with a car top carrier.

On the bright side, traveling provided many special opportunities for our parents to teach us lessons that were not necessarily apparent in daily life. Some examples:

Leave the house spotless
Before leaving for any trip, my parents would clean our house until it squeaked. Every bed had to be made, every dish washed and put away, every trash can empty, and every item of clothing laundered. For some reason, we also had to close the doors to all the rooms. My mother firmly believed that the worst possible thing in the world was returning home from vacation to a messy house. So we always left it in a sterilized state. As an adult, I still find myself rushing around the kitchen, placing freshly washed pots in cupboards, as my husband impatiently honks at me from the driver’s seat of our fully packed car.

Depart on car trips at 4:00 am
Many is the morning that we kids remember being awakened while it was still dark outside, quickly bundled into clothes, and limply escorted into the station wagon. My parents always liked to hit the road before the morning paper arrived. The theory was twofold. First, you could get one last night of sleep at home, without having to drive through the night or pay for a hotel room. Secondly, you got an early start, avoided all the morning traffic, and could get a couple hundred miles from home before the kids fully gained consciousness.

Television shows are a measure of time
As anyone who has traveled a long distance by car knows, time begins to have no meaning after a certain number of miles are logged. This is especially true for small children, since their grasp of time is tenuous to begin with. To combat this, my parents developed a foolproof way of telling us how much time stood between our next stop and us. When one of us would offer up the inevitable plaint from the backseat, “How much longerrrrrrrr?” my parents would reply using units we could understand. “Two Sesame Streets and one Mister Rogers,” they would respond. This, as any fan of educational television knows, is equivalent to two-and-a-half hours. Using this child-friendly estimator, even a three-year old could figure out whether lunch was only 15 minutes away, or whether we weren’t going to even slow down for another half day.

Never stop unless you absolutely must stop
Perhaps because we took such long and involved trips, or perhaps just because my parents were masochists, a typical day’s drive for us usually involved about 1,000 miles. With so much ground to cover, stops of any kind became a prized and rare commodity. Generally, my parents liked to use one stop and one stop only to take care of: lunch, a fresh tank of gas, six bathroom breaks, souvenir buying, stretching of legs, repacking the car top carrier, separating any bickering children, changing diapers, any necessary medical attention, relevant phone calls, sightseeing, mechanical repairs, and hugs. Sometimes they’d work a second, similar stop into the evening, then continue to drive straight through the night. This was not a car for whiners.

If you do make a “frivolous” stop, make it count
One thing that my parents were always willing to go out of the way to see, on these jaunts, was a place of natural or historical significance. Yes, I grew up in a family of National Park junkies. Before every trip, my father would spend weeks with his maps and his pads of yellow, lined paper, plotting the route that would take us by the greatest number of national treasures. As children, we hiked the Grand Canyon, toured Native American ruins, discussed whether Mount Rushmore was a “gyp,” timed the geysers at Yellowstone, and ran among the great Sequoias. Whenever possible, we camped overnight at the parks, enjoying the thrills of bear warnings, ranger campfire talks, and carry-along casserole heated over our miniature propane grill. The love of these parks has never left any of us. If anything, we kids are even bigger park addicts now than we were as children.

When checking into a hotel, never admit the true occupancy
Most of the time, on the vacations we took early in my life, my family camped at night. But as we got older, more often we would stay overnight at a Holiday Inn or some comparable motor lodge. My parents would invariably tell the desk clerk that only four of us would be staying in the room, in order to save money on extra occupant fees. Thus, two children were always forced to stay in the car while my parents filled out the necessary paperwork. Then, as we traveled to our room, those unacknowledged children would have to keep their heads down in the car and scurry into the room. Hey, ten bucks is ten bucks.

Do not take the cap off the radiator when the car overheats
Our cars generally performed well on these extremely long journeys across the country. But, inevitably, something would go wrong at some point on the trip. We had many memorable breakdowns. Once we came out of McDonalds, in a bad part of town near Washington, DC, to find a poorly timed flat tire. We had one car that intermittently got the shakes and started doing a back and forth chugging motion. But, most often, our car would simply overheat. When that happened, we would generally just pull over and let it cool down. Once, however, my father made the horrible mistake of unscrewing the radiator cap, to investigate the problem. He was rewarded with a scalding stream of water directly into his face. It is safe to say that no member of my family will ever, and I mean ever, unscrew a radiator cap again. That pained shriek still rings in my ears.

Now we lock ’em all up

According to historian Gordon S. Wood, “Traditionally[,] accused criminals were held in jail only until they went to trial; then if convicted they were fined, whipped, mutilated, or executed, but not incarcerated.” [Emphasis mine.]

“Debt and Democracy” in the June 12, 2003, issue of The New York Review. Wood points out that debtors were the sole exception. “But actions for debt could send the debtor to prison where he languished….”

(Wood is indeed the same Gordon S. Wood whose work is discussed in the one-upsmanship bar scene in Good Will Hunting.)

The n Commandments

The Ten Commandments are found twice in the Old Testament: Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 5.

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia the Commandments were, “Written by the finger of God on two tables of stone, this Divine code was received from the Almighty by Moses amid the thunders of Mount Sinai, and by him made the ground-work of the Mosaic Law.”

There is some difference regarding the numbering — neither source in the Old Testament numbers the Commandments.

The Catholic version resulted from Saint Augustine’s interpretation of the Hebrew text in the fifth century. Augustine combined the two Commandments concerning false worship and false gods into a single precept. This made taking the Lord’s name in vain second and so on ending, however, one short. To keep the Decalogue whole, the stricture against coveting was divided into not coveting flesh and not coveting goods.

Protestant faiths usually keep the first two Commandments separate and combine the last.

In other words, there could just as easily have been nine commandments or eleven.

The text is from Deuteronomy 5. The numbering is mine, based on the punctuation in this translation. Sorry Augustine.

I am the LORD thy God, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage.

  1. Thou shalt have none other gods before me.
  2. Thou shalt not make thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the waters beneath the earth: Thou shalt not bow down thyself unto them, nor serve them: for I the LORD thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me, And shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments.
  3. Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain: for the LORD will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain.
  4. Keep the sabbath day to sanctify it, as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee. Six days thou shalt labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, nor thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thine ox, nor thine ass, nor any of thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates; that thy manservant and thy maidservant may rest as well as thou.
    And remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and that the LORD thy God brought thee out thence through a mighty hand and by a stretched out arm: therefore the LORD thy God commanded thee to keep the sabbath day.
  5. Honour thy father and thy mother, as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee; that thy days may be prolonged, and that it may go well with thee, in the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee.
  6. Thou shalt not kill.
  7. Neither shalt thou commit adultery.
  8. Neither shalt thou steal.
  9. Neither shalt thou bear false witness against thy neighbour.
  10. Neither shalt thou desire thy neighbour’s wife, neither shalt thou covet thy neighbour’s house, his field, or his manservant, or his maidservant, his ox, or his ass, or any thing that is thy neighbour’s.

Bill Maher noted on Real Time that only two of the Commandments would seem to apply in the court house: Thou shalt not kill and thou shalt not steal. He missed not bearing false witness.

George Carlin has gotten ten down to two.

I give you my revised list of the two commandments:
Thou shalt always be honest and faithful to the provider of thy nookie and Thou shalt try real hard not to kill anyone, unless of course they pray to a different invisible man than you.

Two is all you need; Moses could have carried them down the hill in his fuckin’ pocket. I wouldn’t mind those folks in Alabama posting them on the courthouse wall, as long as they provided one additional commandment:

Thou shalt keep thy religion to thyself.