
New York City- Sadly, Cory Lidle, a starting pitcher for this year’s Yankees (after being traded to them from Philadelphia at the deadline) was killed when the plane he apparently was piloting struck a NYC high-rise. I had the priviledge to share a dinner with Cory’s family at my Uncle’s Birthday party. They were classy people, who were so proud of their son and his accomplishments. I have been following his career for years (since before he made it into the majors) because of my uncle’s relationship with the family. Cory was an outspoken, hard-nosed competitor on the field, and always seemed to handle himself with a high degree of professionalism. My prayers are with Cory’s family tonight.
Crash claims the life of Lidle.
October 11th, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · 1 Comment
Back to the real world…
October 10th, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · 1 Comment
Paris was amazing…I highly suggest it to anyone. The food was great, the city was beautiful, and the experience was well worth the effort. Highlights included visits to the Louvre, Versailles, and the Eiffel Tower. It is impossible to explain how completely overwhelming the Louvre is. The section on Egyptian Antiquities, housed in the Sully Museum, is nearly the size of the entire collection now housed at the Getty Museum (I really enjoy the Getty, don’t get me wrong)…and it is just part of an enormous facility, which is housed in an incredible structure.




Sometimes, scale is important.







Funny Picture….
October 3rd, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · 1 Comment

Of course the tough part would be the hairball he would have had later.
I found this picture on a friends blog….I think it is photoshopped…I know it is funny…and no, the President does not eat kittens…..he prefers puppies.
Here is a little more on this topic
Nice to see things have changed so much
October 3rd, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · 2 Comments
| LIFE Magazine: Americans Are Losing the Victory in Europe |
| January 7, 1946 |
We are in a cabin deep down below decks on a Navy ship jam-packed with troops that’s pitching and creaking its way across the Atlantic in a winter gale. There is a man in every bunk. There’s a man wedged into every corner. There’s a man in every chair. The air is dense with cigarette smoke and with the staleness of packed troops and sour wool.
“Don’t think I’m sticking up for the Germans,” puts in the lanky young captain in the upper berth, “but…” “To hell with the Germans,” says the broad-shouldered dark lieutenant. “It’s what our boys have been doing that worries me.” The lieutenant has been talking about the traffic in Army property, the leaking of gasoline into the black market in France and Belgium even while the fighting was going on, the way the Army kicks the civilians around, the looting. “Lust, liquor and loot are the soldier’s pay,” interrupts a red-faced major. The lieutenant comes out with his conclusion: “Two wrongs don’t make a right.” You hear these two phrases again and again in about every bull session on the shop. “Two wrongs don’t make a right” and “Don’t think I’m sticking up for the Germans, but….” The troops returning home are worried. “We’ve lost the peace,” men tell you. “We can’t make it stick.” A tour of the beaten-up cities of Europe six months after victory is a mighty sobering experience for anyone. Europeans. Friend and foe alike, look you accusingly in the face and tell you how bitterly they are disappointed in you as an American. They cite the evolution of the word “liberation.” Before the Normandy landings it meant to be freed from the tyranny of the Nazis. Now it stands in the minds of the civilians for one thing, looting. You try to explain to these Europeans that they expected too much. They answer that they had a right to, that after the last war America was the hope of the world. They talk about the Hoover relief, the work of the Quakers, the speeches of Woodrow Wilson. They don’t blame us for the fading of that hope. But they blame us now. Never has American prestige in Europe been lower. People never tire of telling you of the ignorance and rowdy-ism of American troops, of out misunderstanding of European conditions. They say that the theft and sale of Army supplies by our troops is the basis of their black market. They blame us for the corruption and disorganization of UNRRA. They blame us for the fumbling timidity of our negotiations with the Soviet Union. They tell us that our mechanical de-nazification policy in Germany is producing results opposite to those we planned. “Have you no statesmen in America?” they ask. |
| The Skeptical French Press
Yet whenever we show a trace of positive leadership I found Europeans quite willing to follow our lead. The evening before Robert Jackson’s opening of the case for the prosecution in the Nurnberg trial, I talked to some correspondents from the French newspapers. They were polite but skeptical. They were willing enough to take part in a highly publicized act of vengeance against the enemy, but when you talked about the usefulness of writing a prohibition of aggressive war into the law of nations they laughed in your face. The night after Jackson’s nobly delivered and nobly worded speech I saw then all again. They were very much impressed. Their manner had even changed toward me personally as an American. Their sudden enthusiasm seemed to me typical of the almost neurotic craving for leadership of the European people struggling wearily for existence in the wintry ruins of their world. The ruin this war has left in Europe can hardly be exaggerated. I can remember the years after the last war. Then, as soon as you got away from the military, all the little strands and pulleys that form the fabric of a society were still knitted together. Farmers took their crops to market. Money was a valid medium of exchange. Now the entire fabric of a million little routines has broken down. No on can think beyond food for today. Money is worthless. Cigarettes are used as a kind of lunatic travesty on a currency. If a man goes out to work he shops around to find the business that serves the best hot meal. The final pay-off is the situation reported from the Ruhr where the miners are fed at the pits so that they will not be able to take the food home to their families. “Well, the Germans are to blame. Let them pay for it. It’s their fault,” you say. The trouble is that starving the Germans and throwing them out of their homes is only producing more areas of famine and collapse. One section of the population of Europe looked to us for salvation and another looked to the Soviet Union. Wherever the people have endured either the American armies or the Russian armies both hopes have been bitterly disappointed. The British have won a slightly better reputation. The state of mind in Vienna is interesting because there the part of the population that was not actively Nazi was about equally divided. The wealthier classes looked to America, the workers to the Soviet Union. The Russians came first. The Viennese tell you of the savagery of the Russian armies. They came like the ancient Mongol hordes out of the steppes, with the flimsiest supply. The people in the working-class districts had felt that when the Russians came that they at least would be spared. But not at all. In the working-class districts the tropes were allowed to rape and murder and loot at will. When victims complained, the Russians answered, “You are too well off to be workers. You are bourgeoisie.” When Americans looted they took cameras and valuables but when the Russians looted they took everything. And they raped and killed. From the eastern frontiers a tide of refugees is seeping across Europe bringing a nightmare tale of helpless populations trampled underfoot. When the British and American came the Viennese felt that at last they were in the hands of civilized people. But instead of coming in with a bold plan of relief and reconstruction we came in full of evasions and apologies. U.S. Administration a Poor Third We know now the tragic results of the ineptitudes of the Peace of Versailles. The European system it set up was Utopia compared to the present tangle of snarling misery. The Russians at least are carrying out a logical plan for extending their system of control at whatever cost. The British show signs of recovering their good sense and their innate human decency. All we have brought to Europe so far is confusion backed up by a drumhead regime of military courts. We have swept away Hitlerism, but a great many Europeans feel that the cure has been worse than the disease. The taste of victory had gone sour in the mouth of every thoughtful American I met. Thoughtful men can’t help remembering that this is a period in history when every political crime and every frivolous mistake in statesmanship has been paid for by the death of innocent people. The Germans built the Stalags; the Nazis are behind barbed wire now, but who will be next? Whenever you sit eating a good meal in the midst of a starving city in a handsome house requisitioned from some German, you find yourself wondering how it would feel to have a conqueror drinking out of your glasses. When you hear the tales of the brutalizing of women from the eastern frontier you think with a shudder of of those you love and cherish at home. That we are one world is unfortunately a brutal truth. Punishing the German people indiscriminately for the sins of their leader may be justice, but it is not helping to restore the rule of civilization. The terrible lesson of the events of this year of victory is that what is happening to the bulk of Europe today can happen to American tomorrow. In America we are still rich, we are still free to move from place to place and to talk to our friends without fear of the secret police. The time has come, for our own future security, to give the best we have to the world instead of the worst. So far as Europe is concerned, American leadership up to now has been obsessed with a fear of our own virtues. Winston Churchill expressed this state of mind brilliantly in a speech to his own people which applies even more accurately to the people of the U.S. “You must be prepared,” he warned them, “for further efforts of mind and body and further sacrifices to great causes, if you are not to fall back into the rut if inertia, the confusion of aim and the craven fear of being great.” Getting Déjà Vu yet? Here’s more from this issue of LIFE…
These are still more than 25,000,000 homeless people milling about Europe. In Warsaw nearly 1,000,000 live in holes in the ground. Six million building were destroyed in Russia. Rumania has her worst drought of 50 years, and in Greece fuel supplies are terribly low because the Nazis, during their occupation, decimated the forests. In Italy the wheat harvest, which was a meager 3,450,000 tons in 1944, fell to an unendurable 1,304,000 tons in 1945. In France, food consumption per day averages 1,800 calories as compared with 3,000 calories in the U.S. Germany is sinking even below the level of the countries she victimized. The German people are still better clothed than most of Europe because during the war they took the best of Europe’s clothing. But their food supply is below subsistence level. In the American zone they beg for the privilege of scraping U.S. army garbage cans. Infant mortality is already so high that a Berlin Quaker, quoted in the British press, predicted. “No child born in Germany in 1945 will survive. Only half the children aged less than 3 years will survive.” On Germany, which plunged the Continent into its misery, falls the blame for its own plight and the plight of all Europe. But if this winter proves worse even than the war years, blame will fall on the victor nations. Some Europeans blame Russia for callousness to misery in eastern Europe. But some also blame America because they expected so much more from her. On the following pages the distinguished novelist John Dos Passos, who has been abroad as LIFE correspondent, reports on Europe’s suffering and what it means for America. This posted at numerous sites…I found this article here |
Now for something completely different
October 2nd, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · No Comments
The Article I have been referencing
October 2nd, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · No Comments
This article, by Charles Krauthammer, is the one I have been referencing which makes possibly the most convincing argument against Iraq “creating” terrorists or jihadists.
Hawks vs. Doves
October 2nd, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · No Comments
We have been discussing the Hawks and the Doves in 11th Grade U.S. History…
“The group that mostly used the anti-war slogans were called “doves”; those that supported the war were known as “hawks.” (Protests)
Truthfully, these are not nearly as simple to define as one might imagine. A Dove might support some war, but not all of them, and some Hawks might oppose military action in some cases.
Examples of citing in blogs
September 29th, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · No Comments
Internet example-make link in parenthesis
Akhenaten was an exceptional family man in Egyptian History.
“Akhenaten had an extensive family, which was well represented in the art from his reign. His parents were Amenhotep III and Tiye. Akhenaten’s name was originally Amenhotep IV, which he changed later. Akhenaten was married to Nefertiti, who is now famous because of the beautiful bust of her found at Amarna. Nefertiti’s origins are uncertain. Some historians believe that she was a foreign princess, but there is some evidence to suggest that she was a relative of Akhenaten.” (Lorenz)
“Amenhotep III’s son and successor, however, preferred the Aten to all the other forms of the sun god.” (Oakes 156)
Works Cited Entry
Oakes, Lorna, and Lucia Gahlin. Ancient Egypt:An illustrated reference to the myths, religions, pyramids and temples of the land of the pharaohs. New York: Barnes and Noble Publishing Inc. 2003.
Can’t find anything on Egypt?
September 29th, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · No Comments
Try here

Operation Phantom Fury
September 28th, 2006 by stillthinking3 in General Info · 1 Comment

The Battle of Fallujah will be one of the topics we will be studying soon in 11th Grade US History. This battle was one of the most intense in recent history. If you are interested, you can get a little advance look. Go here for an incredible satellite image of Fallujah before the battle started.



We are in a cabin deep down below decks on a Navy ship jam-packed with troops that’s pitching and creaking its way across the Atlantic in a winter gale. There is a man in every bunk. There’s a man wedged into every corner. There’s a man in every chair. The air is dense with cigarette smoke and with the staleness of packed troops and sour wool.
The first winter of peace holds Europe in a deathly grip of cold, hunger and hopelessness. In the words of the London Sunday Observer: “Europe is threatened by a catastrophe this winter which has no precedent since the Black Death of 1348.”