Archive for 2013

Happy New Years Eve, CHIEF N.O.T.S.U.O.H!

December 31, 2013
1493 AD: Chief Notsuoh heads to Houston with his three four-legged friends and his iron rattler stick.

1493 AD: Chief Notsuoh heads to Houston with his three four-legged friends and his iron rattler stick.

Happy New Years Eve, Everybody!

A year ago today, The Pecan Park Eagle wrote about the Legend of Chief Notsuoh and how his late 15th century bad experience in the area that is now roughly the downtown and inner city core of present day Houston seems to have led to a curse upon our local fates in team athletics. Spooky as it may be, the 2013 arrival of Houston as only the first city ever to finish dead last in both professional baseball and football in the same calendar year seems to ride home as confirmation of Chief Notsuoh’s  poison wishes for us.

In case you never read last year’s report on Chief Notsuoh, here it is again verbatim from our original report of December 31, 1912:

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By the second new moon of the year we know today as 1493 AD, the drums of wary change about the coming of the pale face from the waters of the Pond of the Morning Sun had beaten their way across the face of the land known to every native tribe as the Home of all Family Nations and had then faded quietly into a humming red mist across the Pond of the Evening Stars beyond the Great Rock Mounds of the far west.

 

Most human beings of that time were content enough to simply let the news be heard as an ominous message from the Great Spirit that further personal purification was essential for them all to one day take up residence in the Perennial Summer Forest of the Great Sky that awaits everyone beyond the Time of Endless Sleep that comes to all.

 

Not so much did Comanche Chief Notsuoh (pronounced Not*Sue*Oh) hold on to the idea that the drums intended to merely fall silent as an “ominous warning” about the need for reform and personal purification. Oh no. Chief Notsuoh heard the drums as a beckoning to organize and come forward as a tribal gathering of human beings and turn back the threat of invasion from the pale ones, should they soon decide to return to these sacred shores with greater numbers of their kind and an intent to pollute all that was then pure.

 

From his home region in the valley we know today as the Basin Prairie of the Big Bend, Chief Notsuoh set forth each morning toward the Sky of the Rising Sun in leadership of one thousand Comanche braves who believed in his cause.

 

Chief Notsuoh had in his possession three horses that had been captured from the first pale faces, but he did not understand their true purpose. He called them “My Four Legged Friends on Four Legs Who Listen Well and Never Talk Back.”

 

The chief also possessed a loaded late 19th century model Winchester rifle that one day on the journey fell through a time-warp black hole and killed a six-foot long rattler before it could strike the great leader. Again, Notsuoh failed to grasp the utility of the instrument that had befallen him, but he kept it as a friendly weapon, nonetheless, calling it “My Iron Stick for Killing Rattlesnakes in a Wahoo Whack.”

 

Armed with believers, good intentions, and much misinformation, Chief Notsuoh set forth each morning toward the sky of the rising sun. About sixty sunrises later, the chief and his native land crusaders had traveled a distance roughly equivalent of the space between present day Alpine, Texas and the banks of a muddy slow-moving stream in southeast Texas that back then was heavily populated by a herd of 10,000 bison or buffaloe.

 

Tired of the morning walks into the sun, and impressed by the abundance of buffaloe to eat. Notsuoh decided to settle the area until further notice. With the help of his one thousand warriors and the hundreds of camp-following squaws who had trailed their men east, Notsuoh established a far-reaching Comanche community in the areas of downtown present day Houston, and stretching southwest to the former site of the Summit, southeast from there to Rice Stadium, further south to Reliant Stadium and the Astrodome, east to the University of Houston and Buff Stadium, and back northwesterly, downtown to the areas covering all current sporting venues.

 

One day in 1494 AD, when the Notsuoh Braves were rocking along to a prideful lacrosse win over a tribe of barnstorming Apaches, the whole town, including the team, choked on some very bad buffalo meat, snatching the agony of defeat from the jaws of victory, causing a loss of the game, a loss of pride, and, in seven days time, a loss of life for everyone in the community.

 

Before his own death, Chief Notsuoh blamed himself and the white man.

 

Blaming the tragic event upon his failure to continue his pursuit of the loathsome pale-face menace in favor of mindless and unrewarding sporty pursuits in the area that is now modern Houston, Chief Notsuoh swore out this curse upon all future pale face settlers of this same geographical area:

 

“To all pale faces and all other non-native invaders of this land, by the power of our holy spirit in the sky, I henceforth place this curse upon you: Should you ever decide to settle this land as your own, building your personal paleface dreams upon the ground that covers our bones, may this special curse be visited upon you:

 

“May your athletic teams of any sport devised be doomed to inevitably break your hearts in the end. May they sometimes pull your hearts high into the sky and the land of hope, but may they always finish by dropping your dreams flat as a dead eagle, falling splat to earth from the mighty clouds of high aspiration.”

 

That’s my Chief Notsuoh story – and I’m sticking to it. Especially after today’s Texans game.

Oh, yeah. – Happy New Year!!! Things are about to get better because everything that really is important – already is OK.

~ The Pecan Park Eagle, December 31, 2012.

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That bold type advisory from the last day of 2012 still applies on the final day of 2013: Things are about to get better because everything that really is important – already is OK.

In the meanwhile, all serious Houston sports fans who cannot assume the same wisdom are once more advised and warned —–>>>>

"Don't Mess with CHIEF N.O.T.S.U.O.H!"

“Don’t Mess with CHIEF N.O.T.S.U.O.H!”

 

“HAVE A SAFE, FUN, AND REASONABLY SOBER NEW YEARS EVE, EVERYBODY!” ~ THE PECAN PARK EAGLE.

In Memoriam of Baseball’s 2013 Deceased

December 30, 2013
Almost Time to Say Goodbye.

Almost Time to Say Goodbye.

In Memoriam …

The world lost some great people in 2013 and we only know the most famous ones and, of course, the ones close and dear to our personal lives. Nelson Mandela is undoubtedly our most famous loss in 2013, but he is joined at Heaven’s Gate, or wherever else it is that good souls go from here after living their lives as unspoken gifts to the world of their cherished others. To all the millions of little anonymous people who passed with Mr. Mandela from Earth in 2013 from quieter, smaller. less famous service to others everywhere, we say thank you. About all of them, we say, may their deeds be always remembered and acknowledged, wherever possible. Placing something larger than our personal acquisitive goals in play as our service to a greater peaceful cause that does no harm to the innocent is the highest calling that awaits all of us – if we listen for it – and if we are willing to hear it.

In behalf of those of us who love the game of baseball, 2013 also was a year in which we said goodbye to 48 former MLB position players, 40 former pitchers, and 2 former managers. They were not all saints, but one came close. His name was Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals. A less famous guy like Harry Elliott is recalled by some of us as a former member of the Houston Buffs prior to the city’s 1962 jump to the big leagues. Both of the two deceased managers listed here also had a connection to Houston. Hall of Fame manager Earl Weaver played for the Houston Buffs early in his all minor league playing career – and Grady Hatton managed the Houston Astros late in the first decade of their big league existence. Cot Deal, a former Astros pitching coach, also left this world in 2013 – as did three former pitchers of the St. Louis Browns, Lou Sleater, Virgil Trucks, and Bob Turley, plus former Browns catcher, Babe Martin.

Andy Pafko at the Polo Grounds. 10/03/51, waiting on the ball that is not coming down in the field of play.

Andy Pafko at the Polo Grounds. 10/03/51, waiting on the ball that is not coming down in the field of play.

And how can I not mention outfielder Andy Pafko. As a kid, I just loved the all-out way Andy Pafko played the game. He was in left field at the Polo Grounds in 1951 when Bobby Thomson hit his famous “Shot Heard Round the World.” You could tell from Pafko’s body language in the old newsreel films that he was  both stunned and hurt by his closest view of the Dodger-fatal home run leaving the field of play. Poor Andy. Now we have to go through missing you all over again. God bless you.

The list still does not include the name of Paul Blair, who passed away on 12/26/13. He was also a favorite of mine.

Please check the list from Baseball Reference.Com for the names of those who left us this year.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/MLB/2013-deaths.shtml

Rest in Peace, 2013 baseball souls, and thanks for each of your contributions to our national pastime.

It’s Good Riddance Day in Houston Sports!

December 29, 2013

GoodRiddance_Logo

 

After just seeing this idea this morning on the ABC Good Morning, America news, it hit home as a useful concept to plug this general year’s end housecleaning notion from NYC into the specific issues facing those of us who are Houston sports fans. Whereas, the newscast showed a woman who was saying “good riddance” in writing a public note to the husband she had just divorced, we think Houston sports fans are capable of expressing themselves here with a public statement of which persons or local conditions they would love to say “good riddance to” in all sincerity about our local sports experience.

As a special bonus here at The Pecan Park Eagle (TPPE), those who post at least one “good riddance” item will be eligible to Rub the old genie lamp for one wish they would make now about some area of Houston Sports, if they knew that wish was bound to come true. Of course, we cannot stop you, nor do we really want to stop you from bypassing the “good riddance” item and going straight to the “one magical wish” step, if you so choose. But just know that you will be cheating if you do. 🙂

I’m limiting myself to one “good riddance” and one “magical wish” here, simply because I don’t want to skew the arena of consideration too much, but the ones I’ve picked hit the general field of ideas hard enough, as is:

Our TPPE Good Riddance To: 2013 – and what we hope will be the only season in history in which Houston fields the worst professional baseball and football clubs in the world of big league sports.

Our TPPE Magical Wish: That 2014 will see us find a way to save and preserve the Astrodome in a dignified, meaningful, and productive way.

Now, please step up to the plate yourself on these two points. And feel free to express as many “good riddances” as you have – and use that one magic wish wisely.

Most all. Have fun. We don’t get magical wishes everyday.

An Astrodome Note. Just a parting note on my Astrodome salvation wish: Most of the wisest people I know agree that the Astrodome is not going to be saved by all of us little guys with a million pleasant memories and can-clinking coin contributions. Some of our big money people are going to have to step up and kick the can down the street with their millions – or its not going to happen. – Therein rests the problem. – What is it going to take to attract their interest, attention, and commitment to the dual ideas of saving an architectural landmark that is internationally as important as the Eiffel Tower by instilling the old structure with a legitimate business venture?

It’s like a native Houstonian attorney friend of mine says: “Houston is home to some people with very deep pockets. Unfortunately, most of them have very short arms.”

Memorable Not So Famous Thoughts and Words

December 28, 2013
Texas Gov. Miriam "Ma" Ferguson

Texas Gov. Miriam “Ma” Ferguson

Miriam “Ma” Ferguson was elected as the first female Governor of the State of Texas in 1924 after her husband, Gov. James Ferguson was impeached and convicted of various improprieties in that same post. Running on a special election slogan that stated to the voters, “now you can have two governors for the price of one,” Ma was elected to her first term. She would subsequently be defeated after her first term (1925-27), for one thing, purportedly selling gubernatorial pardons, but she would later return for second helpings (1932-35). Ma’s not so famous memorable words are now suspected as fiction created by opponents who wished to characterize her as an uncaring buffoon, but my dad always shared them in some form with me as one of the truths he the truth he learned about her while he was a student at St. Edward’s in Austin during her first term. Dad was also proud of the fact that the Governor and her husband once picked him up hitchhiking on Congress Avenue and took him to class at St. Ed’s in the governor’s limo.

And, back to subject, here are those not-so-famous, but quite memorable words (or one version of them):

Asked by the press why she failed to support the initiation of bilingual education in the heavily Latino populated areas of South Texas, Ma Ferguson supposedly answered: “There’s no need for it. If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it ought to be good enough for the school children of Texas.”

220px-NixonLBJLibrary1971 Sometimes memorable words are the result of so-called “Freudian slips” of the tongue, when people speak out the unintended unconscious feelings they are having about a given moment in time. One of these moments probably occurred on May 22, 1971, when former President Lyndon Johnson was personally showing former President Richard Nixon around the grounds of the new LBJ Library in Austin on its dedication day. If you’ve ever seen the video of that moment, no explanation will be necessary.  One-on-one, LBJ was practically shoving the somber, but smiling Nixon from room to room, with his loud drawling voice leaving no room for hearing anything the silent Nixon may have wanted to say or ask.

The “slip” was an easy spot for all of us who both saw the presidential walk-around and then heard Nixon speak these words at the mike during the dedication ceremony. It came quick. In Nixon’s very first uttered sentence:

“A few minutes ago, while President Johnson was throwing me through this beautiful new library…”

Long Before NCIS LA

Long Before NCIS LA

Several years ago, in the ordinary, everyday local news broadcast world of reporting the latest cops and robbers events to their listeners, a Los Angeles radio broadcaster, whose name I’ve long since forgotten, finished up his report with words about the apprehension that I have found it impossible to forget:

“The arrest was made by Sgt. Joe Friday, a defective of the Los Angeles Police Farce.” *

* That’s right. I forgot the arresting officer’s actual name too. See “Freudian slip” explanation above for a deeper understanding of why I may have forgotten.

Paul Richards

Paul Richards

A good example here is pretty well-known in Houston and among baseball people, but it is worthy of an even larger recollection because of its wittiness. When the great Paul Richards was fired as General Manager of the Houston Astros in 1965 because the club did not live up to the expectations of principal owner Judge Roy Hofheinz, he was apparently inconsolable and angry over his abrupt dismissal. If memory serves, our nationally famous writer Mickey Herskowitz tried to help calm Richards with words that went along this familiar trail:

“Take it in stride, Paul,” said Mickey Herskowitz, in words to this effect, “sometimes the Judge is his own worst enemy!”

“Not as long as I’m alive, he isn’t!” Richards quickly responded.

Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Parker

And finally, for now, there’s one attributed to 1920s writer Dorothy Parker that will probably remain my all time favorite for its genius wit and spontaneity. Parker was a regular member of the Algonquin Club during the 1920s. The club amounted to a group of Manhattan writers who gathered at the Algonquin Hotel to drink lunch on an ongoing basis while they also shared stories and played mind games with each other. One day, the task was to make up complete sentences with certain obscure words that also contained an element of humor to them. Thinking they would stump Parker with this one, the word they gave her was “horticulture.”

Parker shot back immediately with, “You can lead a whore to culture, but you can’t make her think.”

Enough said.

I could go on all day, but will resist the possibility of again exceeding the attention spans of my readership, if, indeed, I have not done so already. Please kick in your own favorite memorable, but not-so-famous examples of words and thoughts worth remembering as comments on this column.

Much Adieu About Nothing

December 27, 2013

arch cloud

As the new year approaches, I am always reminded of past issues that no longer matter at all; little differences in our perception of time that never really get resolved on the emotional level; and things that have come into our lives that have have everything about how we live and made it different. They all qualify as subjects that add up together as “Much Adieu About Nothing”.

Allow me to demonstrate. Only time this morning prevents this one from becoming a much longer list:

1) Remember Y2K? For about the last five years of the 20th century, we went through this socio-scientific angst that all our new personal computer and business-governmental dependence upon the Internet was going to come crashing down with the onset of the 21st century because all our electronic data systems had been inadequately coded from the start to also reach their outer limit with the coming of the new millennium. Our fears about this total data collapse invited visions of a digital Armageddon with the coming of the new century in 2001.

Didn’t happen. The super geeks solved it. We flew into the 21st century without losing a thing, increasing our dependency on the new technology exponentially. We went from being a culture that disconnects from others on our own to one in which we use our ubiquitous cell phones for texting and Twitter as electronic ways to disconnect from people who are immediately present in preference for constant electronic contact with people we’ve never actually met.

2) High Definition Plasma TV. HDTV has done it. With big, wide, never clearer HD screens at play, it is now possible to watch movies and sports better at home and a lot more comfortably than at the theaters and ball parks. In fact, If you end up with a seat near the end zone at a place like Reliant Stadium in Houston, you will most likely end up watching most of the game on one of the two giant screens, and not on the field. Pretty soon, you will also figure out that you could be watching the game more comfortably at home – and without people standing up to block your view.

3) When does a new century begin and end? The 21st century began on January 1, 2001 and it will end upon the completion of December 31, 2100. Still, like it always has been, most or many people will again continue to see the start of the new century as arriving on January 1, 2100. The ongoing confusion is helped along by the fact that every century change is ushered in by an almost entirely new set of people than the ones who were here for the last big century jump.

4) Microwave Ovens. Our only son grew up completely after the coming of the microwave oven. One day, when he was about eight, he asked me: “Dad, how did people cook their food before we had the microwave?” It wasn’t surprising. This was the same kid that asked me at age five, “Was it hard getting from your car to inside of the mall when we still had dinosaurs?”

5) Personal Telephones. They have changed everything, even how we write plays, movies, and fictional books. Check out the classic movie channels sometime and witness how many old movie plots evolve around a character’s inability to get to a phone or borrow one. Can’t write that into a storyline today.

Please chip in your own favorite deal-breaker changes, inventions, or hard-to-grasp simple points that keep recurring.

Another MLB Realignment Suggestion

December 26, 2013
Maybe Game 5 will produce the first 40 run inning in World Series history!

Relief Pitching? Realignment or not, we don’t need no stinkin’ relief pitching in Houston! … Guess why!

From a purely selfish standpoint, the 2013 left a lot of us Astros fans with our blood running cold for the American League and it wasn’t just the “DH” rule that did it. What got me the most was the quality of our team’s play and the nuisance fact that I couldn’t even follow the team on TV to look for signs of hope in the future. Throw in the fact that I don’t care a rip for the teams in the American League West, or staying up to listen to radio broadcasts of losing baseball from the west coast and 2013 added up to little more than a psychological reconditioning exorcism for the mental illness of “fandom rabidity” (DSMR Diagnostic Manual Code 463.64 – or something like that.)

It’s the kind of negative development that always leads me back in fool’s hope that MLB could, at least, rearrange the league alignments back to something that returns all the inter-league scheduling options back to the two leagues and removes it from the Commissioner’s Office and vests it in two reborn strong league presidents. Look – I know that’s not going to happen, but do like to bring it up as the prime example of what has been destroyed on the watch of Commissioner Bud Selig.

How long do you seriously think that the NL could hold out against serious pressure from Selig’s forces if Bud, or a like-thinking successor, ever decides he wants to force the DH on the NL? Remember the coercion that Selig put on Jim Crane as the condition for approval on his purchase of the Astros? Selig made him an offer he couldn’t refuse. It was either move to the American League for a few million less purchase price dollars – or “for-ged-aboud-it”!

They may as well realign the game along the same lines as the NFL. Only, in baseball, the new big name would be “American League Baseball” (ALB), and the two leagues would then melt into the no longer distinctive American and National Baseball Conferences.

Realistically, the two leagues may never again have the individual power they each once enjoyed. Any hope they have for same is locked away by that Astros forced move to the AL. That one gave us two 15-club leagues and took away all practical options to inter-league play. Now there has to be an inter-league game built into each schedule change in the season because of the uneven matching 15 membership numbers in each league. Add to it the desire of each league to operate with three even-numbered divisions and it means that each league would need to either downsize  to 12 clubs each or expand up to 18 clubs each to achieve an even-numbers balance for attractive fair competition that could restore the option, to play or not to play, inter-league ball during any given season.

With some help from the 2010 census data, I came up with six new areas that minimally matched the kind of populations and locations that might work to serve the needs for MLB expansion. I did not try to analyze all the political factors that could work against, at least, one of the new locations, nor did I deal with the fact that one of the new sites (San Jose) is currently being eyed by Oakland as their new home. And except for moving Houston back to the NL and taking Texas with them, I did not attempt to wholly realign the major leagues.

The six new franchise areas I selected are noted in bold type in the chart below and they include: Orlando, FL; Las Vegas, NV; Portland, OR; Sacramento, CA; San Antonio, TX; and San Jose, CA.

Chart Showing One Possible Realignment of MLB into 36 clubs in Two Leagues with 18 Members Each:

AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST EAST
1) BALTIMORE 1) ATLANTA
2) BOSTON 2) MIAMI
3} NEW YORK YANKEES 3) NEW YORK METS
4) ORLANDO 4) PHILADELPHIA
5) TAMPA BAY 5) PITTSBURGH
6) TORONTO
6) WASHINGTON
CENTRAL CENTRAL
1) CHICAGO WHITE SOX 1) CHICAGO CUBS
2) CLEVELAND 2} CINCINNATI
3) DETROIT 3) HOUSTON
4) KANSAS CITY 4) SAN ANTONIO
5) MILWAUKEE 5) ST. LOUIS
6) MINNESOTA 6) TEXAS
WEST WEST
1) LAS VEGAS 1) ARIZONA
2) LOS ANGELES ANGELS 2) COLORADO
3) OAKLAND 3) LOS ANGELES DODGERS
4) PORTLAND 4) SAN DIEGO
5) SACRAMENTO 5) SAN FRANCISCO
6) SEATTLE 6) SAN JOSE

Happy New 2014 Wish # 1, Everybody!

An All Seasons Greeting

December 24, 2013

Santa-Claus-christmas-2736312-1024-768

Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanza, Happy New Year, and Happy Holidays! – Whatever floats your boat. – Mine just happens to sail best on “MERRY CHRISTMAS” and these sincere wishes to all of you:

May your days be merry and bright!

May you know peace and joy in every square inch of your infinite heart and soul!

May you know good health, prosperity and restful contentment and acceptance with your state of mortal existence in a physical body and its surrounding finite world.

May you continue to experience growth in your wisdom that life is not about getting rich at any cost, but about passionate giving of yourself to life in whatever good ways beckon to your own open channels to the call.

May you also grow in your understanding that Love is always with you on this trip – and that you take it into you with every breath of sweet air you inhale.

May you always find comfort in the knowledge that we raise our children to let them go. It is not our job to find a future for our children that will make us feel comfortable with our accomplishment as parents. It is rather our job to do what we can to lay a foundation for their own search for self and personal growth. We can only act as “Indiana Jones” or “Nelson Mandela” in our own behalf. Our kids must do that job for themselves, using their own role models and metaphors as everyday guides.

May we always come to understand the spiritual gold that is hoping to force itself upon us from everything we experience in life as “defeat, disappointment, betrayal, failure, anxiety, depression, jealousy, envy, laziness, regret, angry reprisal (incoming and outgoing), vengeance, revenge, perfectionism, pride, the relentless need to please others, or any other emotional stress that causes us pain.” By any name, pain is always trying serve us up the lesson of our experience. When we learn the lesson, we get to move on as healthier, more freedom-bound souls. When we fail to see or get the lesson, the penalty is that we get to see it again in some form – until we finally get it – or we go broke, go crazy, or die from our prideful aversion to the truth about our own responsibility for setting in motion patterns of behavior that are bad for us over time.

Finally, may we all come to keep in mind that now is the only time we have – and that the present is the only true moment for love and life. We neither love nor breathe, yesterday or tomorrow. We love and breathe now – in the present – or we do not love and breathe at all. – Is “today” enough of life for any of us? – It had better be. – It is all we have.

We cannot capture what is yet to be with our promises. We cannot regain what might have been with our regrets. If its do-able, we must either do it now, from one tick of the present to the next, or else, turn it over to the part of our ego-dominated mind that will take our procrastination in and convert it, one more time, into a regret about the past and a promise about the future.

Don’t do anything, for money or service, that your heart is not into all the way.

If something’s not good for you, find a way to let it go. Then let it be. And enjoy your life. With every breath you take.

Merry Christmas with Love,

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

1954: Idahoans Report Strange Lights

December 23, 2013
"Hello, Earthlings! - With the New Year coming, get ready to hallucinate like it's 1954!"

“Hello, Earthlings! – With the New Year coming, get ready to hallucinate like it’s 1954!”

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Idahoans Report Strange Lights

Idaho Falls (UP) – Strange lights have been sighted in the skies near Idaho Falls again – this time by officials of the Trinity Methodist Church.

The Rev. Miss Ernestine Hitchcock, assistant church pastor, said she saw a brilliant white light moving across the sky Wednesday night. It was also witnessed by Mrs. Mary Ann Moore, secretary of the church.

Bill McCurdy, Idaho Falls, said he and three passengers saw an orange light explode beside his car earlier this week. He was about four miles west of the AEC (Atomic Energy Commission) site at the time, he said.

~ United Press, Kalispell (Idaho) Daily Inter Lake, January 10, 1954, Page 2.

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So, what does this all mean? It was 1954 and two devoted church ladies living out there in the boondocks of Idaho, near the AEC site, took the time to report a mysterious white light moving across the western night sky. As Dana Carvey so often exclaimed in his church lady character, “Isn’t that special?”

Then, wouldn’t you just know it, a guy named Bill McCurdy and his three traveling buddies actually get to witness an exploding orange light beside his car while driving only four miles from the AEC Idaho site!

Makes me wonder about all those Pecan Park Eagles I saw coasting across the skies of Southeast Houston off the Gulf Freeway when I was growing up after World War II. – Who knows? Maybe they weren’t eagles after all. Just maybe, like these credible UFO Idaho sightings from 1954 reported again here, they too were all part of a larger plan for the invasion of earth by beings from an alien world!

Maybe the Eagles were simply part of what the great Rod Serling used to call – The Twilight Zone.

Twas the Night Before Christmas, in 2013

December 22, 2013
"Super Santa's Coming to Town"

“Super Santa’s Coming to Town”

Christmas Eve in Houston – at each and every house,

Not a fan’s wish was deferring – this year had been a louse.

Their new dreams were now hung – by the chimney with care,

In hopes that St. Superman – soon would be there.

 

The sports fans were soft-nestled – all snug in their beds,

While visions of sweet victory – danced in their heads.

And mamma in her Texans jersey – and I in my Astros cap,

Had just liquified our brains – for a long winter’s nap.

 

When out on the lawn – there arose such a clatter,

I sprang from our bed – to investigate the matter.

Away to the window – I flew like a flash,

Tore open the shutters – and threw up the sash.

 

The moon on the breast of the new-fallen rain

(The stuff doesn’t freeze here. – Do I need to explain?)

When, what to my wondering eyes should appear,

But a miniature sleigh – and eight tiny reindeer.

 

With a handsome young driver – so lively and quick,

I knew in a moment – shoulda’ brought my best BIC!

More rapid than eagles – his coursers they came,

And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name!

 

“Now, Astro! – Now, Texan! – Now, Rocket! – Now Go, Dy-Na-Mo!

On, Cougar! – On, Rice Owl! ! – On Tiger! – All-The-Rest-You-Know!

To the top of the porch! – To the top of the wall!

Now dash away! Dash away! Dash away all!”

 

As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,

When they meet with an obstacle – mount to the sky.

So up to the house-top – the coursers they flew,

With the sleigh full of Dreams – and Superman too.

 

And then, in a twinkling – I heard on the roof,

The prancing and pawing – of each little hoof.

As I drew in my head – and was turning around,

Down the chimney – St Super – he came with a bound.

 

He was dressed all in blue – with a very red cape,

And his clothes were all tarnished – with ashes and soot.

A bundle of Dreams – he had flung on his back,

And he looked like a peddler – just opening his pack.

 

His eyes – how they riveted! – His smile? – not so merry!

But his cheeks were like roses – and his nose like a cherry!

His droll little mouth – was drawn into a crack!

And the curl on his forehead – was ebony black.

 

The stump of a pipe – he held tight in his teeth,

And the smoke – it encircled – his head like a wreath.

He had a long face – and six-guns for ABS,

A real man of steel – why the smoking man tabs?

 

“The smoke that you see – isn’t coming from me,

It escapes from the dreams that you seek.

As long as dreams tie – to that look in your eye,

Your chances – for glory – are bleak.”

 

He said nothing else – but went straight to his work,

And filled all the stockings – then turned like a jerk.

And laying his hand – aside of his nose,

He nodded goodbye – as his middle finger rose!

 

He sprang to his sleigh – to his team gave a whistle,

And away they all flew – like the down of a thistle.

But I heard him exclaim – ‘ere he drove out of sight,

“Happy Christmas to all – and to all – a good-night!”

 

“On, Springer! – On, Keenum!

On, Ching! – And On, Howard!

Bring True Grit to Houston!

We’ve no room for cowards!”


                                                                                                                                                       

 

Aerial Ghost of The Wild Blue Yonder

December 21, 2013
The P-51 Mustang

The P-51 / Mustang

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SPEEDY MUSTANG PLANES, TERRORS OF DIEPPE, BRING THRILLS TO GREAT CROWDS

LOS ANGELES, CAL., SEPTEMBER 9, 1942 (AP) – A camouflaged streak of light flashed down from the east, whipped across the Los Angeles airport at 40 feet or less, then zoomed up into the haze to the west today.

It was a North American fighter plane, the type our army air forces prosaically call the P-51 and the RAF has more romantically labeled the Mustang. “You may say,” said the AAF representative at this first public showing of the terrors of Dieppe, “that it is very fast. You may. in fact, tell anything you can see while the plane is in flight.”

That is a severe limitation, because the Mustang in flight is little more than a blur. You can say it has engine – Allison, 1150 horsepower, liquid cooled – because you can hear it roar. You can say it has wings – square-cut, not unlike the nazi’s Messerschmidtt 109 – because you can see it fly.

You can say it has armament – because it was the first United States fighter plane to bring down a German Focke-Wulf 190 over Dieppe, (in) one of the many dogfights that accompanied the Commando raid of Aug. 19 (1942). It also has been chosen by the RAF for army co-operational work in reconnaissance and ground strafing.

You can say it has defensive armor – because the AAF sees to it that our pilots have the maximum protection possible.

You can say it is fast – in what the army calls the”400 mph class.” You can say it is being produced in quantity – because that is what it was designed for.

When you have said that, you have said virtually all that security considerations will permit.

Four Mustangs took part in today’s show, with three of their big-brother B-25s – similar to Doolittle’s Tokyo Raiders and fresh off the production line this morning – as background accompaniment.

The B-25 Bomber

The B-25 Bomber

On the ground as spectators were press and photographers, army and plant officials, and several thousand workers who got a bigger belt than anyone out of seeing their handiwork in action.

Mustang acrobatics were executed with commendable smoothness by Bob Chilton of Boise, Idaho, one of North American’s engineering test pilots. The other three planes, which made a tight V-run over the field at well under 300 feet, were flown by Capts. B.R. Eckstein of Los Angeles, C.R. Douglass of Winchester, Va., and L.W. Harris of San Diego, of the AAF.

~ Associated Press, Galveston Daily News, Thursday, September 10, 1942, Page 14

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