Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Warning to my friends regarding COMMENTS
I've reported this to Blogspot twice (because if it's happening to me, it's happening to others) but they have completely ignored my messages.
Gunga la gunga, as they say.
Thursday, February 21, 2008
I'm frozen to the ground, and very happy about it!
It's winter in Yellowstone
And the gentle breezes blow
Seventy miles an hour
At twenty-five below
Oh, how I love Yellowstone
When the snow's up to your butt
You take a breath of winter
And your nose gets frozen shut
Yes, the weather here is wonderful
So I guess I'll hang around
I could never leave Yellowstone
'Cause I'm frozen to the ground!!
~author unknown
(Passed on to me by a friend; if you know the origin please tell me!)
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
For my friend MRINZ

I took this photo from the air on the approach to Salt Lake City in February of 2007. Around that time I was having a bunch of molars crowned. This absolute desecration made me think of what the dentist must have seen as he fixed things in the back of my mouth. It's certainly what it felt like to my half-numb tongue.
It is also strongly reminiscent of Mrinz's photo of the gold mine near her New Zealand home. Of course, being Americans, we have to do everything bigger (preferably biggest) if not better. The Kennecott Copper mine has the distinction of being the world's largest man made excavation and is featured by the state of Utah as an attraction!
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
What I like best about the word sycophant
Sorry, I'm not in a generous mood right now.
Saturday, February 2, 2008
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Society, in general
Monday, January 21, 2008
Year in year out

Just about a year ago I was doing what I am doing today, preparing a very large (more or less 600-page) and complex application for grant funding from the National Institutes of Health. I'm still coming up for air as I did last year by peering periodically at Web cams pointed at my favorite landmarks in and around Yellowstone National Park. I've frequently captured shots from Coolworks' offices at Corwin Springs, Montana, pointed magnificent Electric Peak inside the borders of Yellowstone National Park. Here it is today in all its exquisite beauty. It's been a truly proper winter - appropriately cold and snowy - the first in years in the region. The thermometer on Coolworks' page says it's -17o F. LET IT SNOW!!!
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Ize on the Prize for Worst Dressed

Photo from today's e-Daily Mail, thank you very much.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
The Universe, and everything
Thinking back on it, this is how I have always felt, though I couldn't articulate my thoughts until I got the vocabulary by being married to a (non-religious) physicist. In spite of my interest in his work, I don't think I ever heard him talk about, maybe because he never actually felt, the beauty of mathematics in this particular way.
My parents were avowed atheists. My mother was mostly benign about it, and had not a spiritual bone in her body. My father was assertively anti-religion. He considered any kind of spirituality a symptom of religiosity and a serious character flaw. Perhaps if they had a greater understanding of mathematics (though unusually accomplished people, both were nincompoops even at arithmetic), their lives, and so also mine, would have been very different.
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Good grief! Good Kharma!
Not much later, on my way down to the laundry room I saw a bag of groceries somebody had left in the elevator. It was just a few cans of tomatoes, some onions, and potatoes: Sunday stew-makings. So I rescued the staples and put a sign in the elevator so the owner can find me and claim them. So far, no knocks.
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
A sense of place

For Christmas I was given a lovely book, The Artists of Brown County, by Lyn Letsinger-Miller, with the introduction written by a childhood friend, Rachel Perry.
The book includes, in addition to nice reproductions of gorgeous, evocative oils and works in other media, numbers of photographs of the artists and of scenes from Brown County (Indiana), most from the first third of the 20th century, long before I came along to notice and take in my surroundings. What strikes me above all about these images is how little Brown County, and much of neighboring Monroe County, Indiana, where I grew up, had changed even by the 1960s. Now, of course, the story is quite different. But when I was a teenager, and had my first wheels, I spent untold hours exploring and relishing what I found along the back roads there.
Back when I was consumed by the fires of adolescence, my friends and I thought Bloomington and Nashville and beyond to Martinsville and even Indianapolis (pronounced, locally, Innynaplis) were the most distant of provinces, the most forgotten of backwaters, as out of the mainstream as one could get. This, of course, was not truly the situation, but reflected only our interpretation of the old, old rural way of life we saw that has in fact now become a source of sentimentality for us.
It also inspired me to think about the places that have deepest meaning to me. They are: Bloomington, where I was born, and nearby Brown County, Indiana; Martha’s Vineyard, where I learned to treasure Nature’s glory; Puerto Rico, where my mother’s roots were; Chicago, where I have lived for very close to 40 years; and above all, my newest and possibly deepest connection, the Greater Yellowstone area. Nice to ruminate about on Christmas afternoon.
The photo is of a T.C. Steele painting that I took at the The House of the Singing Winds, T.C. Steele State Historic Site, Nashville, Indiana, in 2005.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Oh, that wild and whacky midwestern English!
I often hear, on Chicago's classical radio station WFMT and elsewhere, references to snottas. As in, Wolfgang Amadaeus Mozart's Trio Snotta.
This morning I was surprised to hear a TV spot advertising treatment for reptile dysfunction. God knows, we can't abide dysfunctional reptiles!
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Cultural revolution from South Africa
From Tsotsi, Presley Chweneyagae and Terry Pheto are actors to watch. Chweneyagae, though only 21 or 22 at the time the film was made, appears as the prematurely aged ganster-thug, Tsotsi. Pheto is stunningly lovely as the widow of bountiful breast, Miriam. And Hood deserves kudos perhaps most of all for knowing exactly when to stop.
Afterthought: Both Princess Magogo and Tsotsi are the fruits of black-white collaborations and cultural mixes. South Africa is a country to watch.
Monday, December 10, 2007
On the matter of naming babies

A colleague in Seoul, South Korea, and his wife recently had a baby girl. Here is the first message I received from him about her name:
"My wife and I have selected five names in Korean for our baby girl. After checking whether these names are matched well with appropriate Chinese characters, we will choose her name."
Today I received the following message about their decision:
"We have named her Na Yun. Na means an apple tree, and Yun means the sunlight. So, her full name means an apple tree under the sunlight."
Apple Tree under the Sunlight has to be one of the most beautiful, evocative names I've ever heard.
(Photo courtesy of her father, photographer unknown)
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Waterways Wednesday






