photo


3
Aug 14

And, now, for a funny story

My great-aunt and great-uncle are a pair of Southern archetypes. She is a the sweet kind of lady who raised two daughters, worked in an auction house and at the courthouse and took care of a neat little house with an inside dog and a pool out back. She has a syrupy accent that is difficult to reproduce. He is a gentleman farmer. He’d sailed into Pearl Harbor not too long after the nation figured out what Pearl Harbor was. He used to let us “ice skate” on his frozen pond, but you’d always get a second opinion from someone else. “Is that pond really frozen through?” He’s a rascal, the good kind, and is forced to be a good sport because of all the ribbing he does of others. To know them is to love them.

Recently, my great-uncle walked out to his garage, went inside, sat in his car, cranked it, put it in reverse and backed out.

Without opening the garage door.

My aunt says she glanced out the window to see him kicking the garage door, bang, bang, bang, BANG. He could have been trying to undo the damage or just kicking the things that need to be kicked after you crash into your garage. She thought he was having a fit.

So the full story goes on and it is bigger than life and cleaner than the countryside they live in and it is perfectly funny.

Today, after church, we drove over to visit them for a few minutes. No one was home. That little dog was barking inside, but all of the cars were gone. I made the joke about how, as I turned around in their driveway, I could back into the garage again or, if I went the other way, back into the garage that is attached to the house.

Instead, we remembered there was a roll of duct tape in the trunk. And, what do you know, there is duct tape all over the garage, too.

garage

I said, “Wouldn’t it be great if we had some giant bandaids … ”

There was no need. As we looked closer, someone had taken a handful of adhesive bandages, probably from the kind of first aid kit that you stow in the trunk of your car, and attached them to the artwork.

But, really, to set off the effort, there should be a message on the tape. And, sure enough, as we looked closer we saw a little note. It looked like it had been painted on with a tiny little brush.

As we left we passed my great-aunt who was returning home from church herself. We only missed her by about 90 seconds or so. We got home to a voicemail about what someone had done to his garage, how it gotten that way while he was at church and they were just sure my mother might have done it.

Only she had not.

Well. It could have been anyone. His son-in-law denied it. He’s a very nice guy, but he just looks like the type. Any of his family could have done it. They’d like nothing more than to get one over on one of their own. Really, it could have been anyone that had heard the story from my great-aunt, and the whole thing was so humorous, how could you blame her for telling everyone about his driving habits?

He’s a good sport and takes it in stride. Their daughter sent us this picture:

garage

We surely needed the laugh. I told you my grandmother delighted in practical jokes. She’d approve of this one, too, we think.

But she might have used more duct tape.


27
Jul 14

Catching up

The post where I place leftover pictures that haven’t yet found a home.

Our friend that got engaged yesterday invited all of his friends and her friends and their families downtown. He’d sent her off on a scavenger hunt, chasing down a series of love letters he’d written her at places that have been important to them. Meanwhile, everyone else had gotten organized and created posters and lined the first block of campus. Most everyone’s notes were sweet and special things about the nice person she is, or how she makes his heart go pitter patter and that sort of thing. We went with comic relief:

road

It was a really cute idea.

The brick wall downtown, picturesque as ever:

WE

A woman bought one thing, and then did this with it. I bet she’s a lot of fun:

store

Clever restroom graffiti I found some time back downtown:

scrawl


26
Jul 14

I well and truly bonked on my ride today

Saw this near the top, not at the top, but near the top. of the biggest hill I climbed today:

road

It seemed a cruel place for such a message. And I wasn’t even on the bike ride that needed the note. But, high sun, heat of the day, and there’s still more hill to go. Have a rest stop. Only you can’t, because this spray paint is old. That’s the way it goes sometimes.

On the other side of the hill you are rewarded, of course. It must be nearly a mile of descending:

road

And I bonked miles from home. That’s a lonely feeling.

This evening we were invited to campus to watch something historic:

road

It was just another sweet reminder of the nice people all over this special place we get to enjoy.


23
Jul 14

A return to 1898

Last year I published this photograph:

Van Ness

It was the second in a series of posts about photos I found in my 1898 Glomerata, which is Auburn’s yearbook, of which I have a humble collection. The first post was here. (I have three more from that book that I scanned to share here, but I’d forgotten about them until just now.)

I say all of this to mention an email I received today. A nice lady from Wisconsin is doing genealogical research on some of her in-laws and one of the guys in this picture is her man, Franklin Waters Van Ness, and did I know which one he might be.

He’s the guy who is sitting. He was the captain of the API track team. At an inter-mural field day against six other schools he won the half mile, running it in two minutes and five seconds. But, I said, that was all the yearbook had on him. This was both a surprise and not surprising. They never really seem perfectly complete, but, also, the school was so small back then, and so many names pop up more than once, that you imagine he’d been in there somewhere, but I can’t find him.

So I asked what she knew about F.W. Van Ness. My previous post had some information that I’d read from research that she’d posted on findagrave.com. She wrote back right away:

He and his brother moved to Chicago where they were engineers. Franklin was also an efficiency expert. Franklin met Jennie Sullivan there. She was a teacher. They married in Chicago and the three children were born there. The family then moved to Milwaukee where Jennie was instrumental in developing playgrounds at the schools. They then moved to East Orange, New Jersey. Franklin is on the 1920 census twice. I think he was also in Cincinnati, as well as East Orange, but he traveled for his work.

Being a southerner, he loved the south, and bought that cotton mill (in North Carolina), which went bust during the Depression. They had lived very wealthy lives until that point.

[…]

(H)e ended up in Richmond, Virginia, and I don’t know why or what he did until his death.

[…]

He was certainly a smart guy and very motivated until the Depression took the steam out of him.

One of his daughters became a success in the hospitality industry, writing a book and giving college lectures on hotel work. Another daughter married an admiral and an ambassador. Franklin’s wife, Jenny, a suffragist and prohibitionist, was one of the first two female legislators in New Jersey. This is an interesting family.

Where Franklin Waters Van Ness is buried is a mystery, so I started Googling the man once more. Where I once again came up empty.

But I did find out something about Franklin’s brother, Graham Van Ness, that she didn’t know. She knew he’d served in the 2nd Missouri during the Spanish American War, but her trail went cold. Here’s the actual muster roster with his name on it. His unit only made it as far as Georgia, where another guy in the 2nd Missouri was famous for being Jesse James’ son. The story goes that people would often visit his unit to take pictures of him. This gives us a small world moment. I’m apparently related to Jesse James, so my relative would have known my new email friend’s relative. Except not. Apparently, the essay notes, this was a trick played by one of the jokers in that unit. But small world!

I found all that because I found a mention of Franklin as F.W. Van Ness in the story covering the suicide or murder of Graham. They were brothers and, the Burlington Daily News explains, Graham had witnessed the murder of Jack Lingle. This was a huge story in Chicago and Graham was apparently on the run from hitmen. Lingle was a well-to-do reporter … and a friend of Al Capone.

van ness

She said another of Franklin’s brothers was murdered in Texas. And another part of the family features a man who made his money in oil and natural gas before branching out into shipping, real estate and S&Ls and buying the Dallas Cowboys. Some family tree.

All of that, and more, I learned today because of a 115 year-old-photo I published last year.


21
Jul 14

Melts in the package, disappears

I think every kitchen has them, the cabinets no one ever really opens. When I was a child they were those spaces above the refrigerator. One of my grandmothers has cabinets that are entirely in violation of the feng shui of her kitchen, if she’d ever heard the word when she had the cabinets installed, far off to the right of everything and practically on the porch. My other grandmother, I imagine, has some low cabinets she seldom uses. You likely have some too. Your glasses and plates are over there. Your junk drawer is here, the occasional small appliances are stored just so and of course all of that stuff under the sink. But then there’s the hodgepodge cabinet, the one that you forget about when you lament for more space.

Ours is a left-handed cabinet, in particular the high shelves. Everything else in the kitchen moves to the right, and the spices are in the one next to it so, really, we already have everything we need in life.

But occasionally you need that giant bowl. And that means that occasionally I have to wash it and, later, put it away.

Doing that this evening I found a smaller bowl inside the larger bowls and inside the bowl was a handful of candy.

You’ve been hiding your stash, I said, thinking it was Halloween candy.

“We’ve been hiding that from ourselves and you should probably throw that out,” The Yankee laughed, telling me where we got it, which instantly dated the stuff.

So I ditched most of the stuff, but kept the one that featured the protective candy shell. A perfect dessert! Tear open the bag and receive:

candy

That’s not really a lot of fun, but everyone has a different scale. I’d say it is more Bemused Size.

Things to read … because reading always brings fun or bemusement.

Mighty George Gring is now Cam Newton’s Mom’s favorite football player:

Looking back, it’s prophetic that Clayton and Katherine Gring of Houston nicknamed their oldest son “Mighty George” when he was born.

Maybe it’s his quick sense of humor, or the sparkle in his blue eyes, or his positive attitude. In any case, there’s something about him that naturally draws people to him. “He’s a little bit magnetic that way,” Clayton Gring said of his 6-year-old son.

These lists never include the word “that” or most adjectives. Nevertheless, 10 words to cut from your writing

A relaunch for The New Yorker, with high stakes:

The new site is the largest overhaul of newyorker.com in years, Thompson said. The last redesign, Thompson said, occurred before he switched from the print side to the web, and was little more than a “fairly minor reskinning.”

The current relaunch has been in the works for about a year, Thompson said, and it’s been in intensive development since the magazine brought on Michael Donohoe as Director of Product Engineering in January. Donohoe, who was hired from Atlantic Media’s Quartz, has been working full-time on the new site for the past seven months, Thompson said.

Every post, in Thompson’s opinion, should apply the magazine’s superlative sensibilities at Internet publishing speeds. “We want it to feel like the best-written story you’re going to read,” he said.

Still, the speed of the Internet necessitates some sacrifice. Overall, posts on NewYorker.com are subjected to a less rigorous editing process than magazine articles are.

They’ve got the talent, and they’ve convinced a lot of people on their payroll to shift their thinking, which is a victory of its own. I hope this works out.

Lawmakers passed it. Aviation experts criticized it. The TSA says they didn’t want it: TSA fee on plane tickets more than doubles.

There is some great data here, now we just have to sort it all out and make sense of it. Dollars per student is something of a simplistic metric, I’d think. See which Alabama school systems spend the most — and the least — educating your children:

Public records provided by the Alabama State Department of Education show significant disparities in per-pupil spending between public school systems statewide.

Due to variations in state, federal and local tax funding, the state’s highest spending school district spent $13,084 per student in fiscal 2013 while its lowest spending district spent $7,201 based on average daily attendance.

That’s a difference of 45 percent.

There are some issues of local monies and political will, but, all the same, that’s a huge variance worth addressing.

Tech links:

20 WordPress Plugins You Can Install Today for Easier Sharing, Better Posting, and a More Powerful Blog

Here’s how Facebook pitched brands on buying ‘likes’ in 2011

Facebook adds a ‘buy’ button

And, now, off to the Monday dinner party!