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11
Oct 10

The Indian burial ground

Our home is haunted. And we’ve terribly angered some spirit that also lives here. This is the only logical conclusion.

First it was just bad work. Then a failure to follow instructions. Then bad luck. And now, I’m convinced we’re on some holy ground that never should have seen a house built in this place.

The first item, previously discussed here was a bad replacement effort on our part when it came to light air conditioner work. Then I broke the shower head, which yielded a much larger, funnier and more frustrating repair job that I never wrote about here.

Suffice it to say that you don’t want a plumber to come to your house on a Sunday night. That can get expensive. Fortunately the home insurance covered it.

After that it was the refrigerator. And here we were beginning to get suspicious.

Now the problem is the dishwasher, the previously steady, unremarkable but reliable dishwasher. It just decided not to do its job last night.

So I spent the late evening hours taking it apart. And my investigation yielded one truth: I can’t fix it myself.

Sealed it up last night and spent a little time investigating the possibilities today. The motor turns. The drain is clear. The float switch is free. What do you think the problem might be? I explained it all and asked this question of two appliance places. Neither had any real idea. One was very helpful, printing off schematics that showed what might be the problem, but upon further inspection doesn’t seem to be the case. Another was an old man who’s just hanging on. He has an appliance shop, the kind of place that 85 percent of the people probably pass on their way to Sears to buy a new deep freezer. The shop hasn’t been the recipient of any work since the 1970s. The man himself was straight out of the late 1960s. All of his prices were contemporary, however. He tried, but he came up grasping for straws, too.

The person that fixes it will probably not be those people. My guess is that the problem is the timer, which I understand can fail, or suddenly a power supply issue, for which I can’t test because of the configuration.

Or we’re living on a burial ground.

Spent the afternoon reading conference papers and checking in on one of my grandmothers, who had a little surgery done today. She’s doing great this evening, but could still use a prayer and a positive thought, if you don’t mind.

In that process I’ve learned there is a segment of my family, old and young, that hasn’t found the need to set up their cell phone’s voicemail. I’d just assumed everyone did that, and created a custom wallpaper on the first day with their new phone.

That’s what you’d do, right?

So there’s the Monday history. I’m still working my way through the Pine Hill Cemetery. There’s just mountains of local history under the stones there and I still have about a third of the place to walk. I’ll give you three of the finds today and a few more next week.

Ross

The first thing you need to know about Bennett Battle Ross, here, is that he was actually a Bennett, junior. His father, Bennett, was a methodist minister. The dad attended nearby Lagrange College and became a professor of English literature at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Auburn) in 1872 when Junior was six.

Junior, then, was educated at API, the University of Chicago and abroad. He became API’s assistant chemist, and then a professor of chemistry at LSU. He’d return to Auburn as professor of chemistry in 1893, served as the dean of agricultural sciences, the state chemist and university president for a brief time. He was in every chemistry society in the world, it seems, and, because he was popular, served as a director of the local bank and cotton mill.

Ross

That’s Ross, a dashing looking guy, from my 1925 Glomerata.

Auburn’s Ross Hall, built in the year of his death, is named in his honor. It was for years the chemistry building, but after a recent renovation now houses engineering and administrative offices. Check out some through-the-years pictures of Ross Hall.

The interesting ones there are from the building’s construction in 1930 compared to a 1957 photograph. If you’re familiar with the campus the difference between 1930 to 1957 is much greater than the one between that 1957 picture and the supporting 1979 photograph. That’s the case for a lot of the world, though.

McAdory

This one is both prominent local history and slim, indirect personal history. Isaac Sadler McAdory’s father, Isaac Wellington McAdory, is the namesake of the high school I attended near Birmingham. After the Civil War — during which he served in the Jonesboro Guard, Company H of the 28th Alabama Infantry Regiment and saw action in Mississippi, Kentucky and, most prominently, in Tennessee at Chickamauga and Nashville and Georgia in various battles surrounding Atlanta — he founded his own school, Pleasant Hill Academy. It crops up as a fairly prominent regional 19th century school in post-bellum history.

His son, Dr. Isaac Sadler McAdory, was Auburn’s second dean of veterinary medicine, working at the university for more than 48 years.

McAdory

That’s McAdory in the 1936 Glomerata, his first appearance there. The university’s large animal clinic is named after him.

Camp

Edmund Camp’s marker says he was the first textile engineering graduate in the western hemisphere (at Georgia Tech). It’s an odd sounding thing, but true. He managed mills in Georgia and would go on to found the textile engineering program at Texas Tech and then started the program at Auburn in 1929. These days it is called polymer and fiber engineering where they’re doing cool things like improving the strength of vehicle armor to help keep soldiers safer.

Camp

Camp was also an Auburn graduate, earning his master’s degree from A.P.I. in chemical engineering in 1935. That picture is from the 1931 Glomerata. Unfortunately there isn’t much more to tell. Even though he was a chemist and an engineer, I have the feeling his story might be a good one, but the Internet doesn’t know it.

I bet he could fix my dishwasher.


10
Oct 10

Catching up

Roses

Flowers on the lovely Samford University campus.

Timemachine

Later, he is going back to the future. He needs to find 1.21 gigawatts.

SixMile

This gas station is the only shot at groceries for miles around. Six, to be exact.

farmland

Shooting from the hip, as it were, in the middle of nowhere.

Drugstore

Looks like someone is a Mason … I hadn’t even noticed that driving by, being much more interested in the bright signage.

X

They’ll explain everything in an owner’s manual if you’ll stop to read the thing.

Sunset

And after this I drove in darkness for 20 minutes.

Allie

Upside down cat reads upside down.

Allie

She doesn’t go outside, but she’s hunting in her mind.


9
Oct 10

Football, via Twitter

Football on Twitter, copied and pasted for posterity. Tennessee at Georgia in the morning, Alabama at South Carolina in the afternoon and then a night of craziness as LSU visited Florida and Auburn went to Lexington looking for revenge against Kentucky.

The Twitter updates are in blockquotes. Anything that needed further thought is bold.

Football cake

Les Miles eats these. Next week he’ll try to eat the real thing. Somehow, this will win him a football game.

Mark Richt’s Bulldogs look like world-beaters today. Too bad they can’t book Tennessee for 12 games each fall.

Can anyone explain the internal logic for ESPN3 blackouts? I mean, besides there not being one?

And that was the morning, really, that and Dean Foy. In the afternoon …

Hey Alabama? South Carolina is calling. They’ve got your number.

Somebody in Columbia send me a garnett Beat Bama shirt, mmkay?

Spurrier’s back, baby!

Just saw a guy in an Auburn shirt cheering at Brice Stadium. War Eagle, sir.

When did Gary Danielson replace Barry Krauss on the Tide Network? #coloranalysthomer

Double bad news for Alabama: trailing at South Carolina and that big Penn State win looks less than impressive. Zook beat PSU badly today.

Spurrier just benched Garcia so hard in his mind … (Upon the instance of Garcia’s safety.)

When was the last time Alabama’s defense was gashed like this? Been awhile.

Ballgame. (Upon the instance of Bama failing to convert on a fake field goal.)

Danielson Summary: Bama cheats, Carolina still gets it done.

Alabama fans commence saying many things to soothe themselves for losing to Stephen Garcia.

JUST thinking that. RT @victoriacumbow @StevenStiefel I can see it on Nick Saban’s face: “Who am I gonna blame for this?”

SC beat Bama with their defensive line, wide receivers and backfield. Know who’s are as good or better? #wareagle

Tomorrow’s Tuscaloosa meme, today: Tide were looking ahead to Ole Miss.

And after that delightful mid-day diversion we come to the game of the night, Auburn at Kentucky:

I think of early drives as something Auburn refuses to prepare, opting instead for the joy and challenge of mid-game adjustments. #wareagle I’m ready for any other rationale you might have on the subject, too.

Cam Newton will trade you this stiff arm for your graham crackers. #wareagle

Meanwhile, Florida, on the alternative screen, show you why you should never wear orange jerseys.

Touchdown Auburn! If Cam has a Twitter account his new status from the sideline is “Isn’t even trying hard.” 7-7 #wareagle

Dyer, Lutzenkirchen, Dyer. Kodi Burns. Chewing up the yardage. Look for another drive or two like this before the night is over. #wareagle

@tzac81au, too, looks like he doesn’t have to run especially hard. #wareagle

TOUCHDOWN AUBURN! Cam Newton grinds out the last bit of the bluegrass. Now’s the time to set the tone for the rest of the night. #wareagle

Look at those Kentucky fans, dreaming about basketball already! #wareagle

Nick Fairley is trying out finishing moves for a potential wrestling career. #wareagle (Upon the instance of the first questionable 15-yard penalty.)

I’m thinking of inventing a candy bar and naming it after Josh Bynes. You’d buy one of those. #wareagle

Do not trick or treat Cam Newton’s place. He will just push your costumed kids to the ground like Kentucky defenders. #wareagle

That’s ridiculous. Just ridiculous. Cam Newton to Kodi Burns on the most ridiculous made up play ever. Ridiculous. #wareagle (Spurrier added it to his playbook for next week’s Kentucky game.)

Touchdown Auburn! Another play, another rushing score for Cam Newton. Three tonight as the Tigers roar out to a 21-7 lead. #wareagle (If only they did this for 60 minutes …)

Kentucky dribbles the ball and Craig Stevens recovers the fumble. First down Tigers! #wareagle

@atcrawford It wouldn’t be the most egregious MNC anyone ever counted. (He congratulated Auburn for claiming the transitive national championship for having beaten the team that beat Alabama …)

Should be 28-7, but nice to see
@wesbyrum connect to run the lead out to 24-7. #wareagle

Dear referees, @Z_Etheridge4 has been through enough. Now he’s going to go through some Wildcats. (Also, he’s still in play.) #wareagle

Dear referees, It is called gravity. And is legal. Newton (not the quarterback, the other one) wrote a law about it. #wareagle

Florida is playing LSU not to lose. Which is working into Les Miles’ oddly crafted hands.

Cam Newton is winning the Kentucky Derby. Write it down. #wareagle

Touchdown Auburn! Gus Malzahn is working in the future, driving up Newton’s stats so he can show off a Heisman to recruits. #wareagle

At the half: Tigers 31, Kentucky 17. Newton is 8-11 for 129 yards passing with 132 yards rushing and FOUR scores on 13 carries. #wareagle

So the first half of the third quarter was an excellent time to eat dinner. And if you are superstitious, I’m not having dessert. #wareagle Because my having food was clearly what caused the problem. That and whatever you were doing after the break. And whatever you’re doing, you really need to stop doing it during football because it was not helping matters.

@wesbyrum Chips one in for a score, Tigers re-take the lead 34-31. #wareagle

And we’re tied again, 34-34. I vote for a seven minute drive featuring Michael Dyer culminating in a @supurmario27 touchdown plunge.

Auburn just put us all in the uncomfortable position of Bob Davie making sense. Hate when that happens. #wareagle When Davie is talking about being sensible on kickoff returns you know you’ve over-thought a play.

We’re running yellow-37. That’s Cam scrambling around to make something happen. It is similar to colors green and red, and numbers 4-31.

@wesbyrum kicks the game winner. 37-34, WAR EAGLE, 6-0 and moving up the polls! #wareagle

LSU, with seconds left, lines up for tying field goal, fakes it, drops it, and STILL gets the 1st down. Les Miles’ soul has been sold again.

The play is being reviewed, but Les Miles is laughing because he knows the NCAA has NO RULES FOR HIS MIND.

The Auburn finish was just an inevitability and not quite as dramatic as the Florida game.

“They can spike it, run it out of bounds or throw it incomplete.” Or they can run the LESTER!

We should start to consider the possibility that Les Miles is sane and brilliant and the rest of us are crazy.

After the game Les Miles and are going to Vegas and betting it all on .5 turquoise and walking out with the roulette table! I changed the color because that makes it funnier.

Not a bad Saturday, that.


9
Oct 10

Dean Foy

Dean Foy

We woke up this morning to learn the sad news that a great Auburn man died last night. Dean James Edgar Foy was a graduate of Alabama, a World War II naval pilot, holder of a PhD from Michigan State (this picture, from the 1970 Glomerata, was just after he’d returned to Auburn from MSU) and a man who’d given the better part of his life to Auburn University.

He has a building named in his honor (should be two buildings, many have argued). The trophy shared between Auburn and Alabama for the fabled football rivalry also borrows Foy’s name. The famous Foy desk is named in his honor.

My personal memories with the dean are, sadly few, and center around the briefest and most cordial conversations at sporting events. While he was, in many respects, a man of another era, he was a timeless gentleman.

A friend of mine from undergrad remembers being honored at a Naval ROTC event with the dean. The two of them cut a cake together, my friend as the youngest attendee, Foy as the oldest. A lot of Auburn men and women have a great Foy story, there will no doubt be more in the coming days. Here’s a good one.

Dean Foy

This picture was from the 1976 Glomerata. It is from the Florida game, a particular miserable experience from the yearbook’s recounting. But, apparently, the students always had fun with Dean Foy, who retired in 1978, still full of life.

Dean James Edgar Foy was 93. He is survived by the entire Auburn family, all of whom are grateful for either knowing him or benefiting from a legacy he helped establish. Dean Foy is an Auburn man.


8
Oct 10

Best not to question Elvis

Elvis

Shouldn’t the picture be empty?

And how do we know this?

If Zombie Elvis doesn’t have you in your blue suede shoes you’re not afraid of seeing that on your doorstep come Halloween.

And you’re welcome for the costume idea.

For this week’s YouTube Cover Theater we lean on renditions of the great Wilson Pickett. If you need me, these guys will be in Soulsville, U.S.A.

The Midnight Hour, they at least recorded it at night:

I saw one cover of that song, by a guy that’s been embedded in this space before, playing it on a keyboard. That was a poor choice.

And then there was Mustang Sally, which changed music for most everybody. (My site, my story.) This gentleman plays it on a sax.

And you’re welcome for that, too.

Happy weekend!

(It would have made perfect sense to make this an Elvis Cover Theater, but that’s now coming in the pre-Halloween edition.)