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6
Nov 12

Election day

Autumn is here:

Autumn

You can’t put that in a picture: the smells, the smiling sun, the sometimes crisp air, the crunch of leaves, the smell of that first wood fire in someone’s yard competing with the smell of a fresh lawn. You can’t capture that in a photograph and you can’t share it in a video. But we surely do try.

It was also election day today. I visited my polling place after breakfast. We vote in a hotel. The parking lot was full and so was the overflow lot next to them.

They have the sign-in stations organized by the alphabet, of course. I visit the Q-S line, which had three people in it. I was through the line quickly. Here’s my ID, there I am in your roster. Sign here and take your ballot.

She said they’d been busy since they opened at 7 a.m.

I sat down at a folding table. I was soon joined by a young lady who was making her first vote. She was pretty excited by this prospect, and busy asking her mother what all the amendments on the ballot meant. Her mother didn’t much know either. We had quite a few, and they aren’t written for a low reading level.

I ran my ballot through the machine, watched with pleasure as the tally ticked up one line. I politely turned down the “I voted” sticker, which seemed to throw the nice lady for a loop.

Someone lost their Voter ID registration card. I returned it to the help desk — there was a help desk — feeling it was part of my civic duty. Hopefully they can mail it to the lady.

I received emails from some of my students who were telling me they may be late to class. They were going to vote. One of those extra perks about teaching college students: they’re all getting their first vote this year.

They all made it to class on time, too.

We had a guest speaker in class today. At the end of his presentation there were still two more hours before the polls closed. I encouraged all of the local students, if they had not voted yet, to consider going to do so. “It will mean more to you as you get older.”

Our guest speaker agreed.

Went upstairs to the Crimson office. The news editor was designing a front page for a Romney win and another for an Obama win. I convinced her of the wisdom of designing a third one, a question mark. She started working on that.

Of course the race was all but over by the time I returned from dinner. They’re working long into the night on the paper.

I remember my first election coverage in 1996. I was writing for my college paper. I attended a county watch party. It was held in the same hotel where I voted today. A very inebriated lady of considerable local influence spent most of the party hitting on me. I left there to go to the other party’s headquarters and spoke with a newly elected congressman on the phone. From my place I called a new senator. His staff told me I would be a terrible reporter. I asked too many questions. It was a badge of honor.

I worked on that story late into the night, typing until morning time. I think I had two front page stories that issue.

Elections are like Christmas. And that’s one of the nights the recovering journalist misses being in a working newsroom.

I remember sleeping in my car for two hours on the night of the 2000 election. That was after watching the deadest watch party ever. The candidate hadn’t talked to the media or much of anyone, felt the whole ordeal was basically hers because she deigned run and was stunned when she lost badly. I feel asleep in my car that night, though, after working probably 20 hours, listening to the radio in the early morning. When I nodded off we didn’t know anything about what was really going on in Florida. I woke up before the sunrise to find we still didn’t know anything about what was happening in Florida. I worked all that Wednesday, but don’t remember much about it on zero sleep.

Like Christmas.

Maybe I’ll get a little more rest tonight.


5
Nov 12

What bric-a-brac says about us

Monday. Class prep. Emails. Working on websites.

Barney Fife

Saw this in a restaurant last night. We had Italian in the middle of nowhere. The restaurant was tacked onto this building that housed knick knacks and bric-a-brac. By the restroom, which had a sketch of Bobby Jones and another of Jesus, there was a display case full of coins and Zippos and knifes and confederate money and a head shot of George Wallace. It was almost everything you might need to try to understand the culture of a middle of nowhere place.

Above it all was this picture of Barney Fife. What the case couldn’t give you in playing armchair sociologist, this photograph might. It is clearly a promotional poster. VIP Printing and Graphics is a firm in Georgia. All of this explains itself.

The lady that ran the restaurant said she was from upstate New York. She’d been in the South for a few years. I wonder if she’s been able to make sense of it all.

I’m still trying to figure out why Bobby Jones’ backswing was hanging in the restroom.


4
Nov 12

Catching up

A few extra pictures from the week:

In flight at the raptor center:

A red shouldered hawk:

And another hawk:

Here’s a red tailed hawk:

A falcon setting off for flight:

The Harris’s hawk, the newest addition to the raptor center:

A falcon eating his treat. They spread their wings so competitors can’t see what is going on. Their plumage also serves as camouflage from birds circling above.

The in-laws are in town, and hanging out with Spirit. They also got buzzed by him as he flew just a few inches over their heads.

Autumn is here. Just ask the oaks:

A good stiff sneeze will leave this maple with nothing more than twigs:

A fan at the football game:

A fan at the football game:


3
Nov 12

New Mexico State at Auburn

One of those years:

upper deck

But along comes New Mexico State, to make Auburn fans feel good about their team for a day. The Aggies made more than $900,000 today. Not bad for an afternoon in the sun. I’m sure that pays a significant portion of their annual athletic budget. And even that money seemed like a bonus early. It took Auburn three drives to break into the positive yardage. And that third drive ended in an interception.

Late in the second quarter the offensive, which has been set to sputter for most of the year, finally found a little traction. Tre Mason claimed the first score of the game, capping an 89-yard drive, the Tigers longest of the year:

Tre Mason

New Mexico State and Auburn had similiar yardage at halftime, but the Tigers found ways to expand their 7-0 lead after the homecoming festivities. All-American and fan favorite fullback Jay Prosch scored on a one-yard run in the third quarter. It was two months to the day since his mother died.

Linebacker Daren Bates picked up a fumble:

Daren Bates

stiff armed a guy he outweighs by 20-plus pounds:

Daren Bates

looked around:

Daren Bates

and imitated Superman to score:

Daren Bates

Onterio McCalebb scored twice. He finally put the kind of numbers that have eluded him all year, including a key kickoff return, to move him up the school record charts a bit:

Onterio McCalebb

My guess is he stays in pretty much those spots as the season wraps up, but there you have it, he’s an incredibly talented player that has often been overshadowed by others.

Junior Trovon Reed finally scored the first touchdown of his career, wearing the number 37 in honor of Ladarious Phillips, a former Auburn football player who was shot to death last summer.

Things finally went more or less right for Auburn. They improved to 2-7 with the 42-7 win.


2
Nov 12

Hanging with the raptors

The venerable barn owl, or ghost owl, if you will. They will spook you in a barn if you aren’t ready for it, by the way:

BarnOwl

Here’s a good look at a long-eared owl:

BarnOwl

A red shouldered hawk in flight:

BarnOwl

This Harris’s hawk was completing his first public flight. They live in the western deserts and are very social, working together — sometimes hopping on one another’s backs — to capture their prey. There is a hierarchy, much like bees and ants, about how they hunt, too. And they’re good for falconry, too:

BarnOwl

And here’s Spirit, the bald eagle:

BarnOwl

And a little video of these birds and more:

Check out the raptor center online.