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OCTOBER
31, 2025
In 1950 the population of my future home town, Richwood, Ohio, was 1,866. Everyone deserved to get their name into the local newspaper. On October 5 of that year, the weekly Richwood Gazette reported that the Girl Scouts held their meeting at the Richwood High School building with their leaders, Jack Van Buskirk and Mrs. Louise Mueck, in charge. The story didn't mention any resolutions adopted at the meeting, but it did manage to name 16 of the Scouts. All had administrative duties, described by the same already-used phrase.
Five girls were listed as in charge of decorating, six (including Miss Phelps) in charge of invitations, and five in charge of favors. It must have been a highly-charged festivity, 75 years ago tonight.
That's not a misprint. A past noble grand is someone who has served a term as the Noble Grand (or leader) of her Rebekah Lodge, the auxiliary of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows (a service-oriented fraternal organization that originated in England). In the nearby hamlet of Essex, the shell of the former IOOF hall still stands.
OCTOBER
29, 2015
The doctors in my neighborhood have passed their pet dinosaur through some sort of mysterious X-ray device, thereby rendering him even scarier to any passing Halloween trick-or-treaters. Boo!
OCTOBER
27, 2025
For a quarter of a century, from 1982 to 2007, my specialty of preparing live television graphics frequently took me to faraway sports events. Almost all of them were in the United States or Canada, but I also crossed the Atlantic to London. Other assignments took me across the Pacific to Hawaii and to Tokyo and to Seoul.
Around September of 1990, a typical week might find me working inside three different mobile units in three different cities and visiting airports on as many as five different days. But the industry was evolving, as I mentioned here and here. For example, consider NBC's coverage of the Summer Olympics. In 1988 I personally spent a month in South Korea as part of the graphics team. In 1996 the Games were in the more easily reached Atlanta, but the graphics were not added on site; they came from NBC's New York headquarters. Although I reduced my travel and finally retired in 2020, Pittsburgh's chapter of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers still sends me its quarterly Local 5 News & Views. In this fall's edition, business agent Jim Ryan describes some of the changes. In Centennial, Colorado, the Mountain Media Center has emerged as a massive hub of broadcast activity. What once required dozens of technicians traveling to stadiums and arenas is increasingly being centralized into a single location. Control rooms, replay stations, graphics, audio, playout, and other operations that used to happen on-site are now possible from Denver. Companies are establishing operations at MMC, signaling that this shift is the new direction of the industry. Closer to home, COSM's C360 facility in Cranberry Township is building the capture systems that make this consolidation possible. Their miniature wide-angle cameras installed in pylons, hockey nets, corner walls, and even inside race cars are able to replace multiple staffed cameras with a single embedded unit. Producers can create multiple angles and instant replays remotely, with little need for the number of operators once stationed at every venue. As a labor official, Jim's job is to boost union membership. We cannot wait until the jobs are gone or degraded. The time to organize is now. If you have information about new facilities or technologies changing the way media is produced, reach out to the Local today.
At first my home page was updated with maybe three new articles per month. Then in 2007 I switched to the present blog format, posting maybe three times per week. Other folks online seem to have more to say. Mark Evanier has contributed 3.6 posts a day during his own 25 years of blogging. And during a recent weekend, Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wisc) averaged 128 posts a day on X. That's one tweet for every seven minutes of awakeness. You've noticed that I often rerun items that I first posted ten years before. I also write for the future. For example, I learned an odd fact about the city where I went to graduate school, Syracuse, New York, so I wrote it up around September 17. But I didn't post it. It involves Irish pride, so I made a note to add it to this website six months later, on St. Patrick's Day. Why do I persist in updating this blog? I'm not trying to be an influencer. As Robert J. Elisberg explained, I write it for a range of reasons, but at the top of the list is it helps me vent and keep my head from exploding, and also I like passing along information that I think might be interesting or fun to others. Nowhere on that list of reasons, as is obvious, is Do this to expand my annual income. And as Caitlin Z remarked, I will never get follower-induced poster's madness because I don't care if anyone follows me or not. I'm posting for me. If y'all wanna hang out, that's cool too. Plus, it's fun.
OCTOBER
23, 2015 Memorial Field behind my old high school in Richwood, Ohio, has been empty for decades, following the construction of a new football stadium near the new school building. Now a similar fate has befallen another small town.
Like the fans, we had a slightly obstructed view. The center-field light standard is in front of the stands. This tower was usually occupied, halfway up, by a man on a platform filming the game for the coaches. His silhouette floated in front of the action on our TV screen.
The photo above was taken by Jason Bridge for Trib Total Media last Friday night, as James Swartz Memorial Stadium hosted its final regular-season home game. The school has buildt a new modern campus three miles outside town, and thats where the Freeport Yellowjackets will play next year. Time marches on.
Could it be the call time for reporting to a TV broadcast? No, I've been retired for five years. Was it a mis-abbreviation of Colossians chapter 8 verse 15? No, there's no such chapter in the Bible. I racked my brain all week, but I was stumped. On the indicated day I sat by my phone from 8:00 to 8:30, AM and PM, and the phone never rang. My apologies if I missed an appointment with you.
I
couldn't see the slice anywhere, despite a thorough search of the
cockpit. Somehow, I didn't hear it slide off the wrapper. Ten
minutes later I thought I heard it slide, but I still couldn't
locate the missing slab of
OCTOBER
17, 2015 Big trucks have a low ratio of power to weight, so they tend to slow down when they have to climb a long hill. Highway engineers often add an extra lane on the right for slower traffic.
Wouldnt it be safer to extend their lane well past the top of the hill, to C, to give the truckers a chance to get back up to speed before they have to merge?
OCTOBER
15, 2025
In 1988, Bobby McFerrin recorded a tune that begins with whistling.
Here's a little song I wrote.
Online, I find numerous video clips of these performances. Click the photo to hear one. McFerrin's a capella version, with Robin Williams included in the video, reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and brought him worldwide recognition.
In every life we have some trouble.
OCTOBER
11, 2015 According to the date on the pictures, two years ago this month Googles Street View camera vehicle made a pass down Amazon Alley, which runs beside my apartment.
Youll notice that my parking space is simply a graveled rectangle in the corner of the lawn, which otherwise consists of a 60 by 60 square of grass. Several rabbits graze here and on the neighbors lawns. We dont consider them pests because we dont have gardens, and theyre welcome to nibble our clover.
When I reach the street I often look back and see a rabbit next to my parking space, watching me depart. He may be almost tame, but for some reason he never waves goodbye.
Ten summers ago, I took a vacation trip to Michigan.
In the foreground: the Stony Creek Mill Pond, constructed in 2003. Across the water: a weaving shop, built in Georgia before the Civil War. No, this isn't a photoshopped composite. It's a picture I took in suburban Detroit, in a place called Greenfield Village. There I saw a roundhouse and a round house and a contrabass triangle. Elsewhere in Michigan I ate schnitzel, watched wind make electricity, and bought a blue Santa.
OCTOBER
6, 2025
When I was enrolled at Oberlin College, my favorite place was WOBC-FM. I loved to hang out with my friends in the spacious studios of the student-operated radio station on the third floor of Wilder Hall, the student union building.
Nearly six decades later, in the wake of COVID, senior Emma DeRogatis-Frilingos told the Oberlin Review that there's been a complete and utter disruption, and it's hard to focus on little things like tradition and consistency. There's been a campus-wide forgetfulness. Clubs and traditions have been disappearing. And WOBC literally disappeared from the third floor of Wilder. On April 28, 2022, came the announcement: the station was going to be disassembled and moved to a temporary location on the fourth floor as part of a multi-year project of renovating the building. In September 2023, I visited those smaller quarters. On May 24, 2025, another tour of the quarters included one of my former colleagues: J. Michael Barone, who had been WOBC's Classical Music Director when I was Program Director in 1968. Mike writes:
I was on campus in May to receive an Alumni Award during commencement weekend, and happened to get into town just before the WOBC photo-op on the stairs in front of Finney. I was surprised that, despite it being a special 75th anniversary year for WOBC, so few alumni showed up (fewer than half a dozen?). They were doing 'history' interviews upstairs and coaxed me to visit them (as I was the oldest alumni representative on hand) and I provided them with about 20 minutes of my connection to WOBC ... which led directly to my involvement with what was to grow into Minnesota Public Radio, where I am still employed after 57 years (!).
Though I cannot discount my Conservatory courses in organ and music history, my experience during three years at WOBC provided me (and likely many others ... Randy Bongarten?!?) with (little did I realize it at the time) a lifetime career option which has, in its strange way, touched many. For instance, it was a delight to learn, while interviewing the 30-year-old Johannes Skoog (winner of the 2023 Canadian International Organ Competition and, subsequently, appointed Royal Swedish Organist) that he knew all about Pipedreams and had been listening (online) for the past 15 years!
Then the bottom fell out. Mike included last Friday's article by Skylar Brunk of the Review, who quoted student engineer Beck Robertson:
Peters G33 is a temporarily-vacant faculty office in the basement of 138-year-old Peters Hall. The building includes classrooms for world language study. Unfortunately, during many hours of the day and night there's little other activity there.
WOBC moved their equipment into G33 late last month. They hoped to train DJs and begin broadcasting early this month. And they still dream of a future permanent home, still promised for a renovated space in Wilder. Andrea Simakis, the director of media relations for the College, emailed the Review: We know this displacement has been tough for everyone at WOBC and appreciate their help and patience as we work to build a safe and accessible home for WOBC operations.
OCTOBER
4, 2025
Many news stories about Taylor Swift's latest album, The Life of a Showgirl, featured a closeup of the cover. Was I the only person who wondered why there's an ugly white scratch running across the singer's face?
It turns out that she's partly submerged. The ragged white line is merely the edge of the water. Oh.
OCTOBER
3, 2015 The federal government has introduced a website called College Scorecard that allows families to compare universities on several different metrics. One of them is how much money a recent graduate can expect to make. At one end of the scale, alumni of North Dakotas Sitting Bull College earn an average annual salary of only $11,600. At the other end, SUNY Downstate Medical Center graduates are paid nearly 11 times as much. In between are institutions youve actually heard of: MIT $91,600, Harvard $87,200, Penn State $47,500. My alma mater, Oberlin College, barely beat the national average at $38,400. In fact, 48% of Oberlin graduates earn less than people with only a high school diploma! But thats okay. Im not surprised that Oberlinians are paid less than SUNY doctors, or MIT engineers, or Harvard lawyers, or Penn State executives. We tend to heed less lucrative callings. We may become educators or social workers or classical musicians or organic farmers or pastors or poets or performers. Our treasures are not necessarily in our bank accounts.
If you ask whether college is worth it, dont just compare how much youll make to how much itll cost. Consider more than return versus investment. A college is not merely a trade school to prepare you for a specific career. A college particularly a liberal arts college like Oberlin is a place where young performers and politicians, poets and physicists, talk to each other. It prepares you for life.
OCTOBER
1, 2025
Four years ago I wrote:
In 2025, others agree. Scott Renshaw posts that he has literally never heard the phrase do your own research from the mouth of anyone who shows even a rudimentary understanding of how one conducts reliable research. And why are there suddenly more planets and stars than there were in the 1600s? Clearly some root cause is to blame, and not the advancement of scientific knowledge. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom Virginia Montanez calls a brain-wormed weirdo, notes that autism rates among eight-year-olds have risen from 0.7 percent in 2000 to 3 percent in 2022. What might be the root cause that we can blame for this very dramatic 300% increase?
So what is the cause? There are several possibilities, including:
In the New York Times, autistic Maia Szalavitz writes, To see the nation's scientific agencies following Mr. Kennedy's lead and promoting pseudoscience is shattering. And Jessica Grose opines that the Trump administration is using Tylenol to blame mothers for their children's autism because it's easier than building a society that can support people with special needs.
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