May. 7th, 2007

bunrab: (cillie)
So, the Army Band's big 85th anniversary concert ended with the chorale exhorting the audience to sing along with them in "God Bless America." We stood, because we respect other people, but did not sing along, because we don't believe in a god, let alone one that has a particular favoritism for America. But it sat in the back of my mind, and what came percolating up a few days later, when I woke up this morning, was:
first draft, a version of Irving Berlin's song for atheists )
Not perfect, but available to work on. I've sent it to Dan Barker at FFRF 'cause that seems like someone who could polish it up. (We're longtime FFRF members.)

Other news from that concert: the Army Chorale is changing its name and mission; they soon will be called DownRange, and they'll be doing mostly soul/R&B/do-wop with a small jazz-band type instrumental back-up. They gave us a demo, and it was pretty funny, with four lead singers all African-American, and 4 pasty white people doing the do-wop background. Anyway, it's clearly a move to address today's enlisted force, which is a different mix of ethnicity and background than WW II's enlisted force was. Look for them to come to a USO concert near you!

Other weird news: last Friday, someone released a bunch of emus in downtown Baltimore. When the police and animal control came to round them up, homeless people in the area told them that a van had pulled up, opened the back, and shoved out the emus. So there they were, abandoned, dazed and confused. Some were not in good condition. The article didn't say how many, but I gathered there were at least half a dozen, and maybe as many as a dozen. They were taken to shelters and farms in the surrounding rural counties. I know winos is probably an incorrect term these days, but still, can't you see it, the winos wondering, is this a hallucination, or are there really five-foot-tall birds suddenly standing on my street corner?
bunrab: (bike)
This evening, instead of regular rehearsal, the Bel Air Community Band had its awards banquet. So, we rode the bikes up there, about 60 miles each way (the banquet site is further away than the school we rehearse in.) Many people in the band did not know we were Biker Skum, since normally they only see us when we are toting large, heavy, asymmetrical brass objects, which travel better in a car than on a bike. Nice roads out in the countryside north of Bel Air proper. Note to self: you CAN'T see in the dark. Stop being so damn optimistic about it. Do NOT attempt to ride on interstate highways in the dark, even in the slow lane at 50 mph making other people crazy. REMEMBER that, why don't you, Kelly?

There are other routes home - we took US 1 most of the way, but got on I-695 for the last 15 miles or so, because the surface routes have problems. Staying on US 1 goes through some areas I'm not sure I want to ride a bike through at night, and US 40 would work except that I've been on that often enough during the day to know that it's in extremely bad repair in many spots, because it gets dug up for so many things so often, and so can be just as dangerous to two wheels. I'll have to investigate whether there are any other surface roads that aren't too complicated to find in the dark and would nonetheless allow me to stick to 35-40 mph, which is the outer edges of my night vision.

My brother JJ is gonna be in DE this week, visiting with our folks, so Thursday, weather permitting, we're gonna ride over to Dover and visit with them. And then stay overnight and ride back the next morning, NOT ride back 90 miles at night!
bunrab: (alien reading)
Haven't had that much time to read recently, but I have read a few things:
The Man Who Understood Cats by Michael Allen Dymmoch - 1st in a series; I'm starting the second one now, so obviously I liked the first well enough.
Freddy's Final Quest by Dietlof Reiche - the last volume in the Freddy the Literate Golden Hamster series, very funny juvies.
Don't Believe Everything You Think - author's name has disappeared from my head for the moment. An OK introduction to skepticism but nothing new to anyone who already reads science magazines and "Skeptical Inquiry" and the like.
Mental Floss' Genius Instruction Manual - sorta silly, actually. Funny in spots, but not as funny as they think it is.

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