Category Archives: personal

Blogfest 4

blogfest4.jpgOn Wednesday, I attended Pittsburgh Blogfest 4. I thought about writing a post the next day, but having my wife wake me up at 3AM to tell me that our car was stolen didn’t exactly put me in a blogging mood.

Anyhow, the fest was a lot of fun. I made an effort to meet more people than last time. Here are the blogs whose authors I spoke with.

Burgh’s Eye View
G-clectic
Grabass and Have a Good Sandwich
Pittsburgh Dish
Sneak Peeks
Venky’s Musings
I’m Dirtae
Challenge Impossible
Subdivided We Stand
My Brilliant Mistakes
Random Thoughts

Dude, Where’s My Car?

Please pray for the miscreant that broke into and stole our car last night that he/she might turn from his/her criminal ways. Pray also that we can acquire another vehicle soon.

My wife has been working on-call hours as a lab technician for a drug study. She was called in yesterday to work. She parked the car on Bayard between Tennyson and Ruskin. As often as needed, she came out to feed the meter. After 6PM, though, that was no longer a problem. When she was done workat around 2AM, all she wanted to do was go home and sleep. She walked to where the car was parked and found only broken glass. Thankfully, she was able to get a ride home from a generous security guard at the hospital (who deserves prayers on his behalf for whatever his needs and intentions are).

This sucks. It’s taken the wind out my sails, so I might be delayed in posted about Blogfest 4 (which was fun, by the way).

Update 11/18/05: We have the car back. Remind me to tell you folks the odd and amusing of what happened to it while it was gone.

On this Date…

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Today is Sunday, October 16, the 289th day of 2005. There are 76 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date:

1793 – Queen Marie Antoinette is beheaded during the French Revolution.

1846 – American dentist William Morton demonstrates the effectiveness of ether as an anesthetic by administering it to a patient undergoing jaw surgery.

1859 – Anti-slavery activist John Brown leads a group of about 20 men in a raid on Harper Ferry, West Virginia. The rebels are soon killed, but the incident brings the American Civil War closer.

1916 – Margaret Sanger opens the first birth-control clinic, in New York City.

1946 – Ten Nazi war criminals condemned during the Nuremberg trials are hung.

1949 – The new East German Democratic Republic establishes formal diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union.

1952 – An estimated 10,000 Communist-led Viet Minh troops launch an offensive in northwestern Indochina, overrunning French Union forces in the Nghialo basin.

1957 – U.S. State Secretary John Foster Dulles warns the Soviet Union it would face armed American retaliation in event of a Russian attack on Turkey.

1962 – The Cuban missile crisis begins when U.S. President John F. Kennedy is informed by his aides that reconnaissance photographs reveal the presence of missile bases in Cuba.

1964 – China detonates its first atomic bomb.

1970 – Anwar Sadat is elected president of Egypt, succeeding the late Gamel Abdel Nasser.

1973 – Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho are named winners of the Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating a cease-fire in the Vietnam war; the Vietnamese official declines the award saying the Vietnamese don’t have peace, so he can’t accept a peace award. The war continues for a few more years.

1978 – The College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church choose Cardinal Karol Wojtyla to be the new Pope; he takes the name John Paul II. He is the first non-Italian pope in 456 years.

1983 – A U.S. Marine is killed and three are wounded in a sniper and grenade attack at Beirut International Airport.

1987 – Rescuers free Jessica McClure, an 18-month-old girl trapped in an abandoned well for 58 hours in Midland, Texas.

1990 – U.S. President George Bush signs the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act, prohibiting employers from discriminating against older workers in providing pensions and disability payments.

1991 – A man crashes a pickup truck into a restaurant in Killeen, Texas, and shoots patrons, killing 23 people before taking his own life.

1992 – Indigenous rights activist Rigoberta Menchu of Guatemala is named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.

1994 – Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s government wins a thin majority in Germany’s elections.

1995 – A vast throng of black men gather in Washington for the "Million Man March" led by Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.

1996 – Fans try to squeeze into a World Cup qualifying soccer match in Guatemala City, killing 78 and injuring more than 100 in the crush.

1997 – Swiss investigators freeze the bank accounts of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and her family after allegations surrounding the illegal obtaining of $13.8 million while she was in office.

1998 – British police arrest former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in London for questioning about allegations that he had murdered Spanish citizens during his years in power.

1999 – A New York Air National Guard plane rescues Dr. Jerri Nielsen from a South Pole research center after she spent five months isolated by the Antarctic winter, forcing her to treat herself for breast cancer.

2000 – Tens of thousands of Italians seek shelter on high ground as torrential rains continue to fall in northern Italy and southern Switzerland. The deluge blocks transport links and hampers power supplies.

2001 -Tickets for the first commercial flight of a British Airways Concorde since the supersonic fleet was grounded 15 months ago goes on sale. Half of the 100 tickets for its first fare-paying London-New York flight in November are sold in the first two hours.

2002 – The North Korean government admits it had been conducting a major covert nuclear-weapons development program for several years, in violation of international agreements.

2003 – Pope John Paul II celebrates the 25th anniversary of his election as pope, making him the fourth-longest serving pope in Catholic Church history.

 

2004 – Eric Williams marries Amanda Sceiford in St. Patrick’s Church (Diocese of Erie).

2005 Chamber Classic 5K

I ran the Chamber Classic 5K in North Park this morning. All in all, I’m pretty unimpressed. First of all, I’m unimpressed with my time, 29:42, which works out to a 9:35 mile pace. Ugh. I really should be doing 9 minutes or better for a 5K race. Perhaps I haven’t been training enough lately. Then again, perhaps my sweatshirt and sweatpants impeded my performance. I definitely don’t feel like I run as well when I have to keep warm with sweats.

That’s my personal stopwatch time, by the way. I don’t have my ChampionChip time yet, and I don’t know if I’ll trust it when I do. You see, the entrance to the registration and refreshments tent was right next to the 5K finish line and the 1/2 marathon lap checkpoint. When I finished, there was no "rancher" herding me to the guy with the clippers to remove my chip. Consequently, when I went into the tent to get goodies and ask about getting my chip removed, I set off the 1/2 marathon sensor. I’m very much not alone in that, either. I saw lots of folks do the same.

The refreshments, by the way, were just about the only really worthwhile thing about this race. The spread was ample and diverse with apples, oranges, bananas, cookies, bagels, and lots of beverages.

The race was really disorganized. Nobody really knew where the starting line was because there were no signs, banners, or arches. In fact, I didn’t even see chip sensor stuff, I’m sure my chip time will be artifactually longer because there was no differentiation between when someone said "go" and when I actually crossed the starting line, not there was really any to be seen. When we actually did start, it was at least 5 minutes late. Grr.

The organizers describe the course as mostly flat with a steep incline at the beginning. Well, the steep hill part is right. The rest is flat like Dolly Parton. It’s a series of rolling hills. None are as steep as the first, but the constant up and down screws with my stride. Also, the run was through a park, but we ran on park roads, not paths. For me, that kind of defeats the prupose of running in a park. Might any of my readers know of any good 5K or 10K races that use park trails? I love running on trails. I really think Schenley Park, where I do some of my training, would be an ideal location, but I’ve never heard of any races using it.

I’ve already mentioned some of the post-race annoyances. One that affected the 1/2 marathoners more than it affected me was, again, the location of the lap checkpoint. When the 5K racers finished, they naturally milled about, caught there breath, and sought refreshments. Meanwhile, the 1/2 marathoners are trying to continue their race. It was kind of chaotic. Not only that, but the route past the 5K finish line was poorly marked and I saw more than few 1/2 marathon racers accidentally cut a large corner as they existed the parking lot we were in.

Poorly planned, poorly organized, poorly executed. It was no thrill to run this race. I doubt I’ll be doing it next year. nor will I be running the Jingle Bell Run held in North Park.