Monday, May 21, 2012

Photos and videos of Sayulita, Nayarit


By Jack Brummet, Mexico Travel Editor

I recently spent 2 1/2 weeks in Bucerias, Nayarit (our fifth visit there).  On previous trips, we have made the trek north to Sayulita numerous times.  I'm not quite sure why, except there has always been a buzz about the place.  When we've been there with our children, they were always interested in going because--unlike Bucerias--there are waves large enough for actual surfing.  Other than those waves, Sayulita always just seemed like a sleepy almost featureless town.  But fast forward several years and Sayulita has become extremely hip--a kind of Brooklyn/Oakland/Ballard of the Nayarit Riviera.  The New York Times travel section has had several articles about Sayulita in the last couple of years. Even though the beach is small, with large rocks near the shore, it is more popular than ever (especially with gringos/gabachos).  It was fascinating seeing it in the middle of the big Mexican Easter break.  There were many hundreds of Mexican tourists and visitors.




On the outskirts of town--Sayulita looks just about like it always has.  Except, on the outskirts of 
town,  you suddenly see about thirty tour buses parked in newly expanded parking lots.

During this post-Easter week, many bars in town featured women in various stages
of dress and undress hawking, a/k/a marketing,  Modelo, Pacifico, and Tecate cervezas.

The Tecate brewski gals

Surfers


Boards, boogie boards, and inflatable kayaks and motorboats to rent...



College age kids on the beach, and one thing I'd never seen in 
Mexico--girls walking the beach with quarts of beer in hand.

The best thing about our day at the beach were the bands--las bandas.  There were 
three of them playing, and even sometimes engaging in battles of the bands. . .



A drum band and some ferocious boot shaking.





There are some nice art galleries in Sayulita now.  This is an oil painting of Jesus.

Another oil painting.  Wow.
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Sunday, May 20, 2012

The Navajo's message to the moon

By Jack Brummet, Folklore and Urban Legend Editor


When NASA was preparing for the Apollo project, they did some astronaut training on a Navajo Indian reservation. One day, a Navajo elder and his son were herding sheep and came across the space crew. The old man, who only spoke Navajo, asked a question, which his son translated. "What are the guys in the big suits doing?"


A member of the crew said they were practicing for their trip to the moon. The old man got really excited and asked if he could send a message to the moon with the astronauts. Recognizing a promotional opportunity for the spin-doctors, the NASA folks found a tape recorder. After the old man recorded his message, they asked the son to translate. He refused.


The NASA guys brought the tape to the reservation, where the rest of the tribe listened and laughed, but refused to translate the elder's message to the moon.


Finally, NASA called in an official government translator. He reported that the moon message said, "Watch out for these guys; they've come to steal your land."
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Marion Barry's beer poster by Flying Dog Brewery



A beer poster produced by Frederick-based Flying Dog Brewery featuring an image of former mayor, now Councilmember Marion Barry, was taken down today after a call from Barry's attorney.

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Painting: Interlocking Parts

by Jack Brummet

[hand-drawn; scanned and colored digitally]

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Friday, May 18, 2012

Skeleton at the feast: Frederick Buechner on anger




"Of the Seven Deadly Sins, anger is possibly the most fun. To lick your wounds, to smack your lips over grievances long past, to roll over your tongue the prospect of bitter confrontations still to come, to savor to the last toothsome morsel both the pain you are given and the pain you are giving back--in many ways it is a feast fit for a king. The chief drawback is that what you are wolfing down is yourself. The skeleton at the feast is you."  - Frederick Buechner
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Four interesting photos of Abraham Lincoln from the Library of Congress Archives

by Jack Brummet, Presidents Editor

Photographs courtesy of The Library of Congress (your tax dollars at work!)



1846

1860


1864

1865

And one not from the Library of Congress, but from the Pundit Kitchen:


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The McDonnell-Douglas Product Registration Card


[Ed's note:  Source: unknown.  This has been drifting around the interwebs for some time.  It's impossible to find who originally created this.  Generally, wherever it is posted they usually write something along the lines of:  "This was originally posted by an employee to the McD-D web site.  It was quickly taken down my management."  Obviously, this is very unlikely. . .but in any case, this is pretty good:]




Thank you for purchasing a McDonnell Douglas military aircraft. In order to protect your new investment, please take a few moments to fill out the warranty registration card below. Answering the survey questions is not required, but the information will help us to develop new products that best meet your needs and desires.

1. [_] Mr. [_] Mrs. [_] Ms. [_] Miss [_] Lt. [_]Gen. [_] Comrade [_] Classified [_]Other
First Name: .....................................................
Initial: ........
Last Name:......................................................
Password: .............................. (max 8 char)
Code Name:......................................................
Latitude-Longitude-Altitude: ................................

2. Which model aircraft did you purchase?
[_] F-14 Tomcat
[_] F-15 Eagle
[_] F-16 Falcon
[_] F-117A Stealth
[_] Classified

3. Date of purchase (Year/Month/Day):
19..../...../.....

4. Serial Number:.......................................

5. Please check where this product was purchased:
[_] Received as gift / aid package
[_] Catalog showroom
[_] Independent arms broker
[_] Mail order
[_] Discount store
[_] Government surplus
[_] Classified

6. Please check how you became aware of the McDonnell-Douglas product you have just purchased:
[_] Heard loud noise, looked up
[_] Store display
[_] Espionage
[_] Recommended by friend / relative / ally
[_] Political lobbying by manufacturer
[_] Was attacked by one

7. Please check the three (3) factors that most influenced your decision to purchase this McDonnell-Douglas product:
[_] Style / appearance
[_] Speed / maneuverability
[_] Price / value
[_] Comfort / convenience
[_] Kickback / bribe
[_] Recommended by salesperson
[_] McDonnell Douglas reputation
[_] Advanced Weapons Systems
[_] Backroom politics
[_] Negative experience opposing one in combat

8. Please check the location(s) where this product will be used:
[_] North America
[_] Iraq
[_] Central / South America
[_] Iraq
[_] Aircraft carrier
[_] Iraq
[_] Europe
[_] Iraq
[_] Middle East (not Iraq)
[_] Iraq
[_] Africa
[_] Iraq
[_] Asia / Far East
[_] Iraq
[_] Misc. Third World countries
[_] Iraq
[_] Classified
[_] Iraq

9. Please check the products that you currently own or intend to purchase in the near future:
[_] Color TV
[_] VCR
[_] ICBM
[_] Killer Satellite
[_] CD Player
[_] Air-to-Air Missiles
[_] Space Shuttle
[_] Home Computer
[_] Nuclear Weapon

10. How would you describe yourself or your organization? (Check all that apply:)
[_] Communist / Socialist
[_] Terrorist
[_] Crazed
[_] Neutral
[_] Democratic
[_] Dictatorship
[_] Corrupt
[_] Primitive / Tribal

11. How did you pay for your McDonnell-Douglas product?
[_] Deficit spending
[_] Cash
[_] Suitcases of cocaine
[_] Oil revenues
[_] Personal check
[_] Credit card
[_] Ransom money
[_] Traveler's check

12. Your occupation
[_] Homemaker
[_] Sales / marketing
[_] Revolutionary
[_] Clerical
[_] Mercenary
[_] Tyrant
[_] Middle management
[_] Eccentric billionaire
[_] Defense Minister / General
[_] Retired
[_] Student

13. To help us understand our customers' lifestyles, please indicate the interests and activities in which you and your spouse enjoy participating on a regular basis:
[_] Golf
[_] Boating / sailing
[_] Sabotage
[_] Running / jogging
[_] Propaganda / disinformation
[_] Destabilization / overthrow
[_] Default on loans
[_] Gardening
[_] Crafts
[_] Black market / smuggling
[_] Collectibles / collections
[_] Watching sports on TV
[_] Wines
[_] Interrogation / torture
[_] Household pets
[_] Crushing rebellions
[_] Espionage / reconnaissance
[_] Fashion clothing
[_] Border disputes
[_] Mutually Assured Destruction

Thank you for taking the time to fill out this questionnaire. Your answers will be used in market studies that will help McDonnell-Douglas serve you better in the future--as well as allowing you to receive mailings and special offers from other companies, governments, extremist groups, and mysterious consortia.
As a bonus for responding to this survey, you will be registered to win a brand new F-117A in our Desert Thunder Sweepstakes!
Comments or suggestions about our fighter planes? Please write to:


McDONNELL DOUGLAS CORPORATION
Marketing Department
Military Aerospace Division
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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Middle finger of the day: The White House

Selected by Mona Goldwater, Symbols, Signs, and Gestures Editor




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Some of our favorite images of the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. (with a video on the MLK photos in The National Archives and some shots of the MLK memorial)

By Jack Brummet, History Editor


If you run a Google/Bing/Yahoo search on Martin Luther King, Jr. images you come up with millions of hits.  Of these, there is a core group of about fifty or so that are ubiquitous.   Here are some of our favorite photos of MLK, along with some of the many hundreds of postage stamps created in his honor; a couple of shots of the MLK memorial in Washington, D.C.; and a short video on the National Archives holdings of MLK photographs.

Click images to zoom/enlarge

Two uneasy partners:  Martin with his frenemy; President Lyndon Baines Johnson










 One more shot of LBJ/MLK

I have never been able to find out more about this photo. I don't 
really know if Martin knew his way around a pool table or not...


What if?

Jesse Jackson, Joan Baez, Ira Sandperl, and MLK.  This shot was taken at a 1964 free speech event.

Bayard Rustin with Martin


MLK with Coretta

The "I Have A Dream" Speech

 Speech in Washington, 1963

 MLK with Malcolm X





Some selected MLK postage stamps:




 









Photos of the Martin Luther King Memorial in Washington, D.C.:





 A background video on the photographs of MLK, Jr in The National Archives:

 

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