dr_phil_physics: (tomb-of-the-unknown)
Memorial Day (Observed)

Memorial Day weekend. Big noisy movies in the cineplexes. War movies on cable, including Kelly’s Heroes and Rambo III. The 99th running of the Indianapolis 500. PBS shows the National Memorial Concert with Joe Montagne and Gary Sinise. Picnics. Beach. A day off. One whole Facebook post which showed a red poppy on a hat. 10pm Sunday night and someone has just set off some fireworks… in the rain.

This morning the Sunday Grand Rapids Press had an article about two little girls who started something in April of 1862. And there is where my story comes from.

“Memorial Day-IV”
by Dr. Philip Edward Kaldon

Friday 31 May 2943
West End Cemetery
Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA, Nordamericano, Earth (Sol III)
     Wsh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sha.  The eight o’clock superslide from Chicago 
to Detroit passed by on the elevated techcrete track.  It was already slowing 
from 450 kph for Kalamazoo.  
     The old man was eighty-five.  He didn’t move so fast these days, but 
that wasn’t stopping him.  This section of the cemetery had opened in 2880, 
the year the war with the aliens began.  He took his time, pulling the weeds 
from around the black grantex markers.  One, two, three.  He used to count 
them.  Now he just looked to see how many rows were left.
     Wsh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sha.  The nine o’clock superslide from Detroit 
to Chicago passed by accelerating to 450 kph having just left the downtown 
Kalamazoo station.  
     Number 47 was always the hardest.  PAUL J. KUYPER (2858-2883).  They’d 
gone to school together, enlisted in the Fleet Marines together and even both 
shipped out on the cruiser USFS Kalamazoo (CCH-733).  Paul was the only man 
in this cemetery he personally knew.
     Wsh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sha.  The ten o’clock superslide from Chicago was 
arriving in Kalamazoo.  
     The old man had finished the weeding and was walking back to the start.  
He gathered his pack with the flags in it, preparing to cross an American and 
a Michigan flag to the left of each marker, and a Unified flag on the right.  
But on the grantex base of the first marker were a couple of early spring 
wildflowers with their stems twisted together.  And the next.  And the next.  
Five markers in all.  They hadn’t been there before.
     He looked around, but didn’t see anyone at first.  Then he spotted the 
two girls coming from the open fields to the west, bearing whole armloads of 
flowers.
     Donna, 8, and Theresa, 11, often came to the cemetery park.  They’d ride 
bikes up and down the paved paths or wander through the fields looking for 
bugs or frogs or turtles by the pond.  They’d gathered up bouquets of 
wildflowers this morning to take back to their mom.  But when they spotted 
the old man cleaning the base of the stones, they’d shrugged their shoulders 
and started putting their flowers down.  They quickly ran out and ran back 
for more.
     They stood and watched the old man start to plant the flags.  He didn’t 
touch their flowers.  So they went and did eight more markers.  And when 
they started heading back to the field, the old man wordlessly handed them 
a cloth bag with a handle so they could carry a lot more flowers at a time.
     Wsh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sha.  The eleven o’clock superslide to Chicago 
sped up out of Kalamazoo.  
     Wsh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sha.  The noon superslide arrived in Kalamazoo.  
     The girls’ mother followed the tracking on her own bike, to get them 
to come back for lunch.  She found them quietly placing flowers while the 
old man placed flags.  No one else was about.
     The mother joined the girls in gathering more wildflowers.  The old man 
rested from his labors, waiting for them to come back so he wouldn’t get ahead.
     Wsh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sha.  They paid no attention to the one o’clock 
superslide streaking by the cemetery.
     But they kept on laying flowers and planting flags at the bases of the 
newly weeded markers.

"Memorial Day-II" for Memorial Day 2010 (DW) (LJ).

Dr. Phil
Posted on Dreamwidth
Crossposted on LiveJournal
dr_phil_physics: (jude-mourning-1)
An Unexpected Passing

After I'd broken out the laptop at ConFusion, there was a Facebook posting from Sarah Gibbons. Now a fellow itinerant college professor, back in 2004 she was a grad student at Michigan State and beloved by those of us at the 2004 Clarion workshop as "our copy girl". One can only imagine the hours she endured making more than two dozen copies of the 115 stories with a collective word count of 385,562.

On Friday she said that Lister Matheson had died the night before. Lister had been Director of the 2004 Clarion workshop.


Lister introducing Jeffrey Ford at a reading at Archives Books, 1 July 2004. (Click on photo for larger.)


Lister holding court in his kitchen at the Clarion BBQ 4 July 2004 -- it's a terrible picture but it was muggy, rainy and dark, and the flash-and-focus on my tiny Sony U30 got fooled.
Lister Malcolm Matheson Haslett, Michigan and Lochalsh, Scotland was born on May 19, 1948 in Glasgow, Scotland and died on January 19, 2012 of complications arising from a form of aplastic anemia. He was 63. Lister was the eldest son of Charles and Margaret Anderson Matheson (née Lister). In the United States he is survived by his son, Calum, and life partner, Tess Tavormina. In Scotland he is survived by his mother, his sister and brother-in-law Charlotte and John Barbour, his brother Calum, and cousins Edna Shoebridge, Robert Sinclair, Gordon Sinclair, Evelyn Topp, Ian Fraser, Malcolm Freeman, Susan Steward, Heather Marskell, Charles Findlay, Hilda Ross, Farquhar Matheson, and many nieces and nephews. At the time of his death Lister was Professor of English and Medieval Studies at Michigan State University (MSU), where he had taught since 1986. He was an alumnus of the University of Glasgow (Ph.D., 1978), and served as an Assistant Editor of the Oxford English Dictionary while completing his degree. From 1975 to 1986, he worked at the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) as an Associate Editor of the Middle English Dictionary and Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature. His scholarly interests lay in the study of the languages and literatures of England and Scotland and especially in their medieval chronicles. His expertise and publication history were wide-ranging and authoritative. Lister's magisterial study of the Middle English Prose Brut - the legendary and historical account of the founding of Britain - is widely recognized by his peers as the definitive work on the topic. At MSU he taught courses in the history of the English language, Old English language, Old and Middle English Literature, Geoffrey Chaucer, Arthurian literature, medieval English drama, comparative epic, and Scottish history and culture. For several years he directed the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers' Workshop in Lyman Briggs School at MSU. Lister's family and friends will treasure his memory as loving son and brother, devoted father and life partner, dedicated colleague and loyal friend, and esteemed professor and mentor to many undergraduate and graduate students. He was generous with his time, knowledge, and talents and was keen to spur on the intellectual growth and scholarly pursuits of his students. Lister was a natural host whose large heart, expansive soul, and mischievous sense of the silly and ridiculous endeared him to those who knew him and made strangers feel immediately welcome and appreciated. He was a gifted raconteur, actor, reader of poetry, singer of inspired and inane songs, and connoisseur of haggis and single malt Scotch. He lived a full life, travelled widely, and absorbed everything. He cherished his family and friends and was always the animating spirit around any crowded table, sharing good food, drink, and lively conversation. His family and a very large crowd of admiring friends shall miss him terribly. A memorial service for Lister will be held on the MSU campus this spring, at a time and location still to be announced. Lister's ashes will be interred in Lochalsh, Scotland and there will rest honorably in the company of many generations of Mathesons. The family asks those who wish to honor Lister's memory to contribute financially to the ARC Great Lakes Blood Services Region (please add "Blood Services" in the memo line), American Red Cross, 1800 E. Grand River Avenue, Lansing, MI 48912 or by donating blood at the Lansing Blood Donor Center of the American Red Cross, 1729 East Saginaw Street, Lansing, MI 48912 or at any blood donor center or blood drive convenient to them. The family is being served by Gorsline Runciman Funeral Homes, East Lansing. On line condolences may be made to www.greastlansing.com.

Published in Lansing State Journal on January 24, 2012

Anything In A Coffee Cup Is Coffee

Lister could be cantankerous, but it was clear he loved writing and writers. His field was more Chaucer than Tolkien or Clarke, but he saw the connections with Literature and SF/F. With Clarion moved to San Diego, alas I had no need to go to MSU for Clarion readings in the summer and we lost touch. Condolences and sympathy to all who knew or worked with him.

Dr. Phil

UPDATE 1/25/2012 Wed:
A public memorial service will be held on (Saturday) April 7, at 2 pm, in the MSU Alumni Chapel (we chose the date for reasons of family schedules, with regrets that it may conflict with religious observances of the Easter weekend and beginning of Passover).
dr_phil_physics: (tomb-of-the-unknown)
The Dark And Healing Slash Of Granite In The Mall

Somewhere I have an essay on how I was introduced to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, when I was in DC for one of the Spring APS Meetings in the early 1990s, but I can't find it. The friend from college whom I was visiting, still playing clarinet in the Air Force, took me on a quickie tour of some of the area landmarks. But the Wall hadn't been in place when I had the odd day in Washington between trains during college. So I wanted to see it -- we ended up going twice. The first time was at night. If you've never been there, you cannot imagine descending into the earth and seeing the growing list of names suspended in the air against the reflection of the polished stone panels, towering overhead. And then coming out of it, reborn. We went back the next day, because I wanted to see it in light. And with people. A very different but also moving experience.

I remember the controversy over Maya Lin's design. It didn't fit with some people's traditional view of what a war memorial should be. Thankfully, her main design survived intact, because Vietnam didn't need a white marble column or other traditional war memorial.

So while I grew up in the Vietnam War era, I was too young to serve. But as I knew of people who were touched directly by the war -- and well as studying history and warfare more than most -- I have felt a personal connection to the Vietnam Memorial since I visited it about twenty years ago.

The National Memorial Day Concert

Tonight PBS ran a ninety minute program from near the U.S. Capitol with music and stories honoring those who have served, are serving and those who have given life and limb in their nation's service. It was through the story of a fatherless young woman and a friend of her father who came forward twenty years after his death, that I learned about an organization Sons and Daughters In Touch.

Every year members gather at The Wall on Father's Day. A thousand long stemmed rose are left: "Red roses represent those killed in action in Vietnam and yellow roses are for those who remain missing." Every five years they wash the Wall, a cathartic act of renewal.

I did not know this existed, but I am so thrilled for the families that it does.

And What Of The Future?

This year of 2011 has seen the last of the remaining World War I veterans and we are rapidly losing our World War II vets. Eventually a time will come where the surviving veterans and families of the Vietnam War will be gone. And what will be the relationship with the Vietnam Memorial? Of course there will be those families searching for ancestors, and historians searching for answers. And the polished black granite will still hold its power over visitors.

But it won't be the same.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (space-shuttle-launch)
Twenty-Five Years Ago Today...

In January 1986 I was in grad school. Doug came by and said that the Space Shuttle had blown up. I knew there was a launch attempt that day, but this was the first word I'd heard of the Challenger Disaster. I raced over to the MTU Union and through the back door into the "rubber room" -- before the renovation, they had this dingy basement TV room with these oddly discolored plastic/foam blocks which formed "chairs". The room was packed as we watched the seventy-odd seconds of the launch over and over, interspersed with watching debris raining down into the Atlantic for what seems like forever. I'd thought maybe it'd gone up on the pad. The reality though... right on the cusp, right after "Go for throttle up" and passing through Max Q -- the maximum aerodynamic forces on the spacecraft. Clear sailing ahead, or so the crew must've thought.

Eventually the word came out about what had happened, and the stupidity which caused the tragic results. I still get mad thinking about it. And yet, it had to happen sometime. Twenty-five years of manned spaceflight and we thought we'd never lose a crew? Wasn't possible. And Challenger provides a powerful teachable moment to our young scientists and engineers.

Forty-Four Years Ago Yesterday...

In January 1967 I was in the third grade. And after a tremendously successful Gemini space program, NASA was winding up towards the first manned Apollo mission. And then the Apollo 1 (Apollo/Saturn 204) command module burned up on the pad, killing Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee.

In an article on Mlive from the Grand Rapids Press on "NASA honors Grand Rapids native Roger B. Chaffee, other astronauts killed in space exploration", one of the commenters mentioned that they had been watching Time Tunnel when the announcement came. Huh -- we definitely would've been watching that. But The Time Tunnel was on ABC. I imagine that as soon as ABC News broke in, probably Jules Bergman, that we eventually switched to CBS -- and found Walter Cronkite crying on the air.

Interestingly, Jules Bergman "covered all 54 manned American space flights, from the first Mercury launching to the Challenger disaster" before he died in 1987.

Eight Years Ago Come Tuesday...

In February 2003, we were pretty much entrenched here in West Michigan. I was a year out from going to Clarion in 2004, but I'd already been submitting stories to markets for over six months. Didn't yet have a blog, but I was doing class web pages -- the memorial graphic below was one I made to add to my homepage in memoriam of what was about to happen.


Saturday's began as lazy days, lying in bed, listening to NPR Weekend Edition, when just after 9am EST, NPR reported a problem with Columbia and we jumped out to the living room TV and saw video of streaks of fireballs separating over the Texas skies as the space shuttle Columbia broke up on re-entry.

As we began to understand what happened and why, the old fears about bad management reared their ugly heads. And perversely, one was amazed at the rain of debris which survived the breakup and fall from the top of the atmosphere.

Three Events, Three Eras

Three crews -- seventeen astronauts. It's a lot to commemorate. And odd that it all falls in a narrow window at the end of January and the beginning of February.

Though Challenger and Columbia were both Space Shuttles, in 1986 we'd not lost a flight crew on a mission. There was considerable finger pointing, soul searching and redesign before NASA sent another shuttle into space. In 2003, we wondered if the old NASA sloppiness of 1967 and 1986 was back. I wasn't sure we'd ever fly another shuttle mission -- and knew that was wrong on so many levels. I think NASA got too risk averse after Columbia, not wanting to lose a third shuttle over anything. And while the shuttle program is not without its flaws or its expenses, I myself would've extended the program with one or two next generation shuttles and we wouldn't be facing a loss of manned flight capacity by the end of 2011.

Good God, man, we ripped apart the Apollo program in 1967 and by 1968-69, achieved the impossible -- to send Man to the Moon and return safely.

This, then, is the time to remember the seventeen men and women -- their support crews and colleagues and families. We utter phrases like "Their deaths shall not have been in vain", but then we have to back it up. Although I marvel at and applaud all the wonderful work being done with satellites and robotic rovers and probes, and don't want to give any of that up, I also believe in a manned space program and think it essential to our very being that we keep chipping away at the boundaries of space.

And not just to honor the seventeen. Or those lost in accidents near space from other programs. But because we shouldn't give up. It's the right thing to do.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (tomb-of-the-unknown)
Memorial Day (Observed)

As a steady stream of cars go up and down the road outside, people going hither and yon for purposes only they know, it is Monday 31 May 2010 and Memorial Day (Observed). Last year I intended to write a SF short story for Memorial Day. Alas, it got bogged down in a side project of wondering how Arlington National Cemetery would look and function nine centuries from now. That needs some thought, still. So as my own modest contribution to the commemorative events of the I have written a different SF story -- this one in much smaller venue.

                       "Memorial Day-II"
                  by Dr. Philip Edward Kaldon

Friday 24 May 2880
Ottawa Bypass MI, USA, Nordamericano, Earth
     The Skat drove by him in a hurry, bearing four shirtless young men 
already well tanned.  They hollered some youthful expression of exuberance, 
probably thrilled to have cut school after lunch in order to start the 
three-day weekend early.  One boy turned back to stare -- surprised to 
see a man in dress black uniform walking along the side of the old road.
     Master Chief Petty Officer Daniel Hoogerhyde (Ret.) didn’t mind.  
The walk westward to Placid Waters Cemetery was hot, but pleasant enough.  
At 0700 hours this morning an intense thunderstorm had crashed through 
town and he’d thought the walk would feel like he was hiking through a 
humid swamp.  But the front had brought high pale blue skies and a stiff 
dry wind, so despite the 29° temperature, he wasn’t miserable.
     By the time he reached the marker stake, he could see the boys had 
parked up on the adjoining Picnic Hill and were playing some sort of 
catch game.  Life went on and he wasn’t annoyed by their presence.  
He was, however, wondering how’d they react to the coming proceedings.
     Another uniformed figure came marching stately up the road.  
Hoogerhyde knew Master Gunnery Sergeant Leo McMasters, USFMC -- they’d 
served together on many of these details.  He noted that the gunnery 
sergeant’s listing on his data glasses no longer had the Retired tag.
     "Master Chief," the Marine nodded tersely when he arrived.
     "Master Gunny," Hoogerhyde replied.
     There was no further reason to talk until the other four arrived.  
And then when the tandem linked bubble cars arrived, the two senior NCOs 
were able to point and direct everyone to their tasks without so many 
words either.  The three enlisted personnel came from two American 
terrestrial military services to fill in.  The lone Fleet officer of 
the detail, Lieutenant (j.g.) Anne Leslie Aage, moved stiffly.  All he 
knew of her was that she’d been burned in a reactor accident somewhere 
hundreds of light years from here and had been sent home to Grand Rapids 
on Earth for rest and recuperation leave.  Still, she walked with them, 
carrying the flag stand base, as the flag and rifle lockers were lugged 
up the hill to the grave site.
     The cemetery staff had already dug the perfectly edged hole, placed 
the brass frame with the support straps, and erected the tent.  The 
electric gravetender sat silently with its load of dirt and carefully 
rolled up patch of sod.  With the arrival of the military honor guard, 
all they needed was the funeral party.
     Hoogerhyde raised the white cloth over the newly laser cut stone 
and inspected it.

                      SPC2 CECILIA GRACE STAAT
                         USFS DELFT (CCB 52)
                                 †
                    5 APRIL 2859 - 26 MARCH 2880
                     IN SCHOOL · SOCCER · SPACE
                        OUR DEAR GIRL ALWAYS
                       THOUGHT OF OTHERS FIRST

The epitaph seemed to match the report he’d gotten from the Fleet 
Chiefs Association, which was considering Staat for recognition as the 
next enlisted spaceman to be named on a Callisto frigate.
     One by one they removed the five flags from the locker -- State of 
Michigan, United States of America, Nordamericano Confederation, United 
Nations of Earth and the banner of the Unified Star Fleet -- unfurled 
them and placed them in their holders.  A farmer’s bubble truck rolled 
up and a local high school student stepped out in a perfectly pressed 
suit and carrying a brilliantly polished brass cornet.  Hoogerhyde put 
away the military music player as this young man was very good on the 
cornet.  The boy’s mother would wait quietly in the bubble truck for 
the service to end.
     A single bip! in his ear signaled the approach of the funeral party.  
The six military men and women aligned themselves on the road below 
and came to attention.  Hoogerhyde could see the four boys on Picnic 
Hill had stopped their games and were now leaning against their vehicle, 
watching.  The hearse glided to a halt directly in front of the detail, 
while a linked train of bubble cars followed with the mourners.
     With few called orders required, the six members of the funeral 
detail took possession of the casket and, with great precision, marched 
one step at a time up the hill to the grave site.  The first time 
Hoogerhyde had borne a casket, he’d been terrified that he might drop 
it.  Now he knew the wisdom of having six bearers split the load and, 
truth be told, this was not the heaviest casket he’d ever taken up the 
hill to Placid Waters.  The family had selected the familiar American 
stars and stripes to be draped on the casket, rather than the more 
stark, black Unified Star Fleet banner.
     The graveside service for Specialist 2 Cecilia Staat was short.  
The private church service had been the place for long eulogies and 
remembrances.  The flag was folded, stiffly and precisely, and handed 
to Staat’s parents by Hoogerhyde, On behalf of a grateful nation and 
people.  The young cornet player performed the Last Call, then 
Hoogerhyde piped Now Departing on a bosun’s whistle and the casket 
lowered as the master gunnery sergeant and the three enlisted men fired 
the requisite volleys into the air.  As expected, it was these sharp 
reports which caused the most visible reaction from the mourners.  
Ceremonial amounts of dirt and single flowers were tossed into the 
grave -- the cemetery’s crew would complete the covering later -- and 
the funeral was over.  All per the 2866 revision of the Manual of the 
Unified Star Fleet Funeral Service.
     After the funeral party and the young cornet player had departed, 
the master chief noted the four boys trotting down from Picnic Hill.  
He continued to help stow the flag and rifle lockers, then walked with 
the others to the tandem bubble cars.  Once stowed, the master gunnery 
sergeant began his walk back to town.
     "Excuse me, sir?" one of the boys stepped up to ask Hoogerhyde, 
after the tandem had left.
     He was immediately elbowed by one of his buddies.  "Don’t call 
him ‘sir’.  He’s got chevrons and rockers on his sleeve -- that makes 
him a chief."
     Hoogerhyde smiled.  "You seem to know something of the military."
     The second boy nodded.  "My brother serves in the Michigan National 
Guard.  He’s a corporal, chief."
     "Master chief," Hoogerhyde said, tapping the patch on his sleeve.  
"But I’ll forgive someone who knows army ranks from trying to keep track 
of the navy -- sea or space."
     "You’re Fleet, aren’t you?  Space navy?"
     "Correct.  The Unified Star Fleet."
     "And who got buried?"
     "Specialist 2 Cecilia Staat."
     The boys seemed to know of the family.  "Was she killed in the war?"
     "The interstellar war with the aliens?"
     The second boy blushed, it seemed such a crazy thing to talk about.  
They’d never found any aliens out nearly a thousand light years from 
Earth -- and then the first ones they find seemed hell-bent on killing 
humans?  Insane.  And yet very, very real.
     "No," the master chief said.  "The war started just a week ago.  
We can move information fast, but bringing casualties home?  That’ll take 
a couple of months."
     "Oh."  The first boy seemed disappointed.
     "But don’t worry.  Specialist Staat is still a hero.  She spotted 
something wrong with someone running to board her ship -- turned out the 
man was trying to get a bomb on the Delft.  She stopped him long 
enough for ship’s security to stop him permanently.  Unfortunately, her 
efforts cost Staat her life.  Space is a dangerous game.  Even without 
alien attackers."
     The boys thought about this.  Three headed back to their Skat –- 
but the one with the brother in service remained.
     "What else can I answer for you?"
     "How come not all of you were in Fleet uniforms?"
     "There’s not a need for a large Unified Star Fleet presence in West Michigan," 
Hoogerhyde said.  "And Ottawa Bypass is a pretty small town."
     "Oh... yeah."
     "The two sailors were U.S. Navy Reservists -- sea navy.  The army 
lad, like your brother, is a Michigan National Guard soldier.  Their 
service is Earthbound, not in space.  Not yet anyway.
     "As for the Fleet personnel, Lt. Aage is going in early for her 
reentrant physical.  I expect she’ll be lifting within a week.  The 
master gunnery sergeant has come out of retirement to go and serve in 
this new war.  He’ll leave in thirty days."
     "Not immediately?"
     "Fleet is vast, but there are only so many billets to fill and 
so many transports -- the pencil-neck Personnel people on the Moon 
have a lot of logistics they have to work out with so many to move 
around."
     "I see."
     "I think you do.  Look, son, I’m not a recruiter -- I’m not here 
to try to convince you to join up with Fleet or for any service.  But... 
Monday is Memorial Day Observed.  That’s the reason you’re getting 
this nice three-day holiday weekend.  All I ask is that you take a 
moment on Monday to remember all who have served in the military, on 
land, sea, air or space.  Can you do that?"
     "Yeah, master chief, I can do that."
     "Then take care, son.  And enjoy a little of this lovely day, even 
after this somber ceremony."
     "Thanks!"  Relieved to be released, perhaps, the boy ran off and 
hopped onto the back of the Skat and the four boys roared off towards 
the lake.
     And you, Master Chief, the boy hadn’t asked, are you going 
back in?
     Hoogerhyde didn’t know.  Perhaps.  Maybe.  Probably he should.  
But he’d been right to tell the boy that Fleet Personnel was flooded 
with old-timers like him begging to be let back in during the last week.  
There’d be an update from the Fleet Chiefs Association on it.
     An interstellar war with an unknown alien race who attacked Fleet 
ships without warning or challenge.  Ships were being damaged or even 
destroyed in battle.  There’d be more spacemen coming back to Earth to 
be memorialized.  Someone had to be here to stand for them.
     He imagined there’d be a couple of waves of new recruits and returning 
officers and NCOs.  It was unlikely that this war would be short -- he’d 
already heard one idiot on the viddie news suggest that it’d be over by 
Christmas.  That old misguided chestnut seemed to surface with every war 
fought over the last ten centuries.  He figured they’d be in this war 
for years.  There’d soon come a time when Fleet would be hurting for 
experienced master chiefs.  When, unfortunately, he could imagine there’d 
be more injured and recuperating come back home to help serve on these 
funeral details.
     There was a time coming when he might return to space.  But for now, 
there were still the men and women who’d already given their lives in 
service to humanity.  For now, his duty was to stand and honor them.  
And he’d  be back on Monday, planting small flags next to graves stretching 
back five-hundred years.
     He could live with that.


Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (us-flag)
Memorial Day 2010

Of course, to those in the know, Memorial Day in the U.S. is May 30th. The first such nationwide observance as Decoration Day was in 1868 to commemorate the Union Civil War dead -- now it commemorates much more. It only became a Federal three-day weekend Monday holiday effective in 1971 when I was in 7th grade. So we've ended up with Memorial Day on Monday, but some of the parades and events were on Saturday -- it's all confusing.

Frankly, since 1971, I think we've gone downhill with making Memorial Day a commercial event, one which doesn't have anything to do with honoring the service and sacrifice of those who've worn the uniform of the U.S. As someone recently pointed out, Memorial Day really isn't about selling furniture.

Dealing With It

We are not traveling on vacation or to visit relatives. We aren't crowd people and I don't handle heat very well, so we didn't go out to any of the parades or what not. Nothing at the cineplexes we were dying to see this weekend, so we left the malls and those crowds to others. It will be a quiet weekend here.

On television, since Friday, we've been flooded with war movies and major sporting events. The Indianapolis 500 is churning and wrecking even as I type. Friday night, though, there was nothing we wanted nattering on in the background or to watch, so I cracked open the set of Firefly DVDs I bought a couple of years ago. It'd been a while since we borrowed the series from a friend, so it was time to be amazed at how much fun that show was. FOX-TV's execs were idiots. And then there's History Channel's new series The Story of Us (U.S.) -- Saturday night they were showing the lead up to and including the Civil War.

I did not know that blacks served as equals on whaling ships. They had trouble enough getting crews that they welcomed anyone who would sign up. The Runaway Slave Act could catch free blacks, if someone lied, and without chance of a proper hearing, get sent South to "their owners". Shades of the Arizona immigration law, methinks?

And the telegraph "is like Twitter today". A point well made in the excellent little book The Victorian Internet.

Don't Get Me Started

The frothy side of politics wants to make a big smear about President Obama's decision to go to the Chicago area Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery, rather than Arlington, tomorrow. Now don't get me wrong -- Arlington National Cemetery is an important place. And Vice-President Biden will lay the Nation's wreath there to represent us all. But there are America's honored dead buried all across the country. And Obama came out of Illinois for political purposes. He went to Arlington last year. And, though I've not verified the claims, this is the sort of thing I'm hearing which points to the lie of the frothies:

Before we get to the actual story, let’s take a quick trivia quiz. Who was the only President in the past 30 years to visit Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day every year of his presidency? It wasn’t Ronald Reagan, who spent one year in Normandy and at least one other at his ranch in California. It wasn’t George W. Bush, either, although he was also at Normandy the one year he missed. George H. W. Bush, a veteran himself, never attended ceremonies at Arlington, sending Dan Quayle in his stead. In fact, it was Bill Clinton who made eight Memorial Day appearances at Arlington National Cemetery.

Let us NOT make this a political statement, wringing our hands about our disappointment at not going to Arlington, but instead recognize that our nation's first black president is going to the Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery to recognize our honored dead.

I can't speak for veterans, as I am not one myself, but nothing gets me annoyed more than someone's false sense of hurt in the name of their special snowflake brand of patriotism. Sorry, I had to say that.

Meanwhile, I will most post more on Memorial Day tomorrow, on the Memorial Day (Observed).

Dr. Phil

A Cold Day In...

Saturday, 29 August 2009 22:30
dr_phil_physics: (Default)
Stares At Calendar Again

High today in Allendale was maybe 65°F. Lows in the next few days will be in the 40s. Cold and rainy all day. I was just looking at the latest Northwestern Magazine -- the alumni mag from NU -- and noted to Mrs. Dr. Phil that (a) 2010 will be my 30th Reunion, which means (b) 2009 would've been her 30th Reunion. But she doesn't like the way her college does reunions right now. They used to be held at graduation in June -- having it in October makes no sense at a school where football was not important.

On the other hand, NU reunions in October are wonderful -- fall in Evanston is wonderful. Of course the picture in the alumni mag showed fall foliage with a backdrop of brilliant blue sky. Given today's weather, Mrs. Dr. Phil brought up the rain. But it didn't deter me. Cold fall rain in Evanston is perfect, too. (grin)

Kind of like... today. (Goes back to contemplating the calendar.) The end of August calendar. Not October.

More On Charles N. Brown

Back on 13 July 2009 I reported on the legendary editor-publisher of Locus magazine. Today I got the September issue, which includes several pages of reminisces by many SF people about Charles.

Also cover interview with Larry Niven and extensive coverage of this year's Hugos. As if you didn't have enough reasons to go to LocusOnline and get your own subscription to Locus.

(Goes back to contemplating calendar.) Locus almost always comes on the first, but it's the 29th. Of August. Not September.

Whatever The Weather Is Doing, It's Not All Bad

My mother used to comment that when they were at the University of Illinois, that the farm reports typically said the weather was "good for the corn" no matter what the weather was doing.

Well, this year had produced some damned fine Red Haven peaches. Red Havens are already the best eating peaches ev-ah, but the ones we bought today continued to be beautiful and lovely. Sigh.

(Goes back to contemplating calendar.) It's still summer? I can has Red Haven peaches? (double-grin)

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (apollo-saturn-v)
Walter Cronkite, 1916-2009

The Voice of Reason from my childhood, legendary CBS news anchorman Walter Cronkite, died just about two hours ago at age 92. In those days we had just three national TV networks in America, and while we watched the news on NBC with The Huntley-Brinkley Report and later the NBC Nightly News with John Chancellor, we still watched Uncle Walter, especially at major news events -- and most especially switching between NBC and CBS during the US space program. It is perhaps telling that I remember Frank Reynolds was the anchor on ABC at the time of Apollo 13, but I cannot remember the name of anyone anchoring the ABC news during the rest of Walter's tenure at CBS.

Watching some remembrances on The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, everyone was talking about Walter crying twice on air -- announcing the death of President Kennedy and Neil Armstrong's first steps on the Moon. But what I remember was Walter Cronkite breaking into programming one night to announce in tears the loss of Grissom, White and Chaffee in the Apollo 1 fire on the pad during a test at Cape Kennedy. The moon program and JFK, brought together in one sentence. You might consider that my generation's Hindenburg. How ironic that Walter Cronkite died just shy of the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing itself. Perhaps it best that his resonant voice will be played out this week and he will be remembered along with the first men on the moon -- and not drowned out by the recent weeks' tumult over Michael Jackson.

There are those who say that reporters of the news shouldn't be the news itself. A sentiment which is sorely breached by those who merge news and commentary and, may I suggest, creating news and things meant to look like news. Yet Walter is also best known for one simple commentary, where after traveling to Vietnam in 1968, he announced on the air that the war was unwinnable. As a result, President Lyndon Johnson decided not to run for re-election, citing that if he'd lost Cronkite, he'd lost middle America.

He left CBS before he was ready, that is probably true. Yet he managed to continue to do things like host the Kennedy Center Honors and the Vienna New Year's Concert. And he sailed his boats for a long time.

The Most Trusted Man in America is now gone. Would that we see the likes of his kind grace our lives again... but I fear not.

Good night, Walter.

Dr. Phil

D-Day Redux

Sunday, 7 June 2009 01:58
dr_phil_physics: (kate-hamlet-uniform)
Saturday the Sixth of June Two-Thousand-and-Nine

65 years ago the world changed. It changed not because an election was held on that day or because someone invented some new technology or created some great work of art. No, the world changed because the force of will of the Allies drove men onto the beaches of Normandy, ultimately breaking the back of Hitler's evil dreams and desires, because the dreams and desires of free men and women was stronger and worth fighting and dying for.

Thought One

An article from a November 1960 Atlantic Monthly article on the real Omaha Beach.

Thought Two

An essay from a friend of mine on today's observances in Normandy.

Though Three

Google is taking some heat for using their Google logo art on 6-6-2009 to commemorate the anniversary of Tetris and not the 65th anniversary of D-Day. If Google did nothing or did a change for the Tetris anniversary, then that's different than if the U.S. government "forgot" about honoring D-Day. And I'm not sure a cutesy cartoon graphic is what the complainers want anyways.

There's perspective, and then there's perspective.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (kate-hamlet-uniform)
On Turner Classic Movies Tonight

First was Above and Beyond (1952) and then The Dam Busters (1955). The first was about the Enola Gay and the run on Hiroshima, the latter about taking out German dams with an innovative "skipping stone" five-ton bomb which would get spent along the edge of the dam, fall down thirty or more feet, detonate, and use the reflection of the water blast to punch out the dam.

The obvious similarity is that both missions require a specially trained unit and a very special weapon. And both are WWII movies. After that, the differences are considerable.

The US Army Air Corps B-29 Superfortress was a high performance, high altitude, pressurized cabin bomber. It required reinforced concrete runways at an isolated island base at Titian. And the uranium fission bomb required care, radar altimeters and crew safety precautions.

The British Lancaster bomber also had four engines, but had an unpressurized box fuselage and used grass landing fields in England. Their bomb required low flight, with altitude determined by a crossed floodlight system and a simple Y-shaped bombsight.

The Hiroshima bomb was a one-off. The other planes flying that day were weather and camera planes. Indeed, a lone B-29 flying weather patrol was not considered a threat and so they were not fired upon. The dam busting bombs were used in multiple planes over multiple targets on their one mission. They were subject to ground attacks and lost several planes.

And then there's this. Part of the reason for making Above and Beyond was to show the strains on marriages in the young Air Force. To try to show that this was a necessary job, despite the secrets and the away time. As for the Brits, there's a glaring bit of controversy about the name of the black dog who served as the units' mascot -- being a black dog he was called "Nigger", a word I thought I'd never have to type in this blog or hear being uttered as a term of endearment by the white British flight crews. Certain prints for television have the dog's name either censored or redubbed as "Trigger".

Wikipedia mentions that Peter Jackson is working on a remake of The Dam Busters. They may use the actual alternate nickname of "Nigsy" for the dog -- under the theory that they are damned if they do and damned if they don't over historical accuracy versus offensive language in 2009. The Wikipedia article also points out that the attack on the Death Star in Star Wars, i.e. the original which is now Episode 4, is based on The Dam Busters.

An interesting pair of movies -- the sterile high performance of the Americans versus the gutsy lower tech British "Cook me a kipper, I'll be back in the morning" fliers.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (kate-hamlet-uniform)
Decoration Day

Or Memorial Day as it is more commonly known today, is intended to commemorate those members of the armed forces killed in action. Grand Rapids MI hosts their Memorial Day parade on May 30th, a Saturday in 2009, which technically is the actual commemorative date. For everyone else, Memorial Day is the last Monday in May, which falls on the earliest possible date this year -- Monday 25 May 2009.

The Three-Day Weekend Effect

Of course that means that most people treat Memorial Day as a play day. An extra vacation day. The official start of summer. Well, I'd rather that Americans get to take a day off, cook some hot dogs, go see a ball game or the latest blockbuster movie, crack open some beers, put up a flag or attend a parade because they WANT to -- than live in some tinpot dictatorship where they pay people to attend the big parades and round up people to celebrate that latest bit of nonsense that the government claims is doing wonders to the world. Because freedoms are what those men and women died for in the service of our country.

The Sci-Fi Effect

Given there are only a limited number of three-day weekends available, it is no surprise that a number of science fiction conventions have adopted Memorial Day weekend as their home. You at the very least get to make Sundays a whole convention day, if not add a whole day to the entire schedule. DragonCon gets Labor Day, but I know Memorial Day has Wiscon and Marcon (Multiple Alternative Realities Convention).

In fact, a more complete list from LocusOnline's Convention page includes:
# Balticon 43 - May 22-25, 2009
* Hunt Valley Inn, Baltimore, MD
* GOH: Charles Stross. Music GOH: Mary Crowell. 2008 Compton Crook Winner: Mark L. Van Name.
* 2009 Compton Crook Winner to be announced.
* Art show, dealers' room, literary, science, masquerade, gaming, etc.

# BayCon 2009 - May 22-25, 2009
* The Hyatt Regency, Santa Clara, CA
* Guests Mercedes Lackey & Larry Dixon have cancelled due to illness; other guests: Tim Kirk, Fred Patten.

# ConQuesT 40 - May 22-24, 2009
* Hyatt Regency Crown Center, Kansas City, MO.
* Guest of Honor, John Scalzi; Artist Guest, Oberon Zell; Anime/Media Guest, Jerry Gelb; Fan Guest, Ed deGruy; Toastmaster, Ellen Datlow.

# MisCon 23 - May 22-25, 2009
* Missoula, Montana.
* Author Guest Steven Brust, Artist Guest John Kovalic, Special Guest Author Michael Stackpole.
* Writer's Workshops, Writing Panels, Art Auction, Dealers Room, Gaming, Film Festival.

# OASIS 22 - May 22-24, 2009
* Sheraton Orlando Downtown, Orlando FL.
* Writer GoH: Peter David, Special Guest Writer: John Ringo, Editor GoH: TOni Weisskopf Artist GoH: Johnny Atomic.

# WisCon 33 - May 22-25, 2009
* Madison, WI.
* GOHs Ellen Klages, Geoff Ryman.
* Panels, discussions, readings, signings, art show, dealers room, parties, special events.
* WisCon is the world's leading feminist science fiction convention and encourages discussion and debate of ideas relating to feminism, gender, race and class.

UPDATE:
CONduit XIX - May 22-24, 2009
Salt Lake City, Utah

I have friends going to Marcon and Wiscon. Haven't been to the Columbus con, but I've made it to Wiscon twice and am sorry not to be going this year or every year. It is one of the best run cons for my money (and the best stocked consuite by far) and includes an academic track and a really nice writing workshop. Alas, as long as I'm teaching a Summer-I class, it's hard to teach a Friday class and then make it to Madison WI. Especially if the late Muskegon-Milwaukee Lake Express ferry isn't running yet.

So That Leaves...

Nothing says commemorating America's heroes like marathons of our "favorite" shows on cable TV. I remember when marathons were actual 24-hour or all-weekend marathons of whole runs or whole seasons of shows. Practically television events. Alas, they are all too common now. Skipping around the dial, I could've had Deadliest Catch on, but I've seen them all. Or better yet, Band of Brothers. But... I am trying to get things done and Band of Brothers demands concentration. So, fluffier TV background? NCIS on USA Network it is. At least for a Saturday afternoon.

And Those Gas Prices

Obviously the oil companies read my musings on gas prices. Their perfidy exposed, after jacking prices up to $2.49.9/gal., they left it there, rather than jerking higher and then running the prices "lower" for the holiday. So I guess this is merely ordinary gouging.

Happy Memorial Day.

Dr. Phil

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