D-League

warrior-cat

Hall of Famer
Oct 22, 2004
191,364
154,933
113
80° today with light winds. It was close to that yesterday and probably hit 80 because it was very warm outside. Have had a few days of 70's before that. What happened to my winter weather? It is supposed to be cooler the next few days, but will be in the 50's and 60's so, still not winter weather.
 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
80° today with light winds. It was close to that yesterday and probably hit 80 because it was very warm outside. Have had a few days of 70's before that. What happened to my winter weather? It is supposed to be cooler the next few days, but will be in the 50's and 60's so, still not winter weather.
You were talking about movies a few days ago. Ever see Requimem for a Heavyweight? The original was for TV written by Rod Serling (the Twilight Zone guy) and starring Jack Palance who actually was a boxer for awhile. The movie version starred Anthony Quinn and a young Cassius Clay was briefly in it in the beginning.
 

warrior-cat

Hall of Famer
Oct 22, 2004
191,364
154,933
113
You were talking about movies a few days ago. Ever see Requimem for a Heavyweight? The original was for TV written by Rod Serling (the Twilight Zone guy) and starring Jack Palance who actually was a boxer for awhile. The movie version starred Anthony Quinn and a young Cassius Clay was briefly in it in the beginning.
No, but will probably check it out now that I know about it. Watching an old Ray Milland movie right now called Year Zero. Post nuclear war scenario in the 50's. Frankie Avalon was in it as well.
 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
Can't link, but was reading about a self proclaimed prophet named Ebo Enoch (aka Ebo Noah) from Ghana. He said the earth would end on Dec 25 of this year due to catastrophic flooding. When the world did not end, he told his followers God accepted his prayers and delayed the flooding. He then took donated money and bought himself an 89 thousand dollar Mercedes Benz.
 

Ben101er

Heisman
Apr 21, 2004
25,214
59,096
103
Can't link, but was reading about a self proclaimed prophet named Ebo Enoch (aka Ebo Noah) from Ghana. He said the earth would end on Dec 25 of this year due to catastrophic flooding. When the world did not end, he told his followers God accepted his prayers and delayed the flooding. He then took donated money and bought himself an 89 thousand dollar Mercedes Benz.
The Bible says that after God destroyed the Earth once by floods that he would not do so again.
 

MdWIldcat55

Heisman
Dec 9, 2007
21,057
83,335
113
Good morning. Happy Sunday. Cold and gray in the east. Walked as far as I could this morning on my arthritic knee - maybe four miles. Aggravating. I was doing twice that as recently as the summer.

My wife is sick, so I'm doing my best to keep her comfortable. It is almost inevitable I'll come down with it too -- I probably have already but it just hasn't shown itself.

Not much else happening. My son heads back to Texas today, so it definitely feels like Christmas is over -- another good one in the books. Have a great Sunday.
 

warrior-cat

Hall of Famer
Oct 22, 2004
191,364
154,933
113
The Bible says that after God destroyed the Earth once by floods that he would not do so again.
Yeah, it just amazes me that there are people in this world that are so easily duped or just so dumb that they will believe this. Also (paraphrasing here) Jesus said that no one will know the day of his return or end this current world time frame except the father which should tell everyone that only God the father knows this so...

Looked it up and here are the verses.

Matthew 24:36 No one knows the day or hour when these things will happen, not even the angels in heaven or the Son himself. Only the Father knows.

Mark 13:32 No one knows the day or hour when these things will happen, not even the angels in heaven or the Son himself. Only the Father knows
 

AustinTXCat

Hall of Famer
Jan 7, 2003
53,479
316,513
113
Good morning from ATX. 69°F and cloudy. Turning colder later tonight.

5-day weekend nearly over. Headed to grocery store in a few. May watch a little TV after a walk.

Wish y'all another peaceful Sunday.

 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
Warrior Cat, you may already know the story, but Jan hates the Steelers and made a comment about the game a minute ago. It reminded me of Rocky Bleier. They did a made for TV movie about him. EVer heard his story? I'm not a football fan, but I always liked him. His leg was messed up by a grenade in Vietnam. Docs said he would not only never play football again, that he might never walk again. He came back and was the starting fullback in the Bradshaw and Franco Harris days. He later became a big advocate for vets.
 

MdWIldcat55

Heisman
Dec 9, 2007
21,057
83,335
113
Good morning folks.

I usually like the week after Christmas and before New Year's from a work standpoint. Generally, not that busy and I can catch up and plan ahead. But I'm absolutely swamped this year. Started working at 6:30 and just making a small dent in today's urgent business.

My son got back to Texas last night. My wife is heading for NYC in a couple hours to see family. So, I'll have plenty of solitude until the end of the year.

I hope all of you are having a more gentle and restful end of 2025...
 

Pidgie

Sophomore
Jul 4, 2025
21
121
28
Good morning from ATX. 47°F and windy is our current temp. Cold front blew in. Should be back in the 80s by Friday.

Back to work. Short week. Monday, Monday. Wishing y'all a great start to your week.

In late July of 2024 I got sick.........the Director was away visiting family......I went a few days without eating.......I started reading about fasting.......I started doing a 72 hour fast every week...........the only thing I would allow myself was water and Bioplasma cell salts...............since then I have went from 215-220 lbs to 175-180 lbs..........once I got to my present weight, I only eat once a day...............I have more energy............my arthritis doesn't seem to be as bad..........I am sleeping much better..........I am not having as much pain in my lower back and knees...........I am sure the extra weight didn't help................The best part is, I eat what ever I want when I do eat.........and as much as I want...........although both my appetite and stomach have shrunk.........
 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
Mr. Carbo, did you work at Martin Marietta?
IT was Union Carbide when I started and Martin Marietta when I quit. You had to have a clearance to work there. I already had a Top Secret Clearance from my military time, but the FBI had to clear me a second time and give me a Secret Clearance to work there. They ran it on a cost plus basis. I think it was 8%. For ever dollar they spent, they got 1.08 back. Ever so many years, the gov took bids on running it. Waste was rampant. They had their own fire dept and security force. I was offered a job in operations and security, but operations paid better. They had their own medical clinic with two docs on duty during day shift during the week. A lot of people used them for personal, not gov use. They had a pay cafeteria for the day workers that probably seated 100 people. It was a small city.
 

cordmaker 74

All-Conference
Jul 5, 2025
243
1,468
93
IT was Union Carbide when I started and Martin Marietta when I quit. You had to have a clearance to work there. I already had a Top Secret Clearance from my military time, but the FBI had to clear me a second time and give me a Secret Clearance to work there. They ran it on a cost plus basis. I think it was 8%. For ever dollar they spent, they got 1.08 back. Ever so many years, the gov took bids on running it. Waste was rampant. They had their own fire dept and security force. I was offered a job in operations and security, but operations paid better. They had their own medical clinic with two docs on duty during day shift during the week. A lot of people used them for personal, not gov use. They had a pay cafeteria for the day workers that probably seated 100 people. It was a small city.
The reason I ask, my cousin that lives in Elgin, he works on the Army base close to Elgin, stopped by for a visit today, was telling me that his brother works there at MM site, he is on the fire department part. He was telling that the old plant was in a multi-year cleanup, but now they have changed directions and something going to be built there if I understood him correctly.
 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
IT was Union Carbide when I started and Martin Marietta when I quit. You had to have a clearance to work there. I already had a Top Secret Clearance from my military time, but the FBI had to clear me a second time and give me a Secret Clearance to work there. They ran it on a cost plus basis. I think it was 8%. For ever dollar they spent, they got 1.08 back. Ever so many years, the gov took bids on running it. Waste was rampant. They had their own fire dept and security force. I was offered a job in operations and security, but operations paid better. They had their own medical clinic with two docs on duty during day shift during the week. A lot of people used them for personal, not gov use. They had a pay cafeteria for the day workers that probably seated 100 people. It was a small city.
Oh, another interesting tidbit. They said the plant used more electricity per day than the entire city of St Louis. Sometimes in the switch yards (where the electricity came in), it would Be raining, with rain nowhere else.

At times, I worked the water plant where we received and treated water from the Ohio River from TVA. At times, we were pulling 22 million gallons of water per day out of the river.
 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
I don't live in Paducah anymore, but yeah the city is trying to work with the gov to get something going at the site. Not sure what. It is in the middle of a game reserve, so fairly remote. They say Alben Barkley (VP under Truman) bought the farmland from farmers and resold it to the gov at a profit. Don't know if true. At one time, they were advising people not to eat any meat from animals or fish taken in the area. Grahmville is the nearest village. At one point, they ran water lines from Paducah (20 miles away maybe?) Because they didn't want people drinking the water.
 

cordmaker 74

All-Conference
Jul 5, 2025
243
1,468
93
Oh, another interesting tidbit. They said the plant used more electricity per day than the entire city of St Louis. Sometimes in the switch yards (where the electricity came in), it would Be raining, with rain nowhere else.

At times, I worked the water plant where we received and treated water from the Ohio River from TVA. At times, we were pulling 22 million gallons of water per day out of the river.
I meant to add, that my cousin that still lives in Paducah somewhere around Husband Road, Spanning Lane area has been a volunteer firefighter ever since he was old enough to join the Reidland FD
 

cordmaker 74

All-Conference
Jul 5, 2025
243
1,468
93
I don't live in Paducah anymore, but yeah the city is trying to work with the gov to get something going at the site. Not sure what. It is in the middle of a game reserve, so fairly remote. They say Alben Barkley (VP under Truman) bought the farmland from farmers and resold it to the gov at a profit. Don't know if true. At one time, they were advising people not to eat any meat from animals or fish taken in the area. Grahmville is the nearest village. At one point, they ran water lines from Paducah (20 miles away maybe?) Because they didn't want people drinking the water.
I stayed in Grahmville in 1970 when I worked for RR Dawson Bridge Co. We built the bridge there by Oaks Mall
 

MdWIldcat55

Heisman
Dec 9, 2007
21,057
83,335
113
Austin -- Best of luck to your wife. Back pain is the worst.

Cold and gray in the east -- temps down into the teens and the wind is howling so it is even colder on the skin.

Another busy day of work, with the degree of difficulty increased because so many people are off this week, and our work is collaborative.

I hope it is a good day for all of you.
 

AustinTXCat

Hall of Famer
Jan 7, 2003
53,479
316,513
113
Good morning and Happy New Year's Eve from ATX. 38°F and clear.

Must work today. After work, I'll visit wife unless she's released early from hospital. Daughter out of work. I may bring her out here because I need help with wife. Must pay daughter, ex and an uncle to care for granddaughter (take her to school, etc) while daughter helps me here. We'll figure it out.

Wishing y'all a Happy New Year.
 

MdWIldcat55

Heisman
Dec 9, 2007
21,057
83,335
113
Happy New Years Eve. A final work day to chip away at all that didn't get done this year.

I can remember some pretty riotous and, in retrospect, dangerous New Years Eves back in the day. I'm grateful every day to whoever watches over us that I didn't hurt or kill anyone drunk driving through the 1970s and first half of the 1980s before I stopped being a reckless fool.

Tonight, I'll be here by myself in Maryland - wife in Manhattan, son in Burnet, Texas, daughters and grandkids in DC and Kansas City, father and siblings in Campbell and Kenton counties, Kentucky.

With any luck I'll be in bed by 11pm and greet 2026 with a clear head about 6.5 hours later.

Have a good day folks.
 

MdWIldcat55

Heisman
Dec 9, 2007
21,057
83,335
113
Happy New Year folks. 2026 is filled with promise and I hope it delivers for all of the D-leaguers.

I was alone as 2025 slipped away last night, with my family all scattered, and I started thinking of other places I'd welcomed in a new year: Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Haiti, Bosnia...One day stood out. At the end of his presidency, George HW Bush came to Somalia to thank the troops there. I'd already been in that wretched country two months, had a bad case of Dysentery, had lost about 35 pounds. The military, clustered at the ports and airport, didn't have sufficient supplies for the likes of me to bum food off them, so I was still trying to filter filthy water, douse it with iodine to drink, and eat rancid camel meat and gummy spaghetti.

But when we heard Bush was coming, we got to the airport, got checked out and given event passes (see below) and we got to hang around while Bush thanked the troops. They knew he was a combat veteran, and mostly liked him (while expressing anger and fear of the incoling Clinton presidency.) So there was some warm and lively conversations. Most of all, we got to partake of clean bottled water and MREs - heavenly!

May 2026 bring lots of blessings, big and small.
 

MdWIldcat55

Heisman
Dec 9, 2007
21,057
83,335
113
I had never really thought about what you guys had to eat or drink. Interesting to hear. At times, I had c rations or mci, even here in the states, but not water I had to doctor or rancid camel meat. Food with insects cooked into it a few times.
Bernie, There were times I was embedded, or before that what was called an official member of the DOD pool -- that was true during Desert Storm and during the Iraq invasion of 2003. In those cases, we'd eat MREs and drink the same water as the soldiers or Marines we were traveling with, and carry a military ID that gave us a status of 04 - Major - for traveling on helicopters and whatever.

But most of the time, in places like Sarajevo or Rwanda or Haiti or Somalia or Afghanistan, we were on our own, and just had to scrounge for food -- usually with the help of a paid local fixer. Often we were in places when there was no US military, which of course was much more dangerous than being embedded with a combat unit. Most often, the food wasn't bad. There was usually chicken or goat meat, decent pita bread and hummus, goat cheese, stuff like that.

But Mogadishu was a challenge. There was no clean water and very little food besides the camels they were slaughtering in desperation. Of course, no electricity or plumbing. It was unbelievably filthy and on the equator so scorchingly hot. Thousands were dying in the famine, and street battles among competing warlord militias were constant before the US military arrived, and the dead from their skirmishing were all around. Before we were able to hire our little posse we were constantly being robbed at gunpoint. Of course, we never carried anything, I think all I lost was some cheap sunglasses. But these were psycho teenagers high on khat, the stimulant they constantly chewed, so it was uncomfortable to be frisked with a knock-off AK-47 in your face.

What little bottled water we could manage to carry was gone in a few days. I was there nearly three months - a solid six weeks before ANY US military arrived. We were pretty much screwed on water, which is why we all got sick, me the worst. We managed to keep a supply of the pasta and camel meat by renting a villa and hiring a crew of gunmen associated with the local warlord Mohammed Farah Aideed (the same guy who eventually orchestrated the Black Hawk Down attacks.) I remember we were paying $17,000 a month under this deal, which sounds like a lot for Somalia, but there were seven writers and photographers living together, so it only came to around $80 a day each.

Ha. Sorry to ramble on. But your response prompted some memories. The below photo might interest you. These guys tried to rob us, but when we basically told them to eff off, they decided they wanted to pose with me. So my buddy took this photo. This was about two months before the Black Hawk Down battle. I'd guess these guys were part of that. I wonder if any are still alive - maybe in Minnesota!
 

berniecarbo

Heisman
Apr 29, 2020
5,053
28,787
113
You had it worse than me, at times anyhow. Being base security, I was on base more often than not. Once I was in a tower sitting on a stool behind an M-60 scanning the perimeter. I had been sitting still so long I was getting a cramp in my leg, so I decided to get up and stretch. Just as I turned my head, I heard something whiz by my ear and a thud in the wall behind me. I hit the floor out of instinct and got low behind my M-60 so there would be a little something to deflect a possible second bullet. The shooter knew he was outgunned I guess when he missed, so he had disappeared in the jungle. If I hadn't of got that cramp in my leg, I wouldn't be here conversing with you today. I thought about that the day Trump got shot in the ear.