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You sure ainta gonna get fired, so don't try:wiggle:N/T
Posted by: Royal
Date: May 06, 2009 07:10PM

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http://royalottmar.blogspot.com/
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Re: Stories by Cupajo..............
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 06, 2009 07:16PM
Having a Cup a Jo!!
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 05:33AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
My Dad drank his coffee black his entire adult life as did his brother and their father before them. They always said they couldnt ruin a good cup of coffee by putting things like milk and sugar in it! When I started drinking coffee as a teen, I put milk and sugar in mine and was looked down upon for it too. As time passed and I joined the military, I gave up milk. Some how the milk/coffee combo started causing me physiological distress and I stopped using it.

After a while I dropped sugar and learned to enjoy a cup of coffee for the flavor of the coffee in its many variations. I prefer a Columbian blend hot and black today. I cant stand flavorings added to my coffee and detest Hazelnut with a passion! I have an old broad based plastic cup that doesnt tip over easily that I carry in my truck and has had many gallons of coffee through it by now Im sure. I start my day early with a steaming cup of Green Mountain Columbian Blend bought at a local convenience store/gas station.

I dont generally wash the old cup although I do rinse it with scalding water from time to time. The plastic cup is seasoned and has a character all its own. Once in a while the brewer will mix up the pots and that causes me to have to carefully rinse the cup, but the plastic will pick up tastes so I avoid soap at all costs! The reason I use it instead of some other kind of cup is that it fits my hand and is nearly indestructible. I have two cups of coffee a day and sometimes a third. More than that is too much.

Many mornings I will catch the sunrise and perhaps enjoy a cinnamon roll as I do, while watching for evidence of boat, bird or fish activity across the surface of The Sound. This morning I skipped the socializing enjoyed on most mornings and settled in at my keyboard to write this bit of nonsense. The early morning socializing has become as much a joyful event as watching the sun rise and is reserved mostly for those days when overcast doesnt allow the sun to peek through.

The regulars are on their way to work, going fishing (in season), going to school (students and teachers) or perhaps just getting a tank of gas and passing through our small community. There are a few retired or semi-retired folks that drop by and the scene is never the same from one morning to the next.

Across the street at another small convenience store, there is a cadre of regulars that gather each morning and swap lies of how life has been for them. They are mostly retired and the atmosphere is a bit tiresome for me, so I avoid the group unless I have to see one of their number about one thing or another.

A fellow stopped in for a paper one morning a couple of months ago and commented that it was chilly that morning. It was 28 degrees and windy and I assured him that in Maine where he comes from it may be chilly, in Connecticut it is cold, but in Texas where I came from it would be damned cold! Later in the day, when I notice myself slipping into my mid-afternoon slump, Ill stop in for my usual caffeine fix.

As a long time local plumber I have met a lot of these folks and enjoy our brief encounters. During the summer months there are seasonal residents to get re-acquainted with and loads of youngsters from the nearby beaches, with tiny bits of cloth mostly (barely?) covering their attributes. As the resident old guy, I can have lots of fun kidding around with these kids. I suggested to one sweet young thing last summer that she should have liability insurance to protect her from lawsuits she might be involved in for causing some of us older men heart attacks! Suffice it to say, she was a barely clad knockout!!!

Sometimes during the course of my day I enjoy a cup with one of my many friends/customers that know I am a coffee drinker. I had a customer that is no longer with us who used to drink coffee all day long when he was a Navy Admiral. He had a steward that kept his cup filled and ready at all times. He grinned and said that he never finished a cup, but would take a sip when it occurred to him. I suggested an intravenous drip and that brought a wonderful laugh from the old fellow who had been the commander of our largest aircraft carrier at one time, the Ticonderoga.

I used to look forward to working for Admiral Chase, because after I finished my job, he would have two cups of steaming hot, black coffee waiting and he and I would enjoy talking about life. He was involved with PT boats as a young officer and sometimes would share a bit of his experiences from those times. He lived in an old family farmhouse overlooking the Connecticut River, between Deep River and Essex, Connecticut. I miss the old Admiral and our visits and the gleam in his eyes when we shared time together.

Now you know why I chose Cupajo as a screen moniker.


Cupajo
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Ol Frank would love to see that one..
Posted by: Mikie [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 08:34AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,373
What an unusual design, Cupa. It does seem to be the lot of far too many ideas.... That they die aborning.

There was a company in Victoria that had a few revolutionary ideas on aircraft design. Unfortunately, the market is/was geared for a pretty specific design.... so that is thew way that they eventually went.

calm seas

Mikie

________________________________________
"A dog is better than me, for she has love and does not judge"
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Either Earlr Grey tea or a regualr orange pekoe works for me.. :
Posted by: Mikie [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 08:43AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,373
That and a bit of lemon in it.

But where is the picture of the sweet young thing. :

Sunny skies

Mikie

________________________________________
"A dog is better than me, for she has love and does not judge"
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Re: Ol Frank would love to see that one. I've been very fortunate in my life to come into contact with rarecreations a few times ala the Tucker and this unusual craft and the great folks on this forum!! N/T
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 10:15AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936


Re: Either Earlr Grey tea or a regualr orange pekoe works for me.. :
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 10:24AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
Picture of the heart stopper?-----------In my mind!

Sorry I can't share!

Cupajo



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/13/2009 10:25AM by Cupajo.
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Nice job of .........
Posted by: Wayne in BC [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 07:39PM Moderator
Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 6,879
filling us in Cupa! Good reading and all hits home

________________________________________
No trees were harmed in the making of this post, however, a whole lot of electrons were confused and inconvenienced
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Re: Nice job of .........
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 13, 2009 09:44PM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
Why Thank You Wayne,

I was sure that there would be a few folks out there that would find the water craft post interesting.

I know I have enjoyed knowing about the details and the gentleman who developed the concept here.

He enthusiasticly promoted his creation until it was destroyed and had funding enough to proceed had the craft survived.

I wish I had traveled in it before it met its demise. I was one of a kind and was a really exciting concept!

Thanks for your comments,

Cupajo


Mulligan Stew of Humanity---The Mill Block
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 14, 2009 05:31AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
In the Mill Block we lived in a couple of different houses during my parents employment at the cotton mill. The last house we lived in there burned and the neighbors I remember most were the one eyed French woman I wrote about in other posts and the Hahn family whos son Curtis was my age. He much later joined the air force and it was largely due to talking to him about the military that I decided to join up.

The other house we were in before that was poorly located on a busy street and my parents took the first available house in the back end of the Mill Block where it was quieter. Our neighbors while we lived in the first house were another boy my age Arthur Hopkins and his family and a fellow called Mupsie Holtz. I remember poor Mupsie being henpecked by a wife that had as caustic an outlook on life as anyone I ever met. She brow beat her poor husband so badly that he was angry most of the time.

They had a daughter married to Shorty Bremstedder. Shorty was a quiet, somewhat mousey sort of fellow, who would rather hunt and fish and hang out in the forests of the local river bottom land than work. The fact that the couple had two kids to feed didnt seem to matter to Shorty, because when the weather got warm enough for camping along the Guadalupe River, Shorty would disappear! He knew his in-laws wouldnt let his family starve and he stayed as far away from them and their criticism as possible when he could.

One night there was a pounding on our door and when my Dad answered, it was Mupsie who had been drinking and was looking for Shorty. He told my Dad he knew Shorty was in our house and that he was coming in to drag him out! Dad was more in tune with Shorty than Mupsie and told him that Shorty was not in our house and that if he (Mupsie) thought he was coming inside he had better think again! He reached into the corner behind the open door and picked up the loaded shotgun that was there and allowed Mupsie a brief glimpse of it.

The big fellow did a double take, his face turning ashen and he jumped down off our steps and we heard nothing more from him that night! I cant recall what ever happened to Shorty, but he had the sympathy of most of the people who knew his circumstances.

That housing complex had a Mulligan Stew of humanity all of whom worked at the mill or were their family members. It was an interesting place for a youngster who enjoyed watching humankind and their antics. Mupsie and the mean old gal he married, had a son that was simple minded. The boy had suffered scarlet fever when very young and was poorly ever after. I dont remember him going to school and the few times I recall seeing him around he was usually wandering about singing to himself and the world in general.

There were a lot of Germanic folk known locally as Bohemians who were hard working and kind and offered me a chance to learn about some things I might not have learned as a small boy elsewhere. I think they may have come from Czechoslovakia, but I dont know if thats true. I watched as they rendered hog fat into lard and they made sausage and I tasted cracklings for the first time. Cracklings or rinds for the un-initiated are the pork skin pieces left after nearly all the fat has been boiled out of them. They taste great to a half starved boy and will quickly make you sick if you eat a few too many. Later in life I learned they tasted better with a little salt and beer.


Cupajo

Re: Either Earlr Grey tea or a regualr orange pekoe works for me.. :
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 14, 2009 06:10AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
I remember reading years ago about tea being a Ying substance and coffee being a Yang substance in the oriental view of things.

According to this way of thinking a person should have a balance of the two kinds of influences to live a full and healthy life.

There was a period of a few years when I too only drank tea, especially green tea.

Somewhere along the trail of life I went back to coffee and I am not sure if I made the right choice as much as I do enjoy a cup.

It can create harsh responses in the old bod.

Do ya think anyone would notice if I put tea in my coffee cup?

After all I am,

Cupajo

I lived in a few places like that Cupa...........
Posted by: Wayne in BC [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 14, 2009 03:14PM Moderator
Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 6,879
we remember well what you described of characters and run down housing! Thanks for the memories, i think

________________________________________
No trees were harmed in the making of this post, however, a whole lot of electrons were confused and inconvenienced

Cupajo, I really liked your rendition of Mulligan Stew of Humanity.
Posted by: Arkie John [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 14, 2009 03:15PM Registered: 3 years ago
Posts: 1,839
I had to laugh at the last line, for sure. My maternal grandparents were part of a 'company town' called Bauxite, here in Arkansas. It was a way of life for so very many. He paid $12.00 a month for rent, but made very little in the way of wages. I suppose the greatest thing was the job security he had a the plant and the fact that the company store would give them credit until payday. They were probably much like the old song Ernie Ford made famous: Sixteen Tons. "Sixteen tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt, St. Peter don't you call me 'cause I can't go...I owe my soul to the company sto'."

Yup, a whole different sociology than most people of this day and age ever knew about. Thanks for the story. It gives me reflections of Steinbeck's "Cannery Row."

aj


Re: Cupajo, I really liked your rendition of Mulligan Stew of Humanity.
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 14, 2009 05:05PM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
"Cannery Row" kinda the story of my growing up until I left home!!

A lot of us been there done that!!

Glad you and Wayne enjoyed the recollections,

CJ


Joe, A good man.
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 15, 2009 05:51AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
Joe, a man of his times, my father-in-law and my friend.

There are few men that Ive met in my life that have as much of my respect and admiration as Joe. The son of Paul and Concetta, born September 20th 1913, in Canicatenese Bagni, Syracuse Province, Sicily. He grew to the age five not knowing his father, who had left his family to travel to the U.S.A. where he started a fruit delivery business in Hartford, Connecticut. His father would return to Sicily every four or five years to renew his relationship with his family and father another child. After building his business to a volume that would enable him to bring his family to America he sent for Concetta, Sam, Ralph, Francesca, and five year old Joe to join him in Hartford. His Mom in an effort to save money wrote down his age on the necessary paperwork as five years when he was actually six years of age, a fact he was to learn after he reached his nineties. He was amused to learn of his mothers trick, but it made no difference to him as he was eternally young at heart and remained so until he left us at ninety four.

The five years before immigrating were spent mostly with his Mom and family surviving hard times in Sicily. Days were spent with his Mom searching the countryside for firewood and any foodstuffs that were to be found, growing and exploring. He developed a very strong bond for his Mom that he still feels today ninety years later. His Mom didnt want to leave Sicily and her Mom and friends, but a wifes place was with her husband. A little over a year after arriving in this country she developed stomach cancer and died. Joe was distraught and became even more a child of the streets than he was before.

Joes father had no experience raising children and no patience for a small boys antics. Sam and Frances were both out on their own, Ralph was living with his Dad and Joe. Both his Dad and Ralph were hard on the boy and he learned to avoid them as much as possible spending most of each day living on the streets of Hartfords south end.

Joe finished four years of formal schooling and ran the streets working as a shoeshine boy and at any other job he could to make a few pennies to buy food for his growing body. He quickly became as tough as he had to be to get along as a shoe shine boy. He had to fight to earn a choice spot on the down town street and to keep it, the fights were bare knuckle rough and tumble and were all too frequent. (They created a love of boxing in him that lasted the rest of his life). The years were marked by the regular beatings by his Dad and cuffing by Ralph usually for being a wise street kid. He and friends were to learn how to beg borrow and steal to survive on the streets.

In the summers he spent time at the Connecticut River in Hartford learning to swim and having fun in the water. He and his friends scooted around the streets on their gigies, wooden scooters built of scavenged wood and whatever wheels could be scrounged (old baby buggy wheels were perfect). When heavy contraband had to be moved the gigies were the handiest way to go. On one occasion he and his friends found an airplane fuselage in a crate at warehouse and using their gigies rolled it through the streets, past the police station where the officers were changing shifts and waved at those crazy kids as they passed by, to a place where they were planning to put an engine in it and fly it away. It was recovered before anyone got hurt and the incident provided years of laughs for all concerned. He was only twelve or so years old at the time.

In the winter he sledded down the hilly streets of Hartford as there was no traffic to speak of in those days. Sailing down one such hill he opted to pass under a parked truck and nearly died when he ripped his scalp loose on the undercarriage of the truck. He spent time in the hospital for the first time in his young life and bears the scar to this day. If he had held his head another 1/2 inch higher and he would surely have died.


Cupajo


Cupajo, I wonder why he decided to go under that truck? ...........
Posted by: Kelley (Texas) [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 15, 2009 06:11AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,649
Reading your story about Joe shows the contrast of life styles of growing up in Texas when compared to growing up in the New England States. Good story, I enjoyed reading it. Please have a great day! Kelley (Texas)
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Re: Cupajo, I wonder why he decided to go under that truck? ...........
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 15, 2009 06:58AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 936
That is a question he asked himself for the rest of his life.

It was a child's miscalculation I'm sure and must have seemed a cool thing to do at the time.

Some of those old trucks were pretty high off the ground, but not high enough in this case or perhaps he just kept his head too high or didn't duck fast enough!

Thanks for reading and your reply,

CJ

Re: Stories by Cupajo..............
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 06, 2009 07:28PM
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 05:43AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984

Uncle Milo was a good man. He was of medium stature and build and remained a trim 150 pounds or so for his entire life. He was to only real cowboy I ever knew complete with working boots and slightly bowed legs from a long life on horseback.. My earliest memories of Milo were of him on a horse. He worked as a ranch hand and later a manager or foreman. There were Brahma bulls, horses, wolf hunts (sometimes from an airplane), and rodeos where he entered calf roping events. He usually had a cigarette hanging from his lip and was one of only a few men I ever knew that actually smoked Bull Durham rolling tobacco. He could build a cigarette in his sleep or so it seemed, because of the ease with which it just appeared in his fingers.

He was 20 or so when he met Aunt Elsie, Moms sister. She was 15 when they married (folks did things like that in those days) and they were together for as long as he lived. She said she knew the second she saw him that he was her man and that never changed. They had three sons and two daughters and somehow through hard work and sacrifice managed to get em grown and gone. Uncle owned his own small place, but had to rent it out to keep it, while he lived on ranches and worked for the wealthy landowners as their ranch manager. He was greatly appreciated for his abilities and when he became ill and could no longer work his boss let him live out his life in the ranch house he had called home for many years. I dont recall Uncle ever being a fisherman, but he did hunt deer and predators as the need arose.

He was a quiet man and sometimes it was a struggle to get a word out of him. He had a quick, shy sort of grin that was a pleasure to witness when it happened. He had a keen sense of humor and enjoyed a good joke. He was the perfect example of the Marlborough man and like that advertizing icon, died of lung cancer. The last time I saw Milo, he was homebound and on a respirator. He could still get around the house, but it was an effort for him. He enjoyed the family gathering that day which was the last time I saw his children all together and the only time he ever saw mine.

We had a great day and I was happy to see him able to take pleasure in the children and grand children. One of the highlights of the day occurred when my oldest daughter Connie, then 5 or so brought him some pecans she had found under a tree outside and offered to sell them to him! I was saddened then to see one of my heroes in such a condition and more so later when I learned he had died, asking for a cigarette.


Cupajo


Cupajo, I have a very dear friend living over near Seguin, Texas that.............
Posted by: Kelley (Texas) [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 06:59AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,655
is just like you just described your Uncle Milo. He is the best horseman that I have ever known, and has won many roping events through out South Texas. He is a quiet type person, does not talk much, but when he does say something, everyone listens. Your story brought back a few good memories. Please have a great day! Kelley (Texas)


Re: Cupajo, I have a very dear friend living over near Seguin, Texas that.............
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 08:40AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
Hi Fred,

I'm glad you enjoyed reading about Uncle Milo.

I just write em as I remember em and I wish I knew more about him than I do.

We lived far enough appart that it was rare for us to get together.

I hardly knew him or my cousins except for those rare visits.

As you can tell he did make an impression on folks and my little story is the best I can do to make sure he is remembered.

Best to Ya Friend,

CJ

He sounds like a man I would like to know...
Posted by: Mikie [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 08:45AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,378
I think that a great many of that generation had lives not unlike your buddys, Cupa. My father had a tough life too and on occasion, would relate a few of those trials to me. But I am certain that he did not tell me all of them....... or the more difficult ones.

By the way, I have never heard a scooter called a gigi.

sunny skies

Mikie

________________________________________
"A dog is better than me, for she has love and does not judge"


A very touching story... People those days did stay together for long periods...
Posted by: Mikie [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 08:59AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,378
Couples worked hard together, and in doing so, found the respect for one another..

Fair winds

Mikie

________________________________________
"A dog is better than me, for she has love and does not judge"


Re: A very touching story... People those days did stay together for long periods...
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 11:08AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
Hi Mikie,

There is so much I don't know of Uncle Milo that I can never know.

His story and others like them are what is pushing me to capture the memories I do have for my children, grandchildren and future generations.

Of course I've been blessed witha few friends that seem to enjoy them as well.

Thanks for being one of them,

CJ


Sounds like he would have been a great person to
Posted by: George-CT [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 03:30PM Moderator
Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 4,036
get to know. I enjoy the old timers. They have a wealth of information and have lived long enough to apply it correctly. I like quiet people. My Dad always said, you learn more with your ears, than you do your mouth. For the most part, it holds true.

Enjoyed the read....

George-CT


Re: Sounds like he would have been a great person to
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 16, 2009 08:23PM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
I'm sorry I didn't get to know him better!

He was a good husband, father and man in general.

Worked hard, enjoyed life and kept his opinions to himself.

We could use more like him, but that is a rare breed.

Glad you enjoyed the read,

CJ

Super Computers/Human Brain
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 17, 2009 05:41AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
As a teenager I began to have an interest in how my mind/brain works (Or Not) and started reading to increase my limited knowledge of such things. As part of that learning I have kept up with the evolution of the development of electronic computers and the on going comparisons with the human brain. A book written in the 1970s compared to human brain vs. the computer in this way; A computer to equal the capability of the human brain would have to be three hundred feet tall and the size of the state of Texas! That was before solid state circuitry was the norm.

Today I suspect the computer would be a hundred feet tall and the size of the state of Delaware! A scientist recently stated that based on research, past trends and technologies under development by the year 2020 a cheap computer would be operating that will have capacity equal to the human brain. This computer will no doubt cost many millions of dollars and will have a specific purpose like all of the Super Computers of today.

The three pound mass between our ears, the most complex biological structure known, has been said to have an infinite computational capacity, but we humans seem to need to quantify everything so somehow the number someone agreed as correct is 100 trillion bits processed per second! Today the most advanced computer in the world can only process 22.8 trillion bits per second! Of course this refers to potential more than actual day to day use limits.

As of November 2008 the fastest machine is the IBM Roadrunner! Its located at the Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico. It is a cluster of 3240 computers, each with 40 processing cores. It requires 6,000 square feet of space and 296 racks of processing equipment. Human brain---3 pounds of gray matter and fits inside a human skull. Roadrunner---$133 Million. Human brain---priceless!

Our government paid for this one of a kind computer to be able to determine the decay rate of the US nuclear arsenal in order to predict its safety and reliability. It is a hybrid design with 12,960 IBM PowerXCell 8iCPUs and 6,480 AMD Opteron dual core processors. As a hybrid it requires software designed specifically for its operational needs. (I hope you dont think I know what all that means!!)

Other possible uses include the sciences, financial, automotive and aerospace applications. A current model quad-core Xeon workstation in the $4,000 range at 2.66 GHz will out perform a Crey C90 Supercomputer used in the early 90s in the multimillion dollar range!

IBM has begun work on Sequioa that will equal 2 million laptops whereas the RoadRunner is equal to 100,000 LapTops. It is scheduled for 2011 completion.

IBM also is developing Cyclops 64 architecture intended to create a Super Computer on a chip. Not your run of the mill PC or lap-top doncha know! The one thing that computers can never do is experience life from birth to death with the wealth of daily activities that make up a life. They may be able to replicate small bits of human experience, but there will not be the attendant emotional involvement that makes a life worth living. Computers dont have the flexibility necessary for them to have these experiences. Linear computations via scientific programming and the ability to use experiential knowledge base (Schema) to think in abstracts creatively represent the dividing line between computer and human brain processing.

I have no fear of computers taking over the world.


Cupajo

It's pretty obvious that a lot of plagiarism is in this article.

Be aware that some of the words are mine, like I, the and maybe Cupajo!


Some time ago, I wrote a small story/article on the actual develpoment of the computor and the ladies who did the programming..
Posted by: Mikie [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 17, 2009 08:59AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,378
And how they never got the recognition that they deserved.

It is amazing to see the changes and improvements in computer technology. Buy the absolute best today and within a couple of months, it is outdated. Why would anyone buy a new one today then? :

All the best bud

Calm seas, fair winds

Mikie

________________________________________
"A dog is better than me, for she has love and does not judge"


Re: Some time ago, I wrote a small story/article on the actual development of the computer and the ladies who did the programming..
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 17, 2009 09:48AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
There has been a lot of conjecture about the computer one day surpassing the human brain in performance capabilities.

The comparisons are interesting, but since the one is a mechanical construct representing a human concept and the other is a living organic entity (emphasis on entity), there can never be a true comparison in "real" terms.

The old apples and oranges thing.

Indeed, why buy a new one when it is obsolete before it goes into production? I will use mine as long as it keeps doing the job I need it to do.

Best to Ya Friend,

CJ

Creativity at Work!!
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 18, 2009 05:58AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
The Ruger .22 Magnum Revolver as wood working tool!

I installed a kitchen faucet for my old friend Andy today. Andy is the fellow I sharpened the Buck knife for years ago. I asked him if he still had the knife and he told me that he still uses it and that he still cant sharpen it beyond a marginally useable edge. My work produced a dangerously sharp edge according to him.

Maybe thirty or so years ago Andy and his cousin decided to build a cottage/cabin in Maine. There was no electricity and they decided to build using hand tools and a chain saw. They set creosoted pilings the size of utility poles to act as a foundation to support the structure. After setting them firmly in the ground they had to cut them off level and even to keep the structure plumb. The realized they had no line level or cord long enough to reach anyway. They had no hose or tube to use as a water level.

To save time and gitter done they came up with a plan. (Now children, dont try this at home!) One post was cut off at the desired height and holding a Ruger .22 Magnum Revolver with a long barrel even with the top edge, they then placed the only level they had to rest on the barrel of the gun. He aimed at the next post to be cut and, when his cousin told him the bubble was centered, he shot into the next post. They then used the chain saw and made as accurate a cut as they could with such a tool and so as not to compound any miscalculations, used the first post again as they marked the next post the same way. They were then able to cut them so that they were very near perfect and he was very proud of the achievement.

I asked why he didnt just lay the level on the first cut off post and using it as a line of sight level have his cousin mark the next post as he called the spot to mark? I could tell by his response that hadnt occurred to him. He replied, That wouldnt have been as much fun! I then asked if he had any other uses for his Ruger wood working tool like driving nails.

He said that later when they had a roof on the cottage, he wanted to cut a hole for a stove pipe and needed to drill a starter hole for his keyhole saw. He said, I went inside and shot a half dozen shots through the roof at the marked location and then sawed out the opening. I asked why he didnt just shoot out the entire opening and he grinned letting me know the thought had crossed his mind and said, because he was out of ammo!


Cupajo

Nice little gun that.... I have one too... I got it as payment for painting a fellows truck.. One of my best compensations ever for a paint job!! :N/T
Posted by: Mikie [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 19, 2009 08:44AM Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 5,378


Re: Nice little gun that.... I have one too... I got it as payment for painting a fellows truck.. One of my best compensations ever for a paint job!! :
Posted by: Cupajo [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 19, 2009 09:11AM Registered: 11 months ago
Posts: 984
Hey Mikie,

Fine revolver for sure.

Ever use one as a wood working tool?

Gotta go have a look at the water.

Nice day out and it may be my first day in the salt.

Tides are running a bit high though this time of month.

Catch ya latter Friend,

CJ


They are a nice gun. I have one in a Buntline that
Posted by: George-CT [ Send a Message ]
Date: April 19, 2009 09:54AM Moderator
Registered: 4 years ago
Posts: 4,036
has both the regular cylinder and the Mag cylinder.... I purchased many years ago and grew attached to it.... I use it and a stainless .44 mag out on the range off and on. Fun guns to shoot... Never tried leveling anything with it, except woodchucks....

Fact, here is a picture of both of them together.....

George-CT

:usaflag: Joe's Teen Years And Early Manhood!!
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 07, 2009 05:30AM
Joes Dad had leased trees in various orchards for their fruit and it had to be picked and delivered ripe each day. Joe spent a large part of his young life helping his Dad to pick and deliver fruit and vegetables. These days were long and exhausting, beginning with his Dad roughly jarring him awake usually with a slap and growl in the wee hours of the morning and lasted until the load of fruit and vegetables were gone. Joe did most of the leg work, running up and down the stairs and back and forth to the old truck. Pay was a roof and bed and whatever food he could get. His Dad went to sleep at the wheel on one of those trips and somehow they both survived the crash. Trucks were not as fast in those days, but one could die never the less. His father still had the stub of his broken pipe stem clenched in his teeth when the truck came to rest.

When he was a few years older, in his early-teens, he worked for an ice man, doing all the grunt work of running the ice blocks up long flights of stairs from the old truck. He grew into an athletically trim and strong young man. He said he was always hungry and his favorite food then and until his death was a nice dish or two of spaghetti with tomato sauce and maybe some meatballs. The day was not complete without fruit of some kind and figs were a particular favorite.

When he was in his mid-teens Joe and his future brother-in-law Sam decided to go to Florida. Sam came up with the idea and Joe was game to try anything. They pooled their meager resources and started hitch-hiking their way south. It was wintertime and they found that their money didnt go very far. By the time they got to New Jersey they were half frozen and had just enough money left to buy a few doughnuts. They shared this meager fare and headed back to Hartford. Somehow they managed to get back before freezing to death. Joe got the blame for the escapade as he often did when things got stirred up. Joe was one to challenge life his way and had developed a bit of a reputation as a rowdy fellow, if not a trouble maker.

When he was in his late teens his Dad, just in from a night of gambling and drinking, hit him once too often and when he raised his hand with a heavily buckled strap to hit him again, Joe grabbed the hand and told his father that he would never hit him again. He told me he wanted with all his heart to strike his drunken father, but he couldnt do it. His Dad realized then that his son could no longer be abused and when Joe told him he was leaving, he begged his son to stay. He offered Joe his business, but Joe left his fathers house never to live there again.

He got a ride to New York with a friend who had a truck route there from Hartford. He stayed with his brother Sam and he got a job in a garment factory. He got the job after assuring the owner that he knew all there was to know about cutting cloth and proceeding to show him. The man knew by the way Joe picked up the cutter that he had no clue about cutting cloth and yelled at him to stop before he ruined the whole stack of cloth. He admired Joes chutzpa and hired him and taught him how to cut cloth. He developed lifelong friendships while in New York and kept in touch with several of those friends as long as they lived.

Joe and his friends had an active sense of humor as was evident on one occasion when they pulled a prank on one of the group. They convinced the only one of their number that had a car to take them on an outing to a sea-side area. It was late in the day and they were about ready to head home, but the driver was sound asleep. As he slept the guys thought it would be funny to awaken him with a hot foot. They almost had a long walk home, but the simple fellow calmed down and saw the humor in what had happened and took them home.

It was a hard era to live in and humor was rough and being tough was the order of the day. Some of the fellows Joe knew then were treading the fine line at the edge of organized crime. He used to see around town several wise guys that were later found to be involved in the murder incorporated affair.

Joes brother Sam was a gambler and Joe often found it was up to him to pay the rent and other bills to keep a roof over both their heads. He grew to resent it and after a while headed back to Hartford where he worked at several factory jobs and continued he rowdy ways. He told of trips to the beach and other resort areas when he and his friends had to patch countless flat tires just to travel in the old cars. His favorite stories were about an old Hupmobile that they once ran on its rims leaving a trail down the road gouged into the hot asphalt!

He told of one trip to a movie where he and his friends sat behind a drunk who was sound asleep in front of them. As the fellow inhaled his head went back and then forward when he exhaled. Being the rascals they were didnt allow them to leave the loudly snoring guy alone. They stuck a piece of chewing gum to his nose and the next time his head came back inserted a lit mach in the wet gum. They sat back and watched the flame waving back and forth and the antics of the drunk when he got a blister on his nose!

To Joe and his friends this was one of many ways to blow off steam that were relatively harmless. They didnt try to rough up the poor man or harm him in any other way, unlike some of todays teens.

One of the things that young men of those days enjoyed as much as today was dancing. There were dances every Friday and Saturday night that featured bands popular then, many of whom went on to fame and fortune. Joe decided to go to one of these dances and couldnt get in because he didnt have on a tie. He went out in the street and looked around for something to use as a tie with no luck. It occurred to him that he might use one of the long socks he was wearing as a tie as long as he didnt hold his partner too close and thats just what he did. At 94 years of age, he was still laughing about that prank.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/07/2009 05:32AM by Cupajo.

Re: :usaflag: In Remembrance of Joe!!
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 07, 2009 05:35AM
Joe was a fruit lover as long as he lived and attributed his good health to his fruit eating ways. He remembered seeing his first banana and asking his mother what it was on the boat to America. She told him it was an American fig! The most common fruits where he spent his early years in Sicily were grapes and figs. Figs were his lifetime fruit favorite and he would eat large quantities of the fruit at a sitting. He also enjoyed the prickly pear cactus fruit and said with a quick laugh that because of their many seeds they acted like a roto-rooter in keeping ones system moving!

His doctor was concerned about his blood sugar being high at one of his appointments later in life and Joe, with a chuckle, asked him if it might be because of the case of figs he had just finished eating?

One day he stopped in at the local Stop and Shop to check out their stock of figs and found figs there ripened to perfection, with a coating of honey like juice oozing out of the sweet fruit. Growing up on the streets had made Joe hyper aware of opportunity and with a quick glance around, he quickly tasted a couple or three, just to be sure he wanted to buy some. He approached the young man that was stocking the fruit aisle and told him that this fruit was unfit to be sold as fresh since it was almost rotten!

The young fellow was visibly shaken and hurried to the fig display to remove the offending fruit. Joe told him that his wife could take that fruit and make jam with it before it was completely rotted and offered to buy a case at a greatly reduced price! The young man happily sold him a case of the rotting fruit to keep from having to dump it in the garbage.

Later in the day Joe told a good friend of his Vinnie, another fig lover, what he had done and they both had a big laugh over the whole thing. Imagine, buying a whole case of lovely ripened figs for such a reduced price!

Joe started thinking about what he had said to Vinnie and headed back to the store and convinced the young fellow to sell him the rest of his stock of spoiled figs! He knew Vinnie would be unable to resist trying his luck using the same ploy with the young fellow.

Vinnie arrived at the Stop and Shop fruit department only minutes after Joe departed laughing to him-self as he drove away. Joes friend asked the misguided employee if there were any of those over ripe figs still in stock and he was told that this old guy had come back for a second time and bought them all!

Those two had a friendship that lasted 50 years or so and they laughed about that episode many times over the years until Joes passing last year in 2008. During the preparation for the wake, the funeral director asked if there was anything that we could think of that would be a special remembrance of Joe and I told him to have figs in a dish to represent one of his passions!

I thought that a small bowl of the beloved fruit would be a nice gesture, but the director put out a lovely dish with a whole case of ripe figs for anyone that might share Joes passion and Vinnie with a gleam in his eye and apologizing all the while had more than his share and the story was told and re-told to honor and remember the man lying in state, who would have reached into that bowl had he been able.


CJ

:usaflag: My Little Red Jeep!!
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 07, 2009 05:39AM
Joe was a fruit lover as long as he lived and attributed his good health to his fruit eating ways. He remembered seeing his first banana and asking his mother what it was on the boat to America. She told him it was an American fig! The most common fruits where he spent his early years in Sicily were grapes and figs. Figs were his lifetime fruit favorite and he would eat large quantities of the fruit at a sitting. He also enjoyed the prickly pear cactus fruit and said with a quick laugh that because of their many seeds they acted like a roto-rooter in keeping ones system moving!

His doctor was concerned about his blood sugar being high at one of his appointments later in life and Joe, with a chuckle, asked him if it might be because of the case of figs he had just finished eating?

One day he stopped in at the local Stop and Shop to check out their stock of figs and found figs there ripened to perfection, with a coating of honey like juice oozing out of the sweet fruit. Growing up on the streets had made Joe hyper aware of opportunity and with a quick glance around, he quickly tasted a couple or three, just to be sure he wanted to buy some. He approached the young man that was stocking the fruit aisle and told him that this fruit was unfit to be sold as fresh since it was almost rotten!

The young fellow was visibly shaken and hurried to the fig display to remove the offending fruit. Joe told him that his wife could take that fruit and make jam with it before it was completely rotted and offered to buy a case at a greatly reduced price! The young man happily sold him a case of the rotting fruit to keep from having to dump it in the garbage.

Later in the day Joe told a good friend of his Vinnie, another fig lover, what he had done and they both had a big laugh over the whole thing. Imagine, buying a whole case of lovely ripened figs for such a reduced price!

Joe started thinking about what he had said to Vinnie and headed back to the store and convinced the young fellow to sell him the rest of his stock of spoiled figs! He knew Vinnie would be unable to resist trying his luck using the same ploy with the young fellow.

Vinnie arrived at the Stop and Shop fruit department only minutes after Joe departed laughing to him-self as he drove away. Joes friend asked the misguided employee if there were any of those over ripe figs still in stock and he was told that this old guy had come back for a second time and bought them all!

Those two had a friendship that lasted 50 years or so and they laughed about that episode many times over the years until Joes passing last year in 2008. During the preparation for the wake, the funeral director asked if there was anything that we could think of that would be a special remembrance of Joe and I told him to have figs in a dish to represent one of his passions!

I thought that a small bowl of the beloved fruit would be a nice gesture, but the director put out a lovely dish with a whole case of ripe figs for anyone that might share Joes passion and Vinnie with a gleam in his eye and apologizing all the while had more than his share and the story was told and re-told to honor and remember the man lying in state, who would have reached into that bowl had he been able.

CJ

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Some people are gullible, Cupa... But the least Joe could have done was to take a 'jar of jam' to the poor employee!! :):N/T
Posted by: Mikie
Date: May 07, 2009 04:41PM

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Re: Some people are gullible, Cupa... But the least Joe could have done was to take a 'jar of jam' to the poor employee!! :):
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 07, 2009 09:16PM
Hey Mikie,

Missed you! Joe ate every one of those figs so there was no jam!

They were perfectly ripe and he being the streetwise character he was, took advantage of the young man's ignorance.

I don't consider what he did was "right", but it was funny!

I could never do such a thing, however I have tasted a grape to determine if I wanted to buy the whole bunch!

I would never eat half a bunch and then go pay for the rest!

Best to Ya Friend,

CJ

:usaflag: Joe Enjoyed A Good Laugh And Stirring Things UP!
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 08, 2009 06:28AM
When Joe moved back to Hartford from New York he worked at various jobs, but found the manufacturing industry suited his talents. During this period he started courting the sister of the friend with whom he had headed to Florida only a few years earlier.

He had seen the girl a bit younger than he and thought at the time she looked like a Chinese child. His older sister told him to get acquainted with this nice girl and when he met her he realized it was the same little Chinese girl all grown up and very pretty and the love affair began that lasted for well over sixty years.

They had a daughter (who later became my wife), a son Joe Jr., and another daughter. At the time of his passing at ninety four, Joe had four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren all doing well in life.

Joe was a man who believed in family. He had not had a close family experience as a child. He was determined that his children would know what it meant to grow up in a close family and they did. He joined the National Guard as a young man and we have a picture of him in the uniform of that day looking much like the action hero of those years, William S. Hart!


After years of accumulating experience in industry, he ultimately worked his way into the position of general foreman at Royal Typewriter Co. in Hartford, Connecticut. He was in charge of several production departments and specialized in the heat treating of the metals used in manufacturing typewriters. He worked long hard and in the summer, brutally hot hours, to earn his way in the world. When The Royal moved its production to England he was sent there as the heat treating expert to help set up the heat treating department there. Officially he was retired and working as a consultant. Not bad for a boy of the streets who had an eighth grade education.

On one of his trips to Hull, England for "The Royal", he took all of the fellows from the department out to dinner with an expensive bottle of wine and the best of everything! Joe was the only one of the people sent there by Royal who was given an expense account. After the meal the group strolled the streets of the small town looking for a way to cap off the evening and came upon a playhouse where a local production was underway.

He asked the usher if he and his friends could catch the rest of the play and was told that the house was packed and there were no more seats. Joe informed the man that he was a Broadway Producer (he made an imposing figure when he wanted to dress up!) and had come all the way from America to catch this production: wasnt there something the fellow could do?

The small group was ushered down to the front row of seats where several people were asked to move to other seats as the production was halted until things quieted down! There was a general hush except for the wave of excitement caused by this unusual event. Suddenly the actors on the stage were playing for "the producers" and the air had quality of energy not exhibited before. Every eye in the playhouse was watching the producer and his entourage for their response to the show.

As the production reached the final scene, Joe quietly rose and with a look at his watch in the dim light, walked up the isle smiling his approval of what he had witnessed and exited the theater telling the usher he had to catch a plane and couldnt stay longer as much as he would like to! Joe enjoyed being where there was action and energy and would make his own if none was otherwise available. He told me once that when you arrive somewhere and want to be treated with respect, Act as if you own the place!

CJ



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 05/08/2009 06:32AM by Cupajo.

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Sounds as though Joe and my father would have hit it off very well...
Posted by: Mikie
Date: May 08, 2009 08:18AM
My dad had a very similar attitude to life.... and he gave me advoce that expressed his views. To this day, I have never been able to do that!. I wish, at times, that I could. :):

calm seas

Mikie



"A dog is better than me, for she has love and does not judge"

"Surfing is not a matter of life and death...... it is much more important than that"

Re: Sounds as though Joe and my father would have hit it off very well...
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 08, 2009 10:00AM
My Jewish friends call it "chutzpah", the English "being brazen", the Latins "having big cajones", The Americans "being ballsy" and the Irish "being Irish"!

He had it all and then some!

CJ

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That was an interesting insight and story Cupa......
Posted by: Wayne in BC
Date: May 08, 2009 11:08AM
another well told and appreciated story!



A liar will assume you are lying

Re: That was an interesting insight and story Cupa......
Posted by: Cupajo
Date: May 08, 2009 06:13PM
Thanks Wayne,

I knew this man for forty years and met many people that knew him longer than that and not one person in all those years had a negative word to say about Joe!

The only thing that he might have done differently that I can think of was to allow a little more freedom for his children.

They need growing room and a chance to stretch and grow in this life and he hoovered over them a bit too much!

His intentions were good, but things could have turned out differently for the whole family had his children been given wings instead of having their wings clipped!

This is not something evident to a casual observer and I only came to this realization after he moved in with us and we had a chance to really get to know one another!

Now, there you have it folks ---the one negative thing about Joe!

CJ

Joe lived in a different world and in some ways, my world
Posted by: Royal
Date: May 11, 2009 09:06PM
at least in the 40's and early 50's. Those old timers sure have some interesting story's



http://royalottmar.blogspot.com/

INCREDIMAIL TECH SUPPORT SUCKS. IT IS TERRIBLE AND DO NOT SIGN UP FOR INCREDIMAIL!!

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Sounds like quite a character!N/T
Posted by: Ron J
Date: May 11, 2009 09:15PM

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