Archive for January, 2008

Fourth annual “Virtual” Groucho Party

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008






The O.P.

Originally uploaded by samh101.



Well it’s that time again, and you know what you have to do, no ?

OK … on the 18th day of the second month of the year I celebrate my continued existence, and for the past three years for one reason or another that has been slightly tricky, however to get around an issue of geography I have celebrated it “virtually” online with a “virtual” Groucho Party.

What is a Groucho Party, I imagine you may ask ?

“Essentially a Groucho Party is a twist on a fancy dress party where by everybody comes dressed as Groucho Marx.”

The “virtual” twist works like this, “Take a picture of yourself wearing a pair of glasses and a greasepaint or false moustache, and smoking a cigar ( or cigar type object ;) and send it to me”, “I will display them on the web somewhere”, you can also upload them onto your own website and send me a link.

You can see previous years entries on the web here …

http://optimist.sdf-eu.org/groucho/

Now unlike previous years I am actually slightly more settled, though looking to move again but that is beside the point right now, and also it’s a significant birthday as it is a multiple of ten years, so for those in Hawai’i ( or those who can get themselves over here ) I am going to hold a non-”virtual” Groucho Party, exciting stuff.

Details to follow. This is merely an initial post to give you all some time to prepare.

I hope you can all “attend”, “virtually” or otherwise, gatecrashers are welcome to the online event … and possibly the non-line one … if they’re cool.

I don’t know, what do you think ?

UPDATE : The 18th is also President’s day in the US, thats a public holiday.

Whan animals attack … San Francisco Tiger edition

Friday, January 18th, 2008

From the Mercury News

One of three San Jose youths mauled by a tiger at San Francisco Zoo told the father of the boy slain in the Christmas attack that they had been yelling and waving at the animal while standing on the railing outside its grotto, according to news reports.

But, then, in an interview with San Francisco police, Paul Dhaliwal, 19, denied throwing anything into the enclosure or antagonizing the animal in any way

The interview - and the account by the father of Carlos Sousa Jr. of San Jose - were part of the affidavit San Francisco police used to obtain a search warrant for the car and cell phones of Paul Dhaliwal, 19, and his 23-year-old brother, Kulbir. The affidavit was filed in court late Thursday.

“As a result of this investigation,” police believe “that the tiger may have been taunted/agitated by its eventual victims,” police inspector Valerie Matthews wrote in the affidavit. Police believe that “this factor contributed to the tiger escaping from its enclosure and attacking its victims,” she said.

In another revelation Thursday, zoo officials said police removed a bloodied sign and post from the tiger exhibit as potential evidence during their investigation the day after the attack.

Sam Singer, spokesman for the zoo, told the Mercury News that the sign had been about 18 inches in from the middle of the railing around the tiger exhibit, in an area “where the public is prohibited to go.”

The location is also near the area outside the railing where the body of 17-year-old Carlos was found.

A San Francisco police spokesman would say only that “the police department has not released that information” about the bloody sign. But Singer said finding a sign with blood on it - inside the exhibit - on the night of the mauling “would suggest that one or more of the young men was on that side of the railing.”

He said he does not know if tests have determined whose blood was on the sign.

Controversies - and back-and-forth salvos between attorneys and officials - have raged ever since Christmas Day, when Tatiana, a 250-pound Siberian tiger, escaped from her grotto around 5 p.m.

Attorneys for Carlos’ family and the Dhaliwal brothers have said their clients were innocent victims of an attack the zoo should’ve prevented.

Shepard Kopp, attorney for the San Jose brothers, declined Thursday to discuss any potential evidence police were investigating. But he said he was surprised police were able to obtain a warrant to search the contents of his clients’ cell phones and car.

I cannot conceive of any possible felony that anyone would suspect these brothers of having committed,” he said. “That’s what you need to get a warrant: probable cause of felony wrongdoing or evidence of a felony.”

The Chronicle said police seized synthetic urine meant to beat a drug test, a small amount of marijuana and a partially filled bottle of Grey Goose vodka from the car. Paul Dhaliwal’s blood-alcohol level was 0.16 percent, twice the legal level for drunkenness, while Kulbir Dhaliwal’s was 0.04 percent and Sousa’s was 0.02 percent. According to the newspaper, police said no incriminating messages or images were recovered.

In Carlos’ father’s account to police, Paul Dhaliwal told him that he and his son had been waving their hands and yelling at the tiger before it jumped out of its moat and attacked them, the Chronicle reported. Previously, in an interview with the Mercury News, Carlos’ mother, Marilza Sousa, said Paul Dhaliwal told her the tiger was not taunted.

” ‘We never tried to taunt the animal,’ ” she quoted him as telling her. ” ‘We were talking, laughing, walking, nothing else.’ ”

But Matthews, in her affidavit, said police had found a partial shoe print on top of the railing and concluded that it matched a shoe worn by Paul Dhaliwal.

A Santa Clara County judge is expected to rule today on whether San Francisco authorities, other than the police, can view the brothers’ car and examine the contents of their cell phones - a decision even Judge Socrates Manoukian concedes may be moot.

No police reports have been filed as part of an evolving civil case against the zoo and the city, but affidavits filed with Manoukian in San Jose include statements by a longtime zookeeper and a security guard about events after the Christmas evening mauling.

Any evidence that the youths provoked the tiger’s attack could limit the zoo’s and city’s liability in a civil case.

Anthony Colonnese, noting he had worked at the zoo since 1971 and was very familiar with the tiger exhibit, said he examined the grotto a few days after the attack “looking for things that did not belong in the grotto.”

He said he paid close attention to the part of the grotto “where I knew the two Siberian tigers were in the habit of resting after their mid-afternoon feeding.”

In that area, “I found two stones,” he said. “One stone was made up of a smooth material that was different from any of the rocks or gunite that make up the grotto exhibit.”

Colonnese also said he found a medium-size steel washer in the bottom of the moat. “I am informed that the keeper responsible for the Siberian tiger grotto inspected the grotto the morning of Dec. 25,” he said, suggesting the washer ended up in the moat after.

A letter from the city attorney’s office says officials want to examine the brothers’ car to determine “whether there are washers in the vehicle that match the washer found in the grotto.”

To a Mäori figure cast in bronze outside the Chief Post Office, Auckland

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

I hate being stuck up here, glaciated, hard all over
and with my guts removed: my old lady is not going
to like it

I’ve seen more efficient scarecrows in seedbed
nurseries. Hell, I can’t even shoo the pigeons off

Me: all hollow inside with longing for the marae on
the cliff at Kohimarama, where you can watch the ships
come in curling their white moustaches

Why didn’t they stick me next to Mickey Savage?
‘Now then,’ he was a good bloke
Maybe it was a Tory City Council that put me here

They never consulted me about naming the square
It’s a wonder they never called it: Hori-in-gorge-atbottom-
of-hill. Because it is like that: a gorge,
with the sun blocked out, the wind whistling around
your balls (your balls mate) And at night, how I
feel for the beatle-girls with their long-haired
boyfriends licking their frozen finger-chippy lips
hopefully. And me again beetling

my tent eyebrows forever, like a brass monkey with
real worries: I mean, how the hell can you welcome
the Overseas Dollar, if you can’t open your mouth
to poke your tongue out, eh?

If I could only move from this bloody pedestal I’d
show the long-hairs how to knock out a tune on the
souped-up guitar, my mere quivering, my taiaha held
at the high port. And I’d fix the ripe kotiro too
with their mini-piupiu-ed bums twinkling: yeah!

Somebody give me a drink: I can’t stand it

- Hone Tuwhare

Isabelle Killick

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

Just heard the word …

Baby Isabelle was born on Thursday the 17th of January at 8:40am weighing in at 6lbs 14oz, in the passenger seat of the car!

.. exciting stuff, obviously she is keen to join us :O)

Congratulations dude !

When animals attack … Vietnamese Water Buffalo edition

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

From the AP

An enraged water buffalo went on an hour-long rampage in northern Vietnam, goring four people and destroying food stalls before being shot to death by police

Crowds of curious onlookers scattered for safety after the 1,000-pound beast gored the villagers during a 3-mile tear Monday. No one was seriously injured.

Water buffalo are commonly used to plow rice fields and transport goods in Vietnam’s countryside. They are typically gentle animals often seen carrying children or wallowing in mud.

When animals attack … Israeli Leopard edition

Monday, January 14th, 2008

From Aunty

An Israeli wildlife guide has overpowered an ageing leopard that jumped into his bed during the night.

Clad only in his night clothes, Arthur Du Mosch lunged at the big cat and grabbed its neck, pinning it down for 20 minutes until help arrived.

Leopards usually enter villages after they become too weak to hunt in the wild. They are little threat to humans.

The uninvited guest is thought to have been trying to catch the family’s domestic cat, which had also been lying in the bed.

Israel nature and parks protection officials answered Mr Du Mosch’s emergency call and came quickly to collect the leopard.

Mr Du Mosch admitted he might not have fared so well if the leopard had been in better physical condition.

The animal was taken to Beit Dagan veterinary hospital near Tel Aviv for tests and was expected to be released into the wild with an electronic tag.

I thought I had reported this one previously, as I am sure I had read it before ( the story dates from May 007, ) but looking back through the archives it appears I haven’t.

What the … Long hair in the dock

Friday, January 11th, 2008

From Aunty

A County Antrim school has asked a judge to back its decision to suspend a pupil who refused to cut his hair.

Lawyers for Ballyclare High School asked the High Court to say its code of conduct on pupils’ appearance was lawful.

Grant Stranaghan, a GCSE student, was suspended for three days in November for having collar-length hair.

*gasp* !

Hang on, this is 2008, why has this issue been taken to court, it’s just hair.

Children’s Commissioner Patricia Lewsley, who has been asked to give an opinion on the case, was also present.

A lawyer for the school’s board of governors told Mr Justice Weatherup that haircuts were an issue of uniform and outward dress.

The lawyer claimed the rules on what pupils wore were designed to develop habits of neatness and self discipline, as well as instilling the concept of a shared identity and a sense of belonging to the school.

Girls with long hair had to tie it back and were forbidden from extreme styles or colours, he told the court on Friday.

Boys, meanwhile, were not allowed to have hair touching their blazer collar or severe number-one cuts

See the different regulations for boys and girls hair ?

What the …

Grant Stranaghan’s strangly locks have caused problems

Really ?

What sort of problems ?

Has it got caught in some form of mechanism ?

Has it attacked a fellow pupil ?

Has it attempted to subvert the local populous into forming an armed militia focused on overthrowing the school board ?

Honestly, it’s just hair, it’s a non issue, but now it’s a big issue.

Cheers.

UPDATE : The seventeen year old founder of the The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Long-haired Men, Davey Jones AKA David Bowie, interviewed on the BBC Tonight programme by Cliff Michelmore.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m5zxeLwUSdk

UPDATE : Aunty follows up …

A County Antrim school’s uniform policy did not sexually discriminate against boys, the High Court has ruled.

That is quite interesting, I am not suggesting that there might be slightly differing rules for boys and girls where appropriate, but length of hair seems an inappropriate distinction to me.

Mr Justice Weatherup said Grant’s human rights had not been breached, but ruled he should have been put on detention rather than segregated.

True, true.

Underground Flavour

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

Out of interest, the London Underground is 145 today. Thanks to Gerald, who is actually Canadian, for pointing this one out at the ops meeting. I mention that Gerald is Canadian as it turns out the British ex-pats ( including myself, ) were largely unaware.

Unclean

Thursday, January 10th, 2008


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXLHWmjA5IE

I’ve managed to get through two boxes of tissues in the past day or so, but I’m soldiering on.

Driving the Saddle Road

Monday, January 7th, 2008

When Ackerman got back from Honolulu we decided to lie low for a while. Even our fishermen friends at Huggo’s were getting nervous about why I was still hanging around, three weeks after Ralph left. The rumors filtering down—or up, as it were—from the real estate bund were beginning to take root all around us. I knew we had reached a breakpoint when even the bartenders at the Kona Inn began saying “I thought you left last week” every time I came in; or, “What kind of story are you really writing?”

“Never mind,” I’d say, “we’ll know soon enough.” It was my habit, at the time, to hunker down in the afternoon at the far end of the Kona Inn bar to read the newspapers and drink cold margaritas while I kept an eye on the scales across the bay— just in case I saw signs of a crowd gathering, which was usually the sign of a big one coming in.

From my perch at the end of the bar, with the big wooden fans whirling slowly above my head, I could look out on the whole waterfront. It was a good place to relax and read the papers—with the hula class practicing on the lawn, tall coconut palms along the seawall, big sailboats out in the bay and a whole zoo of human weirdness churning quietly all around me.

We were drifting into a macho way of life. There was no doubt about it. And no help for it, either. We were living with these people, dealing with them twenty-four hours a day on their own turf—which was usually out at sea, on their boats, mean-drunk by noon and never feeling quite comfortable with these tight-lipped seafaring bastards and all their special knowledge, being always in somebody’s way as the goddamn boat lunges along in the water. …

Forty thousand feet deep in some places, within sight of the Kona Coast. Eight miles straight down, like falling off a cliff. It would take a long time for a body to sink eight miles down to the ocean floor. It is pitch-black down there, absolute darkness.

Not even sharks swim that deep. But they will probably get you on the way down, somewhere in that hazy blue level around 300 feet, where the light begins to fade. Bobbing around on a boat the size of a pickup truck in 40,000 feet of blue water is not a good place to get weird with anybody, much less the captain of the boat. Or even a deckhand. Nobody at all.

These are the rules. You do what they say, no matter how crazy it seems even if the captain locks himself in the head below decks at nine o’clock in the morning with a quart of Wild Turkey while the boat runs in circles for forty-five minutes and the deckhand has passed out in the fighting chair with his eyes rolled back in his head like white marbles.

Even then, it is risky to question anything. These people are professional fishermen, skippers, licensed captains, and they take themselves very seriously. Words like “macho” and “fascist” take on a whole new meaning when you lose sight of land. Nothing will turn a man into a nazi any faster than taking a bunch of ignorant strangers out to sea on his boat, regardless of how much they pay. It is almost a rule of the sea, with these charter captains, that “the clients” will panic and do everything wrong at the first sign of trouble, so that is the way they play it; marine insurance is hard to get once you’ve lost a few clients overboard in water eight miles deep.

“Not one of you swine could get a job in the Caribbean,” I said one night to a table full of professional fishermen on the whiskey deck at Huggo’s. “You couldn’t even get work in Florida.”

Their reaction was sullen. The mood of the table went sour, and Ackerman called for the check. It was something like $55, which he paid with his Merrill-Lynch credit card while the others wandered off to look for fights.

“It’s time to leave,” I told him as we pulled out of the parking lot. “I’m losing my sense of humor.” “So are they,” he replied.

The traffic was bumper-to-bumper on Alii Drive, jammed up by a crowd of thugs who had swarmed onto the road to stornp the driver of a motorcycle that had gone out of control and plowed into a gang of surfers. There were forty or fifty of them, all crazy on marijuana.

I made a quick U-turn and aimed for the hotel, avoiding the madness outside. Moments later, from the balcony, we heard the familiar howl of police sirens.

Ackerman opened a new bottle of scotch and we sat down to watch the sunset. It was low tide, with no surf, and the melee out on the highway had cleared the rabble off the beach. It was time, I felt, to relax and ponder the sea.

Ackerman was smoking heavily. His face had taken on a sort of glazed appearance that made conversation awkward.

“Well,” he said finally, “let’s go to the volcano. They’ll never look for us up there.” He laughed and suddenly stood up. “That’s it,” he said. “We’ll make a run for the high ground, maybe run the Saddle Road.”

The Saddle Road?

“Yeah,” he said. “You’ll like it. We can go for the record— one hour and seventeen minutes from Hilo to Waimea.”

How far?” I said.

Fifty-three miles, at top speed.”

When in doubt, bore it out.
—Harley Davidson

We were coming into Hilo very fast, running downhill in the rain through a residential district at just under a hundred miles an hour. The speedometer went up to 180, but I was not in the mood for unnecessary risks at this point, so I hit the accelerator and shifted down into second gear. . . . Ackerman screamed something at me as a tin mailbox suddenly appeared right in front of us, but I missed it and punched the gas again as we hit the inside of the curve on a straight bounce and kept going. I had never driven a Ferrari before and it had taken me a while to get the hang of it … but now that I finally felt comfortable with the machine, I wanted to push it a bit, lean back and let it run. (Any car that costs $60,000,1 felt, was built for some special purpose—and until now I had not understood just exactly what this one had been built for, what it really wanted to do.)

The numbers on the speedometer had fooled me, for a while, into thinking that the Ferrari 308 was made to go fast. But I was wrong about that. A lot of cars will go fast, and I have driven most of them—-But I have never driven anything that I would dare to put through a five-mile stretch of downhill S-turns at 100 miles an hour in the rain on a two-lane blacktop highway from 10,000 feet above sea level down to zero in less than ten minutes.

The drop is so steep and so fast that every once in a while, at 100 miles an hour, you get an eerie sense of freefall. It is almost like flying, or falling off a cliff. All the outside noise fades away and your eyes feel big in your head and the focus gets very, very sharp.

We had already broken the record—or at least I thought we had—but I couldn’t be sure and Ackerman had gone rigid in the passenger seat, no longer keeping track of the stopwatch. He had been yelling numbers at me every ten or fifteen seconds for almost an hour, but now he was getting nervous. His eyes were wild and his hands were braced on the black leather dashboard. I could see that his confidence was slipping. What he wanted now was a handle, but that was out of the question. We had left all our handles at the top of the hill, in the shadow of Hilo Prison, two minutes ahead of the record and miraculously still alive.

Concentrate, I thought. Stay on the fall line, don’t touch the brakes, use the gears and don’t blink.. .. This is dangerous, we are almost out of control.

But not quite, and the car had amazing balance. It was finally on its own turf, functioning at the top of its form, and I didn’t have the heart to slow it down. Far out in front of us I could see, through the clouds, a white line of surf hitting up on the rocks around Hilo harbor. It stretched off in both directions like a line drawn with chalk, the lush green coast of Hawaii on one side and the deep gray swell of the Pacific on the other. The bay was full of whitecaps, and no boats were out … a bleak Sunday morning in Hilo, the capital city of the Big Island. The population is mainly Japanese, who tend to sleep in on Sundays, and not many of whom are good Catholics.

I had already taken this into account, along with other ethnic factors, when the Speed Run was still in the planning stage—-About six hours ago, in fact, when the bars closed in Kona and Ackerman let slip that he was planning to leave for a Tuna Tournament in Bimini the next day, or at least very soon . . . which alarmed me, because I had very definite plans to use his new yellow Ferrari to set a new land-speed record for running the Saddle Road.

June 4, 1981 Kona

Dear Ralph,
I am hunkered down in my place at Thug Central, watching the sea puppies out there on the break and running up huge bills while. I postpone my departure one day at a time and hang out like some
kind of funky Chinook drunkard up here on the balcony waiting for the big one to strike, like I always knew it would. .. .

And I can almost smell the bastard now, circling out there, just a few feet away from the hook … but this time he’s acting different; this time I think he’s interested.

Things have changed since you left, Ralph. I shaved my head again, for one thing. And I also dropped out of sight. .. but not out of mind, at least not for Captain Steve. I call him constantly, about any problem or even any random idea that happens into my mind: Hunting wild pigs? Typewriter ribbons? Deep Diving on acid? Why is the Tanaguchi market out of Dunhills? Who rents jeeps? How far to the volcano? Where is Pele? How fast can a white man drive on the Saddle Road at sunset? Why am I here? Who has Da Kine? Where are the fish? Has Rupert called? Can you cash another check for two hundred? Why won’t Norwood return my calls about sacking the gravesites? Who was Spaulding’s mother? Why can’t you get a job?

Usually it is Laila who calls him to ask these questions. Which makes him doubly nervous, because in his heart he knows it’s weird. But he always returns her calls. And then she calls him back, for more details … so they spend a lot of time together, doing business and telling jokes.

And getting things done. Which frees my brain a bit and gives me time to focus. I type all night and prowl the roads by day, looking for Pele. She hitchhikes a lot, they say, usually in the form of an old woman. So I do a lot of driving and I pick up many hitchhikers, especially old women . .. but age is a hard thing to be sure of at 55 miles an hour; and the lazy shameful truth is that on any hot afternoon I can be found cruising Alii Drive in my T-top Mustang picking up women of all ages.

And I grill them, while we drive. Some of them can’t handle it: they weep, they lie, they sing along with the radio and show me their tits, and a lot of them swear they’re in love with me by the time we get to the Kona Surf parking lot.

That’s where I take them, no matter what they say or where they want to go. I take them all the way out to the end of Alii Drive and down the hill to that spooky little bay, and all the while I keep offering them a drink of hot gin out of a pint bottle with no top on it that I keep on the seat between my legs.

Most of them say they’ll do just about anything, just as long as it’s not drinking gin with a 200-pound bald psycho in an open car at high noon on Alii Drive or in the Kona Surf parking lot. Which is where I always dump them. Except for the ones who drink gin .. .

OK

H.S.T.

- Hunter S. Thompson
The Curse of Lono