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Ben Franklin's bifocals Friday, February 17, 2006

Composer Arcangelo Corelli
[1653 - Arcangelo Corelli, violinist, composer, born in Fusignano, Italy]

Thomas Jefferson President Jefferson
[1801 - Thomas Jefferson is selected as President (House breaks electoral college tie)]

Red Barber sitting in the catbird seat
[1908 - Red (Walter) Barber, sportscaster, Brooklyn Dodgers, born in Mississippi]

Rabbi Chaim Potok - Writer

[1929 - Chaim Potok, rabbi, philosopher, author, born in New York City]

[1979 - China invades Vietnam and is repulsed]

Method School's Lee Strasberg
[1982 - Lee Strasberg, director, founder method school of drama, dies]

Death Rattles On

US Army officer's saber
The President and his Yes People do an awful lot of saber rattling. This kind of bullying and posturing is of questionable value under the best of circumstances. When one cannot walk the walk after talking the talk, it can be downright counterproductive. The threatening words of the President, Vice President, and Secretaries of State & Defense when directed to Iran, North Korea, Syria, and assorted other nations ring a bit hollow when one stops to notice that our army is stressed to the breaking point just trying to cope with the mess the Administration created in Iraq. Surely the Axis of Evil members are taking note of the stop-loss orders we need to maintain US troop levels in Iraq, and they can no doubt read the newspapers and learn that the Army, National Guard, and Reserves are having difficulty meeting reenlistment and recruiting quotas.

Having worn a reasonable facsimile of a saber on several formal occasions, william can report that when properly fitted in a scabbard a sword does not rattle at all. The ones carried by modern day military officers do not even have an edge. I cannot imagine a saber rattling, unless it was way too small for its scabbard or missing part of its blade.

a real saber

William's Whimsical Words:

When it comes to your saber, size matters.

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