Monday, December 7, 2009

I was a White House Security Breach

I really was.

It was in the mid 80s (the picture is more recent). I was involved in installation and acceptance of a secure video teleconferencing link between the White House and the Pentagon. My colleagues and I did not hold adequate security clearances for free access to the work location in the basement of the White House. We needed to be escorted everywhere. Even to the toilet.

Getting to the worksite involved showing up at the gate, identifying ourselves to the Uniformed Secret Service who verified that we were on an access list and called for our escorts from the White House Communications Agency. Meanwhile we stepped through a magnetometer while our tools and briefcases etc. were x-rayed and scanned. The Uniformed Secret Service then provided us with a visitor badge on a chain to wear around our necks for the day. We waited at the secret service shack at the gate until our escorts arrived to take us down to the communication equipment rooms under the east wing..

At lunch time our escorts would return us to the gate. We held onto our badges while we walked the city in search of a restaurant. On return from lunch we displayed our badges at the gate and the secret service allowed us to step through the magnetometer. We then called for our escorts who would meet us again for return to work.

One day when a colleague and I returned from lunch and called for our escorts they told us that they were short handed and busy “handling traffic” at the moment and did we mind waiting a little while. It was a warm spring day and we didn’t mind waiting on the White House lawn by the gate.

Meanwhile a chatty uniformed secret service agent at the gate asked why our escort was delayed on such a fine day. When I told him he said well you guys know where your going don’t you? I’ll take you there. So we followed him from the gate into the east wing of the white house. We turn down the right corridor and get to the top of the stairwell leading down into the basement where the communications equipment rooms are located. There was a sign at the top of the stairwell indicating that the area was restricted to certain personnel which apparently did not include the uniformed secret service agent escorting us. The agent said “you guys know where you are going from here right?” and dumped us on our own into the bowls of the White House.

It was an eerie feeling pounding on the iron vault door of the Comms room trying to get the attention of the folks behind the door among the chattering equipment. I had visions of spending the rest of the day being grilled by the secret service.. That didn’t happen but a uniformed secret service agent got a good chewing out.

It was a breach. Was it good enough to make the list?

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Building Sanctuary

Emmanuel Baptist Temple
These photos were taken on Aug 1, 2009 during construction of the new sanctuary at Emmanuel Baptist Temple on the Old National Pike just west of Hagerstown. Clicking on the photo will take you to a Flickr PhotoSet of similar photos taken that same day. The photos there are geotagged with links for locating the spot on a map.

Emmanuel Baptist Temple
Emmanuel Baptist Temple has documented the construction of their new sanctuary with monthly slideshows and a large photo collection. The phase of construction captured in my image can be seen in more detail in their August 2009 Slideshow.
Emmanuel Baptist Temple

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

The Kingfisher

to LostBob Photos on Flickr
This guy was seen in Baker Park He was there for a little fishing and some live blues. The Tom Principato Band was scheduled to perform that evening. Unfortunately the show was rained out. I just rediscovered this photo while doing some hard drive reorganization. Click on the Picture to see it in original color and size or here to see it on Flickr PhotoSharing site. The photo there is geotagged.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Censorship Preserves Our Way of Life

Dr. Elizabeth Morgan, Superintendent of Schools for Washington County, Maryland and the Board of Education has acted to protect our students from the following words of the President of the United States:

“But at the end of the day, the circumstances of your life – what you look like, where you come from, how much money you have, what you’ve got going on at home – that’s no excuse for neglecting your homework or having a bad attitude. That’s no excuse for talking back to your teacher, or cutting class, or dropping out of school. That’s no excuse for not trying.”
We don't want to hear crap like that here in Washington County. We like excuses here. Illegal aliens, liberals, commies, socialists, gays, blacks…. Give us more excuses. We don’t want any threats to our way of life.

And we certainly don’t want to risk telling our children stuff like this:

“Don’t be afraid to ask questions”
They just might take it seriously and then where would we be? The very foundations of this community could be shattered.

Each and every member of the BOE should be remembered for this “courageous” act of censorship which serves only to preserve and protect the standing and status of our community. What a remarkable legacy these so-called "educators" leave for posterity. They should really be proud of themselves.

Their next effort should be to purge our school dictionaries of definitions number two and three of this word. Definition number one seems perfectly adequate here.

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Dollar Dragon

The 34th year of Kaung Hsu

1908 Dragon Dollar

Detail seen on 1908 Chinese silver 'Dragon Dollar'

1908 Dragon Dollar

Click on the image to the left to see a larger image of both sides of the coin.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

They Say it's Your Birthday

"And frankly. the song scares me to death"
.

And as I hung up the phone it occurred to me
He'd grown up just like me
My boy was just like me

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Saturday, July 4, 2009

MSO at Antietam National Battlefield 2009

Just a couple of pictures from the Maryland Symphony Orchestra Salute to Independence at Antietam National Battlefield. The performance is always superb this year was no exception. The premier performance of Ghosts of Antietam by the MSO’s principle timpanist Joe McIntyre was really nice. The sound of the tympanis in the darkening view of Bloody Lane and the fields beyond was haunting and beautiful.

My Dad would have been 97 yesterday He was very proud to have been born on the fourth of July. . His Grandfather was at Antietam. He would have really enjoyed the John Phillips Sousa numbrs.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Western MD Blues Fest is Comming!

Be There!

Friday, April 10, 2009

Just Because

It's Good Friday

It was in fact, a good Friday

Flower in Glass Egg by LostBob

Flower in Glass Egg


Glass Egg by LostBobIt's a glass paperweight,
the size and shape of an egg.




Fitting somehow



Monday, April 6, 2009

Cordoglio, L'Aquila

Fontana Luminosa by LostBob

Fontana Luminosa, L'Aquila


This photo was taken in March of 2002. The fountain is located just 7.6 km from the epicenter of this morning's earthquake in central Italy. My heart goes out to the people in the beautiful city of L'Aquila, Abruzzo, Italy. Cordoglio.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Search Me

WTF? Google

This single post, The Cars of the Beast, is responsible for nearly 60% of the traffic on this blog. Folks are coming from around the world to see that page. It's been viewed from one hundred countries just since February     What's up with that?

The Cars of the Beast screen shot

The Cars of the Beast, on LostBob's Blog


A Google Web search for cars of the beast, the title of the post, shows nothing unusual. My Blog is listed part way down the first page.

Note: Clicking on the images below will repeat the Google Search as I entered it, opening in a (single) new window.

Google search screen capture
If I put the search string in quotes Google's response is more specific but still nothing to compel folks from around the world to click on it.

Google search screen captureA closer look at my StatsCounter reports show that over 77% of my visitors arrive Google Image Search, less than 4% from all other searches and only two of nearly 2000 from Google Blog Search. Isn't that curious?

A Google Image search for the cars of the beast yields this:

Google image search screen capture OK, the shiny black Porsche Carrera and Lamborghini are pretty cool. I'd click on those. Seems to explain why folks find that post. But watch what happens if you put the search string in quotes:

Google Image Search screen capture Every picture displayed, save one, is by LostBob, every link is to this blog. Those on the second page too. Most of the images shown do not appear on the Cars of the Beast post. In fact, clicking most will take you to places in the blog where the car of the beast photos cannot even be seen. Some take you to posts with photos different than the one shown.

WTF? Google

And here's a surprise. If You leave the s off of cars Google gets really personal, ignoring the car photos completely. I think Google is trying to scare me away from Flickr and onto Picasa.

Google image search screen capture
Big Brother really is watching.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Dylan's Children's: Book Forever Young



This clip from Bob Dylan was a great find surfing YouTube.


to Amazon.com: Bob Dylan's Book
Checkout Bob Dylan's Children's book     Forever Young

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Old Blog gets New Life

Once upon a time in a blog much like this one, incompetence and circumstance led to duplication (sort of). A few old posts languishing in the blogosphere. Stories about Hillary Clinton, the girls of Mumbai and an apartment in Kazan. Pictures of a bar in India and some Churches in Rome. All gathering digital dust with nary a virtual viewer.

Such was the fate of LostBob’s Old Blog (sort of). until the discovery of bloggers magic cut-and-paste time machine. That little ‘Post Options’ drop down in the edit window. Suddenly it's 2006 again. My old posts can re-appear in a blog that wasn’t even around then. They have been reincarnated.

Most of what was once there has moved here. So if you’ve stumbled here or there via some wayward link or if Google has lured you here for something that was once there but is no longer. It’s probably here. So there you are.

Actually, it’s here

The pictures are links to the most popular old posts
to Dubai RacesThe Car of the Beast? to The Neighborhood BarSeaview Hotel
to Dubai Dhow Docks Loading Oil in Dubai to The Girls of Mumbai The Girls of Mumbai
to Walking around in Rome Ponte Vittorio Emanuele to Churches of Rome Santa Maria Maggiore
The pictures are from the old posts. The links take you to the post's new home. The post about "The Car of the Beast" was revised and is now the most popular post on this blog.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Remembering John Cephas

Legendary bluesman John “Bowling Green” Cephas dies at 78


“More than anything else, I would like to see a revival of country blues by more young people … more people going to concerts, learning to play the music,” Cephas once said. “That’s why I stay in the field of traditional music. I don’t want it to die.”
I met John Cephas in the early 90’s at Oliver’s Pub in Hagerstown. A genuinely friendly man, he spoke of how much he enjoyed playing in Hagerstown.

From his agent, Piedmont Talent’s Steve Hecht
A descendent of slaves, Cephas was born in Washington, D.C. in 1930, and acquired his “Bowling Green” moniker from his childhood days in Bowling Green, Virginia. Cephas discovered gospel as a child, but soon learned the blues from a guitar-playing aunt while his grandfather taught him about eastern Virginia folklore.
I have put together a little playlist of John Cephas clips on YouTube. The clips show him solo and as part of Cephas & Wiggins with long time partner Phil Wiggins on harmonica. The clips show him doing what he did best, playing and teaching. Spend a few minutes and check them out. Or if you are too busy just minimize this window and enjoy the music of John Cephas for a few minutes.

Fellow Hagerstownian Grudnik captured a nice shot of John Cephas at the Western Maryland Blues Fest in 2005. See it on his Flickr photostream.

Note that links in this post open in a single new window.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Samos is Amos

but Sanon ain't Anon

to Melbourne photoset on Flickr If Samos is Amos and Amos is famous then Sanon ain't Anon no more.





The photo is of the entrance to Luna Park in Melbourne, Australia.
Clicking on it will take you there. Go ahead. I’ve already changed the subject.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Amos Anon’s Book

Are there really any dead Tibetans?

Enlarge ImageMy old friend Amos Anon has written a serious and scholarly study guide to the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Now I'm no expert, but I thought the whole purpose of that book was to ensure that Tibetans don’t stay dead. At least not for long.

So why aren't there more Tibetans among us?


Updated Feb 24th:
Turns out Amos has provided the answer in an e-mail.

“Actually, the purpose of the Tibetan Book of the Dead is to help you stay dead, or in other words, to not get reincarnated. “
Which pretty much explains it all.

Told you he was the expert. The only version of the Tibetan Book of the Dead I've read all the way through is the comic book version of The Tibetan Book of the Dead. And Timothy Leary's too; they both agree with Amos. And I bet some of those that do reincarnate come back as Chinese, just for revenge. Or maybe as spies. Karma!

The supply of Tibetans will eventually run out.


to samos-sanon.blogspot.comI'm not the expert. So you should check out what Amos has to say for yourself at his new blog

Samos Samon's Seudo Serial

Better still, go to Amazon where you can read an excerpt then buy his book. Amos tells me it really is very good.

Besides, he needs the money. He owes me a beer.


Note: Links external to Blogger open in a single new window.

Kid Ric's Last Picks

I didn't know Kid Ric well. I met him at Merlin’s Tavern a few times over beers. Ric introduced me to Blogger there. We talked about music and old friends.

to Robert Johnson Blues Foundation

Robert Johnson "...was among the most famous of Delta blues musicians. His landmark recordings from 1936–1937 display a remarkable combination of singing, guitar skills, and songwriting talent that have influenced generations of musicians.... ...Considered by some to be the "Grandfather of Rock 'n' Roll", his vocal phrasing, original songs, and guitar style have influenced a broad range of musicians, including Muddy Waters, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Johnny Winter, Jeff Beck, Jack White and Eric Clapton…”

Add Kid Ric to that list.

Robert Johnson’s Graves , the final post on Kid Ric's Blog appeared on July 6th, 2007. I have reproduced it below.

A small tribute to The great Robert Johnson.
Not just another Taurus genius.

YouTube - Robert Johnson's Graves

Peace, love and light,
Ric

The YouTube video(which opens in a new window)and its background music are hauntingly prophetic yet eerily appropriate and it certainly feels like Ric was indeed saying goodbye.

But less than an hour after posting, Ric added Purple is the color by Milow to his internet radio stream at Kid Ric’s Picks and had this to say:

“This one is a mover. Drums are hot. Love the vocals and the interesting way they play off each other. Great instrumentation. Nice mix. Way to go Milow!”
The song, full of life and energy is quite different from the video. Both are fitting for the Kid Ric that I met.

Ric continued adding songs to his radio stream through early September. By the end of the month he was off to California. He never made it back.

On Nov 25th, 2007 this comment appeared on Kid Ric’s Blog:

It's with great regret that I must tell everyone that Kid Ric (Ric Grove) of Hagerstown, MD did pass away from his short battle with cancer on 11/14/07. He went to California on September 26th to try some alternative treatment, but unfortunately never returned. He was a very good friend of ours and will be missed. Ric & I knew each other for over thirty years, played music together in several projects. Ric was a very talented individual as an artist and a musician, and also a very good hearted guy. He also did web design on the side and won many awards for his web designs. Recently he designed and built my band's web site http://www.thephatkatz.com/, as well as taught me how to maintain it. I'm very sorry to give all of you the bad news, but I think Ric would've wanted you to know what happened to him. He often spoke of his good friends on the blogs.

-Tom Taylor
Fair well my friend. Good tunes! Your music lives on.

To Kid Ric's Radio Stream

Clicking on my self portrait on the left will play Kid Ric's Internet Radio Stream in a new window.




While we are reminiscing, remember also friends Alan Reischer and Nelson Carpenter.

enlargeIt was Alan who introduced me to Tom Robbin's novels while listening to The Bama on WPFW on Saturday mornings. He is missed (and so is The Bama). Shepherdstown and the Meklenburg Inn are not the same without him.

enlarge


Nelson, I hardly knew you. It looks like you were fading away even in this picture from 1972.






to Merlin's Tavern homepage


Stop by Merlin's and lift a pint to Ric, Alan or Nelson. Cheers my friends.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Georgia O'Keeffe in a Paperweight

To my Flickr photopageThe macro setting on my camera reveals a bit of the spirit of Georgia Okeeffe in this little three inch glass paperweight.

To my Flickr photopageThe bubble floats above the petals like a tiny hot air ballon. Looking carefully at the full size image reveals that it is tethered by a thread of tiny bubbles.

To my Flickr photopage

Clicking on the photos will take you to their pages on my Flickr photo sharing site where you can see the full size image.




To my Flickr photo set
Clicking on the thumbnail will take you to a a Flickr photo set where you can see several other similar shots.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Grandma’s Family Postcards

To my Flickr photopage
This is one of a series of Real Photo Postcards (RPPC) passed down from a grandmother I never knew. Most of the RPPCs are from M. J. Hoover Studios, Carlisle & Newville, PA. The photocard stock is from AZO and was manufactured between 1904 and 1918.

To my Flickr photosetI have collected the most interesting (to me anyway) ones into a photoset on my Flickr photo sharing site. You can see them by clicking on the image to te left.

My grandmother was Bessie Geedy of Newville, PA. She passed away in 1947. Her dad, a veteran of the 126th Regiment PA Infantry, was wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville.

The people in the photos are her family and friends. Most of the pictures are unmarked and the people unidentified.





To my Flickr photopage

Friday, February 6, 2009

Reflecting Self Portraits

It's a photograph not a Photoshop composite. Taken with an Olympus C5050.

Self Portrait in Glass Sphere

Self Portrait circa 1972.


The full size image on my Flickr Photo sharing site gives a better hint about how this was done.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Reflections of M. C. Escher

The image below is a photograph. It's not a PhotoShop creation.

Based on Hand with Reflecting Sphere

Inspired by M. C. Escher's 1935 Lithograph "Hand with Reflecting Sphere" .



This one, a play on M.C. Escher's 1946 Lithograph "Three Spheres II" is a PhotoShop creation. It's a composite of four images.

Based on Three Spheres II
I have posted some similarly inspired photos into a Flickr PhotoSet I call On M. C. Escher click the link to see them.

You can see my post about my brush with M.C. Escher in my post on visiting Castrovalva in Abruzzo, Italy.