[blind-democracy] Re: scooter dies at 30

  • From: "joe harcz Comcast" <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 16 May 2016 05:49:31 -0400

Ours wore blue habits.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Carl Jarvis" <carjar82@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, May 15, 2016 4:13 PM
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: scooter dies at 30


Frank,
Back in 1986, in Catholic School, did the Nuns still wear Habits?
When I could still see, before 1965, I think all Nuns wore the black
Habits.  At least the ones teaching at the local girls high school.  I
was told, at least I think I didn't make it up, that the black Habit
represented Original Sin.  I always marveled at Black people joining
the Catholic Church, or the Mormon Church, for that matter.

Carl Jarvis

On 5/15/16, Frank Ventura <frank.ventura@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In 1986 I was still in catholic school and got passes to leave on the
evenings and weekends to work in a local gas station. Although the passes
ate up most of my wages I still had enough left over to help out a little at
home which was good since my mother hadn't heard anything from my father in
years by then. The Reagan era hit the nuns hard and the convent's Ford
Escorts were replaced with Caddilac Sedan D'villes. Word like charity,
socialism, and compassion were as ugly as the F word. On a fashion front
hair was big, shoulders were padded and neon was as good as a hair color as
it was a sign color.
Frank

-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Miriam Vieni
Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2016 12:21 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: scooter dies at 30

In 1986, it was a year after my husband's death. A group from the Ethical
Humanist Society was traveling to Kenya for a tour led by the religious
leader and his wife, who had served in Kenya in the Peace Corps. My friend
from Michigan and I went on that trip. I remember a home for aged women on
the outskirts of Niarobi where women whose husbands had divorced them or who
were disabled, were cared for in a windowless building with an open front,
lots of red dust, and drainage ditches filled with waste, a hospital for
mentally ill people where I was surrounded by Schizophrenic young men who
exhibited the same symptoms that my patients had,at the mental health clinic
where I worked in 1961,  a lioness, surrounded by her babies, lying on a
rock, in the sun, a line of elephants in the distance, a Massai village with
piles of raw cow dung which would be used to patch the roofs of dwellings
and huge clouds of glies. All of that and more is what blots out the rest
of
1986 for me.

Miriam

-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2016 10:44 AM
To: blind-democracy
Subject: [blind-democracy] scooter dies at 30

No, not an unsung Freedom Fighter, gunned down by the Forces of Evil.
Just a simple cat.  Not even the record holder, but the current oldest
living cat. Oops! Scooter died before receiving the honor. But the point
of this pointless ramble is that I got to thinking about what the world was
like, at least here in the good old USA, back in 1986.
Here's the report.  Think about your own world back 30 years ago.

Siamese cat, Scooter, was named the world's oldest living cat by the
Guinness Book of World Records and celebrated his 30th birthday on March
26.

But his owner, Gail Floyd of Mansfield, Texas, said Scooter had died by the
time Guinness conferred its title on April 8.

Veterinarian, Dr Tricia Latimer, said Scooter had lived to the equivalent of
about 136 human years.

Scooter was not Guinness's oldest cat of all time, though. That distinction
belongs to a fellow Texas cat who lived to be 38.

Press Association
******

We can all remember 1986, assuming we're over 35 or so, but it's difficult
to bring up a memory of the world as it was.  My boss, Paul DzieDzic, was
the head of a state agency.  As director of the Orientation and training
Center, I often rode with Paul from Seattle to Olympia for management
meetings. The State of Washington had not yet approved the use of cellular
phones. Along the I-5 corridor there were turnouts with public telephones.
Paul, always half an hour late for a meeting, would fly down the freeway,
pull into a turnout and check with his secretary for messages.  Another
memory.  In my OTC program we had a communications class.  Braille was
taught separately from other communications.  We still taught students to
use the IBM Selectric, the state of Art among typewriters.  Braille was
copied via Therma Form.
We had no computer class. In fact, I was several years away from my first
computer, and I was still using an old manual typewriter. We had no Voice
Mail. My secretary took my calls when I was not in my office, and read them
to me later.  I Brailled out what information I needed.
Other memories included: Space Shuttle Challenger Explodes, Human Genome
Project launched, Sweeping tax reform legislation USA, Bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE) hits UK Cattle, Iran-Contra Affair becomes public,
Soviet Nuclear reactor at Chernobyl Explosion causing major Nuclear Fallout,
US bombs Libya
1986 was the first year I took a two week vacation.  Cathy and I had not
honeymooned following our marriage in 1982, so we decided that it was high
time to do so.  Off to Hawaii we went, along with Cathy's brother and
sister-in-law.  I remember hearing the news about the bombing of Libya.
Later that day we received a frantic call from my oldest daughter who was at
our house watching our two younger children. "Have you heard anything about
Libya retaliating?  I think I hear bombs going off."  Of course it was a
rare thunder storm in the Olympic mountains.
In 1986, Cathy was director of the Para Legal unit for the Seattle
prosecuting attorney's.
In her office was a room containing huge revolving files containing all of
the units records.  They were also using Selectrics.

But in spite of all the specific memories, I still can't really get my head
around the sense of 1986, except to say that it was a very different world.
And I wonder what the year 2046 will look like.  Of course I would be 111
and probably not still hanging around.
Maybe no humans will be around.

Carl Jarvis







Other related posts: