PRA Chapter 34 rotorcraft fly to EAA Chapter 284 for a visit

Posted By on July 11, 2010

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EAA Chapter 284 hosted Popular Rotorcraft Association Chapter 34 at Red Stewart Airfield (40I) in Waynesville Ohio on Sunday. I was a beautiful and warm day for grilling burgers and hotdogs at our EAA chapter hanger. The turnout was excellent and everyone enjoyed the comradely focused on promoting and enjoying recreational aviation.

IMG_3746Besides a close up ogling of these strange looking flying contraptions (my observation), we even had the opportunity to observe an unplanned landing  as one of the pilots upon departure slowed a bit too much while making IMG_3751a tight turn with the wind at the end of the runway. Interestingly the emergency landing was much gentler than a fixed wing could have ever hoped for as pilot and machine plopped comfortable in a few weeds just off the runway. A brief inspection turned up no damage and the pilot was back on his way within 30 minutes. There must be something to the “safer than fixed wing” comments those hanging around aviation circles hear?

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It was an enjoyable afternoon.

Homegrown LeBron James leaves the Cleveland Cavs for Miami

Posted By on July 10, 2010

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I’m merely archiving another disappointment for Cleveland, Akron and northeast Ohio when it comes to sports … although basketball this time. The roundball super-star Cleveland Cavalier forward LeBron James announced his free agency move to the  Miami Heat NBA franchise on Thursday night. Clevelanders were hoping against hope that James lebronjames_cavswould stay with the Cavs and might miraculously give them one more shot at an NBA championship title. For the loyal sports fans — and there are no better — in the financially depressed northeast Ohio area, it was indeed another body-blow. This time it was seeing one of their own (Akron Ohio born and raised) looking for greener pastures and perhaps a franchise offering a better opportunity for his extraordinary talent.

As someone who has lived in NE Ohio and is there for business weekly, I’ve seen my share of Cleveland professional sports heartaches, usually associated with the Browns. I was there for the Cardiac Kids, Red Right 88, The Drive and The Fumble … and the dark years after Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell moved them in the dark of night. I watch the Cleveland Indians slump for 30 years and rise to the top of of Major League Baseball in the 1990’s … only to see their talent head for bigger markets and more money. I was fortunate to rub shoulders with Cavalier players like Mark Price and Craig Ehlo in the late 1980’s and early 90’s, watching them advance to the play-offs for 8 of 9 years. Their team was an inspired team of “average”  NBA players who performed with character on and off the court. My respect goes to Lenny Wilkens, the Cavs standingnlcentral100709outstanding head coach from 1987 to 1993. Thanks for the memories.

Unfortunately, I’ve also come to expect disappointment and failure in Cleveland Ohio professional sports and politics (that’s for another post), so goodbye and good luck LeBron James — thanks for 7 entertaining years. For now, I’m glad to be in Cincinnati with a first place baseball team and a promising Bengals football roster.

My son Taylor, who spends far too much time watching ESPN, reading sports news commentary and debating it all with friends, was disappointed as well, but he is not really surprised. Adam, his college roommate from Cleveland, posted his thoughts and frustrations in a sports blog as well — Cleveland’s Hope — which I’ll link to and share below.

Let me fill you in on how I felt in that moment. You know the moment I’m talking about. It was the moment that I found out, along with all of my friends, that the most coveted free agent in the league, and my personal hero, had just left Cleveland.

I was heart broken. In fact, I had never been so heart broken. And it felt personal. Very personal. How could he leave me? I had been there for him. I had rooted for him. I had made signs for him and bought multiple jerseys (home, away, alternate, etc.) with his number on it.

I was twelve. It was December of 2002. Jim Thome, the Cleveland slugger who had promised us continued greatness, had just announced he was leaving for Philadelphia.

It wasn’t the media frenzy that the Lebron James announcement was. It didn’t mean as much to the nation as the Lebron James announcement did. It wasn’t televised live and it won’t be forever remembered as “the betrayal/decision/contract/ or Benedict Arnold” here in Cleveland. But it greatly impacted me as a twelve year old. It was my first taste of what it meant to be a Cleveland fan. It was bitter.

Flash forward nearly eight years. I’m still not over the Thome incident. Meanwhile, I am reeling with my city over the loss of Lebron James. I feel numb. I feel angry. I feel like a sad twelve year old kid all over again.

I have never been a huge basketball guy. It has always been baseball for me. But across the city, twelve year old kids just like me are getting their first taste of real Cleveland sports. They had grown up spoiled, much like I had with been with the 90’s Cleveland Indians. There are kids in this city that have never witnessed bad basketball here. They have never witnessed a time where Cleveland wasn’t on the map. They have never witnessed the heartbreak. Until now. I feel sorry for them most of all.

But those kids can now join us among the legion of Cleveland sports fans that will receive greater joy than any city in the nation when our day arrives. And it will.

Lebron isn’t invited.

Adam

If you are wealthy, hurry up and die

Posted By on July 9, 2010

Not that it impacts the majority  in America, but if you unhealthy and wealthy and having given all that much though to tax planning, perhap you should start contemplating a swifter exit?

The math is ugly: On a $5 million estate, the tax consequence of dying a minute after midnight on Jan. 1, 2011 rather than two minutes earlier could be more than $2 million; on a $15 million estate, the difference could be about $8 million.

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Follow up ‘teaser’ for Volkswagen’s bigger 2011 Jetta

Posted By on July 9, 2010

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It is interesting to watch small cars marketed to North America grow a little in size with each generational change. Just as small cars from Japan grew from the late 1970’s to today (Camry, Accord, Civic, Corolla, etc), so did the small German Volkswagen Jetta Sedan. From the 1980’s it has grown into a very comfortable midsized sedan (still called ‘compact class’), and looks to be adding another couple of inches again next year. In June the next generation Jetta was announced as a 2011 model and I wanted to include a video announcement teaser below (previous post). One pleasant surprise is that according to reports the price will be going down as well …and Volkswagen Group of America will continue to offer the popular 2.0 liter TDI  turbocharged direct injected diesel in North America too.

Server woes & Dems floating more taxes – the ‘transaction tax’

Posted By on July 8, 2010

I’m struggling once again to keep my blog’s shared database running — hassling with tech support on and off today. Hopefully my low cost host will sorting things out. Yes I’ve threatened to leave once before and magically I was moved to a more efficiently running server. We’ll see how long my patience holds out this time?  I’ve also leaned the index pages temporarily … although it has nothing to do with load speeds. Patience.

What about a transaction tax … says Lanny Davis in The Daily Caller? Not a replacement for our income, sales, property, etc taxes mind you, but another NEW tax on top of our current tax structure. Hmm … I wonder who is coming up with this ‘progressive’ idea – hint a Democrat unwilling to cut the size of government and their spending.

Rep. Chaka Fattah (D-Pa.) floated his “Debt Free America Act” (H.R. 4646) in February this year which would “impose a 1 percent “transaction tax” on every financial transaction — whether paid by cash, credit card or any form of financial transfer, the only exception being transactions involving the purchase or sale of stock. Theoretically, everyone would pay one cent on the dollar for every such transaction in America every day — whether $3 million on a $300 million business acquisition, $300 on the purchase of a $30,000 car, or $5 on a $500 ATM withdrawal.”

It’s HOT! Where’s the Summer Breeze?

Posted By on July 8, 2010

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Is the economy turning or are investors just optimistic today?

Posted By on July 7, 2010

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Up a week, down the next week. The markets closed with a strong surge of buying today as the approaching corporate earning season is expected to be optimistic . An analyst that I talked with today sees continued volatility for the balance of summer, markets100707but he hinted that projections are for a 17% increase by the end of the year … and nearly 3% of that came today. 

The Dow Jones Industrial Average went back through the magical 10000 mark for the 8th time this year. The DJIA climbed 274.66 points or 2.82% closing at 10018.28  The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index was up 3.13% to 1060.27 and Nasdaq closed at 2159.47.

Hot Weather to continue Wednesday and Thursday

Posted By on July 7, 2010

fn_highheat100706While stopping for lunch to check my emails this afternoon, I opened my Slingbox and noticed that triple digits will be hit up and down the east coast.  For once I’m thankful to only be in the 90’s while driving in Ohio. The heatwave has been cooking has been cooking us for the past couple of weeks and has made having a swimming pool a worthwhile investment.

From National Weather Service:
PERSONS WORKING OR PLANNING OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES THIS WEEK NEED TO PREPARE FOR THE HEAT ACCORDINGLY. AVOID PROLONGED WORK IN THE SUN…OR IN POORLY VENTILATED AREAS. ALSO…KEEP PLENTY OF LIQUIDS ON HAND AND TRY TO STAY IN AN AIR CONDITIONED ENVIRONMENT IF POSSIBLE. WEAR LIGHT-COLORED LOOSE-FITTED CLOTHING. REMEMBER TO CHECK ON THE ELDERLY.

Chris Henry and CTE : Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy

Posted By on July 7, 2010

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An autopsy has shown that Chris Henry, the young Cincinnati Bengal who died a few months ago, suffered what is called CTE –– chronic traumatic encephalopathy –– which means, more simply, that his brain had been traumatized.

CTE can be diagnosed only in the brain tissue of cadavers, and 22 deceased former NFL players have been identified as having had it. Studies also show that elderly men who played football have four times the rate of dementia as do other U.S. males.

What makes the Henry case so frightening, however, is that he is the first current player to be diagnosed with CTE — and his case is even more of a tocsin because it doesn’t seem that he suffered any serious concussions. How easy might it be for certain athletes to have their brains damaged?

Not just football players either. Studies by the American Academy of Pediatrics have shown that girls get concussions on the soccer field at much the same rate as boys do playing football. One cannot watch the World Cup, where players slug balls 60 sixty miles an hour with their heads — not to mention banging into opponents’ heads — without thinking that the world’s finest soccer athletes must surely be at the same risk of CTE as NFL players.

Jim Joyce was himself a football player. He got concussions of his own and also remembers laughing at befuddled teammates when they got, in the vernacular, “dinged.” It was all a joke then, all part of being a tough guy on the gridiron.

Joyce’s University of Maryland teammate, a stalwart, sensible guy named Tom McHale, made the NFL, but by the age of 45, diminished by depression and drugs, he had died of an overdose.

McHale’s widow, Lisa, spoke hauntingly to a group of retired players recently about his tragic last years — he not knowing that his failures as a man were not really his, but were caused by the neurological distress that was surely the product of so many head hits on the football field.

Now Joyce, McHale’s old friend, who is the chairman of Aethlon Medical, a research firm in San Diego, is conducting an investigation to discover whether there might be common biomarkers that could lead to identifying those with a predisposition to CTE.

Joyce suggests that if a test could be developed, it might help some parents steer their children away from sports like American football and soccer, where concussions are, sadly, just a part of the game.

“How does a father let his sons play football if he has been diagnosed with CTE?” Joyce asks.

Football and soccer are well established as, in the worst sense of the word, “head games.” They’re too popular to be substantively changed. But if we can find a way to discover which players are more susceptible to permanent damage from concussions, it will make both sports more tolerable entertainment.

Posted via email from richc’s posterous

Super slow-motion: What is this object?

Posted By on July 7, 2010

SmoushedEnded up doing a little recreational surfing last night … web-surfing that is … and I ended up watching “super slow motion” video clips. I found that a golf ball really deforms when blasted into a steel wall at 150 mph — I wonder how far it bounced?

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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