We played golf like Tiger Woods and Brian Williams the other
day. That’s right, the glutes failed to
activate and an RPG disabled our cart, baby!
We still managed to finish our usual 20 over par despite buttery
buttocks and the Navy SEAL team training in the water hazard on 18.
You gotta shake your head at those SEAL guys. What cards!
They tried to bring down our approach shot with .45s and ended up
clipping the wings of a bald eagle, which we rushed to the vet after finishing
the round with our own eagle. Oh, the humanity! The doc saved him, though, and to
this day we keep the crippled big bird in a cage on our desk as a reminder of
our service to the sporting life of America .
Which reminds us of a nugget from Victorian novelist Anthony
Trollope (full disclosure: we are an unabashed devotee and have 34 of his books
on our Nook).
More weak and foolish . . . he had been, but not to my knowledge more wicked. But it is to the vain and foolish that the punishments fall -- and to them they fall so thickly and constantly that the thinker is driven to think that vanity and folly are of all sins those which may be the least forgiven.
More weak and foolish . . . he had been, but not to my knowledge more wicked. But it is to the vain and foolish that the punishments fall -- and to them they fall so thickly and constantly that the thinker is driven to think that vanity and folly are of all sins those which may be the least forgiven.
– The Small House at
Allington
*****
Lesley Gore: An
Appreciation
In 1963, just before the Beatles conquered America , a 16-year-old New Jersey girl in a honey-blonde bouffant
told us all to go to hell; her Johnny was gone and we could play her records
and keep dancing all night without her.
It was her party, and ours was beginning about the same time. As we
said, it was the early’60s and it was going to be a lot of fun.
There was a throaty tartness in Lesley Gore’s voice, and the
songs she sang, even the nominally happy ones, seemed laced with the
make-believe love of the lonely, as in:
Rain goes, disappears, dear
And I feel so fine
Just to know that you are mine
My life is sunshine, lollipops and
rainbows
That’s how this refrain goes
So come on, join in, Everybody!
Sunshine, lollipops and rainbows,
everything
That’s wonderful is sure to come
your way
When you’re in love to stay.
Sure you are, Leslie.
She sang that tune sashaying down the aisle of a bus in Ski Party, a
favorite of ours featuring our favorite teen cutie Deborah Walley.
We saw the late Miss Gore in a free concert sometime in the ‘80s, somewhere in lower
****
The closing of the
American mind
This just in.
Parents, kids and teachers are revolting against the Common Core because
-- gasp! -- it’s too hard. You know, we
think they may be right. We feel awful
when we don’t understand something. And
we’d rather not know we don’t get it than feel stupid.
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