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^^^^^
Couldn’t have said it better myself.
Couldn’t have said it better myself.
That trend annoys me, but I don't know why. Now everything, not just airport codes, has to be a standard three-letter abbreviation: I first noticed it when baseball started standardizing team abbreviations in the 90s, and you never saw "Chic." or "Phila." or "Pitts." or "Cin'ti" on the out of town scoreboard anymore. "Cin'ti" in particular always made me happy. Hearing people refer to Major League Baseball as "MLB" or, worse, "the MLB," on the other hand, fills me with rage.
As Dickens scribbled: "The law is a ass, a idiot..." ...
Constitutional law here in the United States can prove a complex mix of inane penumbra,
deceit, cowardice, heroism, vanity, and other such mercurial dice.
A popular bumper sticker in this region: "MLB PDX." Incorporating the local airport code as a plea for a Major League team.
I'd love to see it happen. I can't get excited about rooting for the Mariners. Not sure if there's a Red Sox Nation contingent here as there was in Chicago, but it's on the post- vaccine to- do list to find out. Loved those folks in Chicago.
At least my 50 year old Rawlings is US made.
I have my younger brother's glove that I bought him...he was 10 years younger than I and when he was 12 or 13 I bought him a top of the line Rawlings glove. He was a very good ball player. Cost me 3 days wages at the time and I think he got a discount. It was a great glove. Even after all these years it is still a good glove although the leather in the palm is a might thin. I will always be a Rawlings guy but and it pains me they are no longer a US made product but then that has been true for a long while now.I played left field wearing a Rawlings glove. Gone now alas.
I think my mom tossed it out with my Playboys when I was overseas.
I can't stand any anti-congestion nasal inhalers. The particles always travel right to the back of my nasal passage and land right on my tongue. Not even the gnarliest mixture of Buckley's cough syrup contains such disgusting flavors.Benzedrine inhalers. They worked pretty well to clear a stuffed-up nose. You stuck 'em up your nose and snorted. I guess the fact they contained benzedrine did them in.
I don't have a choice at certain times of the year if I want to do things like breathe and smell. Life lesson: Don't let your friend break your nose when you're six years old and there's no time to go to a doctor for proper care because it's the morning of your pregnant older sister's first wedding.I can't stand any anti-congestion nasal inhalers...
I just read an article about Nokona baseball gloves...the last surviving American made baseball glove. US leather, US labour and the last man standing. So very sad but understandable as offshore labour is upwards of 10 times less than domestic. Makes me want to go out and buy one but alas it would be a shelf queen.....but a worthy one. At least my 50 year old Rawlings is US made.
If it was an easy job anyone could do it. We chose to go to law school and the cards were on the table all along.
I attended night school at John Marshall Law School while employed as a trade order specialist
on the overnite desk at Lind-Waldock before it was bought out and all staff released save the China desk.
A crim prof and I had an argument one evening over a case where an Hispanic defendant had killed his
girlfriend after finding her with another man. However, he left the apartment-forsaking passion-went out
and acquired a pair of scissors, returned and committed what I deemed murder one. The prof objected,
claiming the defendant was Hispanic, and therefore possessed some innate psychological right to recourse
passion as defense to murder. I countered that the Model Penal Code was writ to objectify the arcane
and vague, so asked why introduce the ethnic variable into the issue? He remained adamant. I countered
that since I was Irish, a member of the Celtic race supposedly immune to psychoanalysis, would he
accord privilege recourse passion to me? The prof was Jewish. Stumped.
I went to the brokerage immediately after class. My first call that night was from a guy who had
lost $40,000 the day before. Pissed as punch. But not nearly as pissed as the prof.
So, you're a John Martian too? I had you pegged for DePaul or Loyola (don't ask why). Did you enjoy the hot pastrami at the Dill Pickle as much when you were there as I did during my years?
I go back and act as a judge / evaluator every year (before the pandemic, anyway) for their ABA/ JMLS crim law trial competition. Seems like a classier venue than in my years there: a lot more expensive as well. It's gone from one of the least expensive private law schools in the nation to one of the most: but now it's part of the University of Illinois system. (Got my backdated UIC diploma recently in the mail: looks kinda impressive, I must say.)
I transferred and later JMLS invited pro bono trial law instructor assistance. UIC/JMLS match does
seem impressive. I had a rather peripatetic collegiate odyssey around Chicago including UIC,
which campus I reluctantly forfeited for a scholarship at Roosevelt University. Briefly touched base
at DePaul and Loyola-Water Tower. Oklahoma University School of Law after JMLS.
Hindsight is always clearly comprehended, readily understood. I passed the Chicago Police Department
after the Army because I could not wait six or seven years listing and recently told that I should have
gone directly to da mare Daley's fifth floor City Hall office. Perhaps. Stare decisis. I would love to be
in law school now especially Constitutional Law.
With one exception, EVERY Chicago cop I was with in law school ended up on the bench. Hindsight, indeed.
I hit the school at a time of transition. From Noble Lee's mercenary operation that "anyone can get into but few survive" to a fully AALS accredited institution. My understanding is that in the old days one could pass every course exam, but still wash out after failing a comprehensive exam that tested all subjects taken, including previous years' coursework. Seems like a nightmare, and if that's what you transferred out from, kudos on your common sense.
That, and Woodward in which a British nanny killed a child and subsequent foolish judge opted to decide
judgemente non obstene veredicto strongly influenced professional departure.
Remember that case, and my wife's comment about it. "These people who hire British girls as au pairs don't realize that most of them are coming over here to party hearty.