Sunday, February 28, 2021

Words 2.28

 Words Twice a Week           2.28

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


This week’s challenge – the “squirrel verse” to This Land Is Your Land

As I went scrambling across the garden

I paused to dig up a row of onions;

I saw before me the towering/tempting/tasty/crunchy sunflowers -

  This land was made for you and me.


Some days from the church calendar -

March 1  David  

A Welsh bishop during the 6th century, he is the patron saint of Wales.  His best-known miracle is said to have taken place when he was preaching in the middle of a large crowd at the Synod of Brefi: the village of Llanddewi Brefi stands on the spot where the ground on which he stood is reputed to have risen up to form a small hill. A white dove, which became his emblem, was seen settling on his shoulder. John Davies notes that one can scarcely "conceive of any miracle more superfluous" in that part of Wales than the creation of a new hill.  The Monastic Rule of David prescribed that monks had to pull the plow themselves without draft animals, and must drink only water and eat only bread with salt and herbs. The monks spent their evenings in prayer, reading and writing. No personal possessions were allowed: even to say "my book" was considered an offense. He lived a simple life and practiced asceticism, teaching his followers to refrain from eating meat and drinking beer.   His emblem, as noted in Shakespeare, is the leek.  So – potato leek soup for dinner?  Anyway, Happy St David’s Day to Welsh men, women, and children around the world!

Mar 2  Chad 

 7th century Bishop to the Northumbrians, the Mercians and Lindsey.  Here’s a couple of the paragraphs from Wikipedia (with comment by yours truly) -

Chad remains a fairly popular given name, one of the few personal names current among 7th century Anglo-Saxons to do so. However, it was very little used for many centuries before a modest revival in the mid-20th century. Not all of its bearers are named directly after Chad of Mercia. Perhaps the best-known Chad of modern times who was so-named was Chad Varah, an Anglican priest and social activist.  False – hands up, how many thought “Chad – priest and social activist”?  How many thought “Yesterday’s Gone” or “A Summer Song”?  (sing it with me...)

      They say that all good things must end some day, 

      Autumn leaves must fall, 

      But don’t you know that it hurts me so 

      to say good by to you.  (Wish you didn’t have to go, oh no, no, no)

     And when the rain, beats against my window pane, 

     I’ll think of summer days again, and dream of you!

  Due to the somewhat confused nature of Chad's appointment and the continued references to 'chads' – small pieces of ballot papers punched out by voters using voting machines – in the 2000 US Presidential Election, it has been jocularly suggested that Chad is the patron saint of botched elections. In fact there is no official patron saint of elections, although the Church has designated a later English official, Thomas More, the patron of politicians.

  St. Chad's Day (2 March) is traditionally considered the most propitious day to sow broad beans in England!?

  Somber note to wrap this up with – Chad (of Chad and Jeremy) died just last December. 

March 3  John and Charles Wesley

  Ok – I suppose Methodists/United Methodists might have a slightly different take on these guys than Episcopalians, although they both lived and died Church of England priests.

  John was the visionary and organizing force behind the Methodist movement, and later the “Methodist” forms of Christianity.  The term was originally a term of derision – they were quite “methodical” about their faith lives.  

  On February 9, when he was 5 years old, the rectory where they lived caught fire.  All the family got out except John who was leaning out of a second story window.  He was rescued by one parishioner who stood on the shoulders of another.  Ever after he thought of himself as “a brand plucked from the burning.”  

  Two other dates – on May 24, 1738 John had a “heartwarming experience at a meeting in Aldersgate Street” which seems to have been a sort of conversion to a new valuing of  experience for faith.  And April 1739, with more and more of the parish churches closed to him, he “overcame his scruples” and following George Whitefield, began preaching (to crowds!) outdoors.

  He died March 2,1791 at age 87.  His last words were “Best of all, God is with us.”

  Charles was the son of, father of, brother of, and grandfather of guys named Samuel Wesley.  I guess they liked the name, though it must have been a little confusing when calling folks for dinner! He wrote between 6,500 and 10,000 hymns, including O For a Thousand Tongues to Sing (which had 17 verses!), Christ the Lord is Risen Today, Come Thou Long Expected Jesus, Hark the Herald Angels Sing, and Love divine, All Loves Excelling.  He’s probably the main reason Methodists/United Methodists are a “singing people”, although John also had 7 directions for singing, including 

  “Sing them exactly as printed...if you have learned to sing them otherwise, unlearn it as fast as you can; 

  Sing all..

  Sing lustily and with a good courage.  Beware of singing as if you were half dead or half asleep…

  Sing modestly…

  Sing in time...Do not run before nor stay behind...take care not to sing too slow!

  Above all, sing spiritually… 

Moving on….

March 6  William Worrall Mayo and Charles Frederick Menninger both guys who with their sons established well known clinics.  Note we drive to Rochester because William was named examining surgeon for the first Minnesota draft board there in 1863.  


Some days from the world/earth calendar -

March 1

+ Yahoo! Was incorporated in 1995.  It was one of the first internet companies.  It declined in market share over the years, mainly giving way to Google, and was purchased by Verizon in 2017.

+ The Lindbergh baby was kidnapped.

+ The Peace Corps was established in 1961

March 2

+ In 1807 the U.S. Congress banned the importation of slaves from Africa, but the internal slave trade continued in states where it was legal.

+ Dr Seuss was born in 1904.  You can find about some of the “Seuss experience” here, and about the current issue of whether his books are diverse or have some racist undertones here and here.  And here for a piece from NPR’s CodeSwitch.  This is kind of sad – apparently he drew racist cartoons as a young man and wrote and starred in (in blackface) a minstrel show.  This is also “Read Across America Day”, or the start of “Read Across America Week”, which has traditionally focused on Dr Seuss books, but is now transitioning away from them.  Here’s a real surprise – the issue is taking on political overtones!

+ D.H.Lawrence died in 1930 – his books raised some issues too.

March 3

+ Rodney King was beaten by Los Angeles police in 1991.   When the police were acquitted a year later, riots and rebellions occurred with 55 people killed, 2383 injured, and $1 billion damage done.  Two of the police were later found guilty of violating his civil rights and served 30 months in prison.  During the riots King made a television appearance pleading for an end to the riots: “I just want to say – you know – can we all get along? Can we, can we get along?”

+ Alexander Graham Bell was born in 1847.  The evolution of the telephone in just my lifetime is staggering.  I still remember, though just barely, lifting the receiver and hearing “Number please?”

+ Johann Pachelbel died on this day in 1706.  He was one of the most significant composers of the Baroque era.  We probably know him best for Pachelbel’s Canon.  Many examples on youtube.  Here’s one for piano and cello which is labeled “Best for Weddings”!  Or here’s one called paco Bell’s Canon

+ start of reading of Winterdance reading – see March 7 below!

March 4

+ Good day to take a walk - get it? - "March 4th"!

+ the first documented case of the 1918 Spanish flu (in Kansas!).  Estimates of the death toll range from 20 million to 50 million, though some would place it even higher.

+ The U.S. Constitution was put into effect in 1789.

+ Antonio Vivaldi was born in 1678.  Another of the Baroque composers, probably best known for The Four Seasons, or for his Gloria, although he wrote more than 500 concertos, 90 sonatas, and 46 operas!  There’s also a web browser named Vivaldi!

March 5

+ Sergei Prokofiev died in 1953.  He wrote the “widely heard” March from The Love of Three Oranges (I don’t think I ever heard it! I think I would remember that.), the ballet Romeo and Juliet, and Peter and the Wolf.  I have heard that!  So apparently The Love of (or “for”) Three Oranges was a satirical opera which was not well received at first, but was then revived and is now widely produced.  In some productions a “scratch & sniff” card was handed out to go along with it!

+ Patsy Cline died in a plane crash in 1963.  She was one of the first singers to cross over from country to popular music.  She sang I Fall to Pieces and Crazy.  Willie Nelson wrote it, here’s a clip of him singing it.

March 6

+ Asprin was trademarked as a pain-killer in 1899.

+ Michelangelo was born in 1475.  A Italian renaissance artist, along with Leonardo da Vinci. (He died on Feb 18)  Most familiar for his sculptures David, Pieta, Moses, and for his painting on the ceiling of the Sistine chapel, including the hands of God and Adam touching in creation.  He also wrote 300 sonnets and madrigals.

March 7

+ Bloody Sunday – Well unfortunately there are a variety of “Bloody Sundays”.  This one is from the Selma to Montgomery march in 1965.  From the National Park Service site -

Approximately at 3 p.m. on Sunday, March 7, 1965, 300 protesters, led by Hosea Williams, John Lewis, Albert Turner and Bob Mants, gathered at Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church in Selma and proceeded through town to the Edmund Pettus Bridge. At that point, the number of the marchers had swelled to 600 as they crossed the span from Selma toward their date with destiny. At the end of the bridge stood Alabama State Troopers and a hastily-organized vigilante band mounted on horses under the direction of Maj. John Cloud. Refusing to speak to Williams, Cloud ordered the marchers to disperse, after which gas canisters were thrown into the crowd. Troopers and horsemen armed with clubs assaulted the protesters who then fled back to Selma.

+ the start of this year’s Iditarod.  If you want to zoom in and listen to some of us read Winterdance by Gary Paulson, at 8pm each night, starting on Mar 3, here is the zoom link,

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81384673676?pwd=aEduQ245Ym5jTXFkRUdrd013RzFBUT09

Meeting ID: 813 8467 3676

Passcode: 023528


And finally a prayer for this week -

Dear God,

thank you for loving us,

in all our glorious shapes and sizes and colors and abilities.

But as we discover and acknowledge our faults and failures,

our hostilities, our bigotries, our aggressions -

we have to wonder – are you Crazy, crazy for loving us?


That’s what I got for now…..


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Thursday, February 25, 2021

Words 2.25

 Words Twice a Week           2.25

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


backspace, backspace to 2.23 – it was the birthday of George Frideric Handel – of The Messiah fame.  With due respect to all productions past, present, and future, the most exciting one we ever experienced was Too Hot to Handel in Denver a couple of years ago.  It was really fun.  You can catch last year’s 7 minute Hallelujah Project on Facebook – there’s a link on the website.  Or you can order a full length cd from earlier years, or I suppose if you search around you can probably find it on Youtube, like just about everything else these days.  (Note, this is NOT Too Hot to Handle – a “reality show” TV series where apparently young men and women in skimpy attire have to forgo sex to earn money!?)

(Nor is it (She’s) Too Hot To Handle, a 1977 “Sexy adventure film has international hit lady Caffaro involved in James Bondish escapades in Manila.” 

(And note this is not Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah which is a dynamite song, but never really seems that “religious” to me.   But maybe that’s just me.  Maybe you have to sink deeper into it!)

Anyway, Hallelujah for Handel for The Messiah and lots more!


Then – this week’s challenge (write a “short fiction” – 280 characters or less - of the gospel story) -

We were drifting along.

Power running roughshod over truth.

The lamp of Justice flickering,

Kindness getting lost in self-interest,

Humility overshadowed by bluster…

In short, temperature dropping, wind rising, darkness falling, we were heading for “Texas”! 

Love came knocking….

I still suspect you could do better than that one…


And finally, here are some thoughts on some of the lectionary texts for this Sunday-

Genesis 17.1-7, 15-16

+ Abram becomes Abraham, Sarai becomes Sarah.  Abram was 99 years old.  Does that mean Abraham and Sarah were 1 year old when Isaac was born?  Note Abram was 75 years old when God first appeared and promised land to the sojourner and descendants to the childless.  24 years is a long time to wait!  We were 14 years married when Christopher was born and that seemed like a long time!  

+ “I am God Almighty” – first time Abram hears this name of God.  Walter Bruggemann notes that the divine name contrasts nicely with the “body-given despair of this old couple.”  Do you have a favorite among the many names of God?  What “body-weariness” are you experiencing and how does one of the divine names contrast with it?

+ “You shall be the ancestor of many nations” – I was just reading something (climate related, I think) that said our most important task is to be a good ancestor.  Man – it used to be that I would remember where I read something like that.

+ “Walk before me and be blameless”  (CEV “do right”  -  “If you want a do right all night woman, you gotta be a do right all night man”)  This is not a matter of moral purity, but rather of loyalty.

+ vs 7 God will keep this promise because he/she is God – it’s what God does. 

+ so the infertility is in fact a theological problem, because God had promised a child 24 years ago.  The tension between infertility and the promise of a child mirrors the tension in the promise of land to a sojourner.

+ Then I was listening to a podcast about a book Land: How the Hunger for Ownership Shaped the Modern World by Simon Winchester, about the concept of land ownership and how it is different among different peoples, especially indigenous people.  Think Chief Seattle – “How can you sell the land?”  He also noted that for example in Scandinavia, people are allowed to wander on private land, as long as they behave well.  Does that maybe color our thoughts to some extent when we read about God “giving the land to Abraham”, especially when it had “belonged” to someone else?

+ and just a little pet peeve aside here, when you search for that book title, five of the first seven results are Amazon, and one is Good Reads which is owned by Amazon.  Does anyone else feel somewhat smothered by Amazon?

+ God’s promise provides protection and resources for an open future.  Even for us, a new possible future that we could never devise for ourselves.

+ note that we are still dealing in “family stories” – the faith comes down to us through families, and our families pass it on to others.  Did your faith come through your family?

+ my favorite line in this story is just a few verses on when Abraham says “Why not just let Ishmael be my heir?”  A child in the arms is worth 2 in the dreams/eyes?  Especially after 24 years?


Psalm 22.23-31

+ the second half of Ps 22.  The first half is a lament over hardship; this half is a word of promise.  The state of helplessness does not imply God’s ire or disapproval – when the psalmist called (from helplessness) God did not turn away but answered.

+ note this is not some interior feeling, but for “when the people gather”.  What kind of gathering is working for you these days – youtube, zoom, phone calls, emails, cards and notes?

+ vs 26 – “the poor shall eat and be satisfied” because the psalmist, as integral part of his/her praise activity, is sharing food with them.

+ the psalmist “offers testimony” as a part of the celebration – in general terms which the individual could then fit into their specific situation.  Testimony moves into the realm of preaching or proclamation.  Does “testimony” make preaching more relevant, interesting, significant, moving, believable for you?  If you were going to give your testimony, what would you say?

+ God is in control, the ruler of all nations – how’s that working out today?

+ vs 30 and 31 - “future generations” – again, be a good ancestor!


Romans 4.13-25

+ Paul explains how the promise rested on Abraham’s faith, not on his works.  Sometimes I think – just say it, don’t explain it, but that’s just me.

+ God is the one who gives life, who opens possibilities; so faith is “giving room for God to work”.  What’s that mean for Abraham and Sarah?  Where might that come into play in your life?  The joke about the person who kept praying to win the lottery and finally God said, “Give me a break, you gotta buy a ticket!”

+ God does what God has promised, not just what we want.  (Even if 2 or more are together?)

+ This all has to do with God “who raised Jesus from the dead”,  so Abraham is not a hero (well he is, but that’s not what this is about) for believing which would be “works”; God is the hero for “doing” so Abraham can believe.  Like I say, sometimes just believe it, don’t try to understand it!


Mark 8.31-38

+ First of three “passion predictions” in the gospel, each of which is followed by a story showing that the disciples aren’t really getting it.

+ going back a few verses, Peter proclaims “You are the Messiah” and Jesus corrects “Don’t tell anyone.”  Now Jesus proclaims/teaches what “being the Messiah” means and Peter corrects – “this shall not happen to you!”  And then Jesus corrects – “Get behind me, Satan”

+ note this was not speaking in stories or parables – “He said this openly”.

+ Jesus began to teach them – so this is something they have not heard before, they are unprepared to hear.

+ “Get behind me, Satan”  Well, obviously the “Satan” part is bad.  The “get behind me” – Jesus called them by saying “Come behind me” (and is about to say to the crowd “those who would come behind me”). So – how does it sound to you?  “Go away” or “get in line”?

+ setting the mind on human things or divine things – how do you tell them apart?  Or “thinking like God vs thinking like humans” – how do you “think like God”?

+ “Pick up your cross and follow; if you try to save your life, yourself, your soul, you will lose; what could you give to get back your soul?”  Powerful, if familiar, words.

+ “Don’t be ashamed of me” – “Be loyal”

+ From Fred Craddock -

The rather elaborate reference to suffering, rejection and death in contrast to the very brief mention of resurrection is significant.   The same proportion holds at the end of this gospel.  Clearly, Mark does not want his church to use Easter to escape Lent and Good Friday.  Then, at the heart of the passion prediction is rejection by the religious establishment, both lay and clergy.  That may have been the sharpest pain of all.  Whether the cross-bearing Christ still suffers such a fate is a judgment each one has to make.  One popular preacher recently explained his approach by saying,”You cannot succeed preaching the cross.  People do not want to hear that; they already have enough problems.”  No wonder he is popular.

+ the passage included both private (to the 12) instruction and public (to the crowd).  Suffering and sacrifice are not just items of first-century history but are inherent in the Gospel.


That’s what I got for now….


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Sunday, February 21, 2021

Words 2.21

 Words Twice a Week           2.21

A few days from the church year -

Feb 22   So this is kind of interesting, the Wikipedia webpage gives this day to Eric Liddell; the Episcopal Church webpage gives it to Margaret of Cortona -

+ Eric Liddell – that’s right, the Chariots of Fire guy.  He was born in China to Scottish parents who were missionaries.  At school in England he became an Olympic class runner, though his career was hampered by his refusal to run on Sunday.  After finishing schooling, he returned to China as a missionary, where he died in a Japanese interment camp.  His wife and three daughters had left China to stay with family in Canada.

+ Margaret of Cortona, on the other hand, was born in 1247 in Italy.  Her mother died and her father remarried, but Margaret and the stepmother did not get along.  At age 17 she became the mistress of a wealthy young man and lived with him for 10 years.  When his favorite dog came home without him one afternoon, she was troubled and followed the dog into the woods to discover the body of her lover, who had been murdered.  She tried to return to her family, but the stepmother would not have her; she then turned to the Franciscan Friars of Cortona, where her son eventually became a friar.  She fasted, avoided meat, and subsisted on bread and vegetables.  Eventually she joined the Third Order of Saint Francis.  She is the patron saint of the falsely accused, hoboes, homeless, insane, orphaned, mentally ill, midwives, penitents, single mothers, reformed prostitutes, stepchildren, and tramps.  (Sounds like a song by Cher!)

Feb 23  Polycarp – early Bishop, Church Father, Martyr.  His name means “much fruit” in Greek.  And I love this, one source dates his death to “Saturday, Feb 23, c.155 or 156"!

Feb 24  St Matthias – he was chosen, by casting lots, to replace Judas after he had killed himself.  It says they chose someone who had been with them through the time of Jesus’ ministry, but Matthias is not mentioned anywhere in the gospels.  So I guess the word is to be ready to step in at a moments notice.  Sort of like the 12th man on the football team.  “According to Nicephorus  Matthias first preached the Gospel in Judaea, then in Aethiopia (by the region of Colchis, now in modern-day Georgia) and was there stoned to death. An extant Coptic Acts of Andrew and Matthias, places his activity similarly in "the city of the cannibals" in Aethiopia. A marker placed in the ruins of the Roman fortress at Gonio (Apsaros) in the modern Georgian region of Adjara claims that Matthias is buried at that site.  The Synopsis of Dorotheus contains this tradition: ‘Matthias preached the Gospel to barbarians and meat-eaters in the interior of Ethiopia, where the sea harbor of Hyssus is, at the mouth of the river Phasis. He died at Sebastopolis, and was buried there, near the Temple of the Sun.’  Another tradition maintains that Matthias was stoned at Jerusalem by the local populace, and then beheaded.  According to Hippolytus of Rome, Matthias died of old age in Jerusalem.”  So maybe it was all good, maybe not!

Feb 25  John Roberts (not that one!)  this John Roberts was born in Wales, became a proest in the Bahamas, and then served with Native Americans in Wyoming and Colorado.  Roberts became known for his interest in, and support for, traditional customs. Roberts also translated the Bible into the local languages.

Feb 26   Emily Morgan  (just put that in to see if you were paying attention – this was not “our” Emily, but an Emily Malbone Morgan.)  She and some friends established The Society of the Companions of the Holy Cross, a group that set up “vacation homes” where working women and their children could get away for a holiday.

Feb 27  George Herbert – He was a Welsh born (1953) poet and priest in the Church of England.  He wrote Let All the World In Every Corner Sing.  Many of his poems were visually designed with longer and shorter lines to look like what they were about – butterflies, altars, etc.


Ok – some days from the earth/world calendar -

Feb 22

+ First Woolworth Store opens (1879).  Interestingly the store quickly failed.  The Woolworth brothers then opened a store, using the same sign, in a different location on July 18.  The stores declined in the 1980, and then, as the sporting goods department continued to do well, morphed into Foot Locker.

Feb 23

+ John Keats died in 1821.  He wrote “Ode on a Grecian Urn” and a number of other “odes”, and “Lines on the Mermaid Tavern”.  (For when we get back to indoor dining!)

+ Woody Guthrie wrote “This Land is Your Land” in 1940.  Apparently Woody didn’t really do anything with the song for three or four years, when he recorded it without the “private property” verse and the “relief office” verse.  As with many of Woody’s songs, verses come and go to reflect current situations.

  Arlo Guthrie tells a story in concerts on occasion, of his mother returning from a dance tour of China, and reporting around the Guthrie family dinner table that at one point in the tour she was serenaded by Chinese children singing the song. Arlo says Woody was incredulous: "The Chinese? Singing "This land is your land, this land is my land? From California to the New York island?"

  On January 20, 2021, Jennifer Lopez performed the song during the inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th President of the United States. She did not include the verses critical of the USA but, performing it as part of a medley with America the Beautiful, interposed in Spanish the words 'one nation under God indivisible with liberty and justice for all', taken from the Pledge of Allegiance, to indicate her support for the rights of Hispanic and Latino Americans, implicitly criticizing their treatment by Donald Trump.

+ 1941, Glenn T Seaborg and team discovered plutonium, a step on the way to nuclear power (and weapons!).

+ Edward Elgar died in 1934.  He wrote the Enigma Variations, and so that we could graduate from high school and college - Pomp and Circumstance.  Don, don don don, don, don….

Feb 24

+ the German Nazi Party was founded in 1920

+ Steve Jobs was born in 1955.

Feb 25

+ Corazon Aquino became the 11th president of the Philippines.  Remember?

+ Muhammad Ali became heavy-weight champion of the world in 1964.  He was still named Cassius Clay at the time.  Fourteen years later he lost to Leon Spinks.   The aging Ali had expected an easy fight, but he was out-boxed by Spinks, who did not tire throughout the bout. Spinks was the only man to take a title from Muhammad Ali in the ring, as Ali's other losses were non-title contests or bouts where Ali was the challenger. Spinks just died on Feb 5 – I seem to recall seeing a quote where he said something like “I’m the champ, but he’s still the Greatest.”  Note that Ali won an unapproved rematch seven months later (15 rounds, unanimous decision)

+ birthday of Christopher Wren – English architect, he (and his company) was given the responsibility of rebuilding 52 churches in London following the great fire of 1666, including St Paul’s Cathedral.

Feb 26

+ birthday of Johnny Cash in 1932.  The Man in Black!  Did I tell you that we have cd’s of Johnny Cash reading the KJV New Testament.  It’s kind of fun.

+ and the birthday of John Harvey Kellogg in 1852.  Corn Flakes for breakfast today?  Or maybe crushed up on your fried chicken?

Feb 27

+ Here’s an eclectic set of birthdays – Ralph Nader 1934, Elizabeth Taylor 1932, John Steinbeck 1902, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1807  “Listen my children and you shall hear, by the shores of Gitchee Gumee, the forest primeval, the murmuring pines and the hemlocks.”  On second thought, I guess I’ll have that chicken cajun style!

+ Ivan Pavlov died in 1936.  Is that a bell ringing?  Man, I’m hungry!

Feb 28

+ Swedish prime minister Olaf Palme was assassinated on the main street of Stockholm while walking home with his wife from a movie.  There were/are at least 12 theories about the murder, but it still remains unsolved.

+ Nylon was invented in 1935

+ Paul Harvey died in 2009.   "Hello Americans, this is Paul Harvey. Stand by for NEWS!"  His real name was Paul Harvey Aurandt.  As a young reporter he broke into the Argonne National laboratory outside Chicago to demonstrate what he felt was lax security at the site.  He was friends with J Edgar Hoover and Joseph McCarthy and supported McCarthy’s “anti-communist” campaign. His father, Harry Aurandt, was a police officer who was murdered when Paul was just 3 years old.   At his funeral, twelve robed members of the Ku Klux Klan arrived late in the service and dropped roses on his casket, though there is no other indication that Aurandt was himself a Klansman.

  Page two – Paul Harvey was named to the DeMolay Hall of Fame (a Masonic Youth organization – hey – I was in DeMolay!).  He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005 from Pres George W Bush.  He married Lynne Cooper of St. Louis.  They met when Harvey was working at KXOK and Cooper came to the station for a school news program. Harvey invited her to dinner, proposed to her after a few minutes of conversation and from then on called her "Angel," even on his radio show. A year later she said yes. 

  Page three  He always ended, "Paul Harvey ... Good day." or "Paul Harvey ... Good night."  The last item of a broadcast, which was often a funny story, would usually be preceded by "And now from the 'For-what-it's-worth' department.…"

  And now you know – The……………!


Want a challenge for the week -

1) write an “Ode to the Cornish/Finnish Pasty”

2) write a verse to This Land Is Your Land from a perspective other than your own – ie, a maple tree, an animal on the verge of extinction, an animal not on the verge of extinction (the squirrels in our backyard waiting for us to plant stuff in the garden for them to dig up), the Mars rover Perseverance, an 11 year old (I just read The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie about the 11 year old Flavia deLuce), ….


That’s what I got for now…


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