Origin of Central New York town names

Origin of Central New York town names ...

http://home.roadrunner.com/~nrw/history/military.html

Links

Further reading

  • Plutarch (75), "Parallel Lives", translated by John Dryden, revised by A. H. Clough (1864)
  • Lempriere (1788) "Classical Dictionary", Routledge and Kegan Paul. Reprinted 1984. ISBN 0-7102-0068-4. The exhaustive reference work for proper names in classical Greek and Latin literature.
  • Philes, George P. (1889) "The Godfather of the Christen'd West - Who was He?" Reprinted in Wright (1961)
  • Rose, R. S. (1935). "The military tract of central New York". Unpublished M.A., Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y.
  • Wright, Albert Hazen (1961). "Simeon DeWitt and military tract township names". Ithaca, N.Y.,: Published by the Author for DeWitt Historical Society of Tompkins County. Includes excerpts from traveler's ridicule of our use of classical and European names.

 

 

NEW "DASH" POEM!

Live Your Dash by Linda Ellis

http://www.live-your-dash.com/

NEW "DASH" POEM!

http://lindaellis.typepad.com/my_weblog/2010/01/on


Buy Two Books, Get One Free! Send Email for Coupon Code:
lellis@bellsouth.net

New Inspirational Poem: "Live Your Dash"

Many years have passed since Linda Ellis introduced her original "The Dash"
poem to the world, and now she has written another. This poem focuses more on living our "dash,"
rather than on introducing the concept.

http://www.live-your-dash.com/


Linda's Lyrics | 1050 E. Piedmont Road | Suite E-135 | Marietta | GA | 30062

http://www.live-your-dash.com/

 

RICE FIELDS OF JAPAN

 

 

Stunning crop art has sprung up across rice fields in Japan, but this is no alien creation.  The designs have been cleverly planted.

Farmers creating the huge displays use no ink or dye.

Instead, different color rice plants have been precisely and strategically arranged and grown in the  paddy fields. 

As summer progresses and the plants shoot up, the detailed artwork begins to emerge.

 

(download)
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The farmers create the murals  by planting little purple and yellow-leafed Kodaimai rice along with their local green-leafed Tsugaru, a Roman variety, to create the colored patterns in the time between planting and harvesting in September.

Don't mess with old men

An old prospector shuffled into town leading an old tired mule. The old
man headed straight for the only saloon to clear his parched throat. He
walked up and tied his old mule to the hitch rail. As he stood there,
brushing some of the dust from his face and clothes, a young gunslinger
stepped out of the saloon with a gun in one hand and a bottle of whiskey in
the other.

The young gunslinger looked at the old man and laughed, saying, "Hey
old man, have you ever danced?" The old man looked up at the gunslinger and
said, "No, I never did dance... never really wanted to."

A crowd had gathered as the gunslinger grinned and said, "Well, you
old fool, you're gonna dance now," and started shooting at the old man's
feet. The old prospector --not wanting to get a toe blown off-started
hopping around like a flea on a hot skillet. Everybody was laughing, fit to
be tied.

When his last bullet had been fired, the young gunslinger, still
laughing, holstered his gun and turned around to go back into the saloon.
The old man turned to his pack mule, pulled out a double-barreled shotgun,
and cocked both hammers. The loud clicks carried clearly through the desert
air.

The crowd stopped laughing immediately. The young gunslinger heard
the sounds too, and he turned around very slowly. The silence was almost
deafening. The crowd watched as the young gunman stared at the old timer
and the large gaping holes of those twin barrels. The barrels of the
shotgun never wavered in the old man's hands, as he quietly said, "Son,
have you ever licked a mule's ass?"

The gunslinger swallowed hard and said, "No sir..... but... I've
always wanted to."

There are a few lessons for us all here:

1. Never be arrogant.
2. Don't waste ammunition.
3. Whiskey makes you think you're smarter than you are.
4. Always, always make sure you know who has the power.
5. Don't mess with old men, they didn't get old by being stupid.

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Top 40 free business apps

http://realbusiness.co.uk/leadership/top_40_free_business_apps

Check out the list below:

1   The Awesome Highlighter: Highlight text on web pages2   Ning: Lets you create and join new social networks for your interests and passions3   The OpenLearn website: Gives free access to Open University course materials4   Primo PDF: Create PDF files for free 5   Twitterfall: Set up tags to view twitter trends. Great to use at conferences or in classrooms    6   Xtimeline: Creates your own timelines  7   Zamzar: Free online file conversion8   Wordle: Create beautiful word clouds 9   Spezify: Visual search10   Visuwords: The online graphical dictionary and thesaurus  11   bubbl.us: Mindmapping tool  12   Free Skype-to-Skype calls: Low-cost international calls and a free iPhone app13   IBM INNOV8 2.0: Resources for business14   Wordpress: Get a free blog, 1000s of free graphic themes15   Hot Potatoes Home Page – create interactive quizzes and puzzles16   Welcome to Wikispaces: Free Wikis for everyone17   FreeMind; Free mind mapping software  18   Gliffy: Diagram software19   Prezi: The zooming presentation editor   20   Free PowerPoint to Flash converter  21   Upload and share PowerPoint presentations and documents22   Xtranormal: Create your movies   23   Riveting talks by remarkable people, free to the world24   Animoto: The end of slideshows 25   Provide feedback on websites  26   PhotoPeach: Free photo slideshows with music  27   BigHugeLabs: Do fun stuff with your photos 28   Read The Words29   OpenSim: Create your own virtual worlds  30   Scratch: Create your own animations and games31   Udutu: Online learning simulations made easy32   SurveyMonkey.com: Powerful tool for creating web surveys. Online survey software made easy!   33   Create free online surveys and polls with PollDaddy.com34   Pageflakes35   Online Meeting, web conferencing, desktop sharing and remote support with Mikogo  36   Audacity: Free audio editor and recorder 37   Dosize: Resize digital photo images online38   Google Sketch Up39   OpenOffice.org: Free and open productivity suite40   Go! Animate: Create your own cartoons and animations 


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Pets for Vets

Pets for Vets

http://www.refresheverything.com/petsforvets

You really should vote for Pets for Vets to win $250,000 Pepsi Grant. This money will help them rehabilitate more shelter pets and match them with
returning servicemen and women who suffer from combat stress related issues.


This truly is a win-win program and needs your vote and support.

http://www.refresheverything.com/petsforvets

http://www.pets-for-vets.com/


Man's Best Friend Helps Heal War Wounds


by Gloria Hillard

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126162874

Leif Meisinger and Spyder...

Leif Meisinger, a former Army gunner, says getting Spyder was one of the
best things that ever happened to him. He credits his canine companion with
helping to ease his PTSD.

May 1, 2010

Unwanted and abandoned dogs fill shelters nationwide, and not many will get a second chance. But, in California there's a new organization that is saving one dog at a time and, in the process, helping those who have served.

One of those people is Leif Meisinger, a combat veteran who still wears a military-style buzz cut. His arms are tapestries of colored ink, including a few tattoos he got in Iraq. The 40-year-old former Army gunner says he has a mild traumatic brain injury after a roadside bomb blast and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic
stress disorder. "It was like I was back in Iraq again," he says. "I was up at night, and I would sleep during the day."

A few months ago, something in his life changed. Meisinger received a dog from Pets for Vets - a Los Angeles-based organization that matches shelter dogs with veterans like Meisinger who are having a hard time re-entering civilian life. "I love this dog," Meisinger says, "and ... I've never really been an
animal-type person."

Four-Legged Therapists

The 215-pound soldier plays fetch with the 10-pound dog, Spyder. "It's the greatest thing that ever could happen to me ... getting the dog," he says. "Now I'm a social butterfly. Whereas before, I was in my house drinking, just dying ... doing nothing."

The founder of Pets for Vets, Clarissa Black, says adopting an animal can change veterans' lives. "It's like having a best friend," she says. "It's like having a companion.


Many of these guys, they talk to their dogs. They tell their dogs things they could not tell anyone else - sometimes even their therapists. And together they're helping each other heal."

Although her job is extremely rewarding, there are hard parts, too, such as choosing dogs out of the many that need a home. At Los Angeles County's high-kill animal shelter, Black looks for a retriever mix. As if reading her mind, dozens of dogs of all sizes try to get her attention. "It's very hard to walk down and see all the animals looking at you and knowing they need a home as well," she says.

Breeding Connections

After volunteering in an animal therapy program at a Veterans Affairs hospital, the 27-year-old certified animal trainer saw a special need and started Pets for Vets. She's placed eight dogs since June. "You can just see the months and years of stress melt away from the first moment that [the vets] see their dog," Black says. She doesn't have much of a budget. A small band of volunteers and donations help cover her expenses to train the dogs as companion animals. And for veterans with special emotional needs, Black, who has a degree in Animal Sciences from Cornell, says she teaches the dogs to recognize things like a panic attack by simulating the behavior herself. She then trains the dogs to react with a gentle nudge or kiss. "It is a very good partner to group therapy or one-on-one therapy," says Richard Beam, a spokesman for the VA Medical Center in Long Beach, Calif., which has referred patients to the Pets for Vets program. "It's a perfect augmentation."

"We've seen some of our veterans really feel connected to something," he says, "whereas without that connection to an animal or a pet, they really did feel alone."

That was certainly true for Meisinger, who says he still participates in group therapy at the VA once a week. But he says it's Spyder that keeps him grounded on the other days. "I'll be sitting there, and I have no idea what I'm thinking, I'm just staring at something, and all of a sudden he comes up and starts licking my
face, and it's like 'Oh whoa' - he pulls me back," Meisinger says. "He keeps me from going to that spot that you don't need to go to."

Listen to the Story

Weekend Edition Saturday
[4 min 36 sec] * Add to Playlist
* Download
* Transcript


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126162874

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What Women Want in a Man

What I Want In A Man! Original List

1. Handsome
2. Charming 3. Financially successful
4. A caring listener
5. Witty
6. In good shape
7. Dresses with style
8. Appreciates finer things
9.. Full of thoughtful surprises What I Want in a Man, Revised List (age 32)
1. Nice looking
2. Opens car doors, holds chairs
3. Has enough money for a nice dinner
4. Listens more than talks
5. Laughs at my jokes
6. Carries bags of groceries with ease
7. Owns at least one tie
8. Appreciates a good home-cooked meal
9. Remembers birthdays and anniversaries


What I Want in a Man, Revised List (age 42)
1. Not too ugly
2. Doesn't drive off until I'm in the car
3. Works steady - splurges on dinner out occasionally
4. Nods head when I'm talking
5. Usually remembers punch lines of jokes
6. Is in good enough shape to rearrange the furniture
7. Wears a shirt that covers his stomach
8. Knows not to buy champagne with screw-top lids
9. Remembers to put the toilet seat down
10. Shaves most weekends

What I Want in a Man, Revised List (age 52)
1. Keeps hair in nose and ears trimmed
2. Doesn't belch or scratch in public
3. Doesn't borrow money too often
4. Doesn't nod off to sleep when I'm venting
5. Doesn't re-tell the same joke too many times
6. Is in good enough shape to get off the couch on weekends
7. Usually wears matching socks and fresh underwear
8. Appreciates a good TV dinner
9. Remembers your name on occasion
10. Shaves some weekends

What I Want in a Man, Revised List (age 62)
1. Doesn't scare small children
2. Remembers where bathroom is
3. Doesn't require much money for upkeep
4. Only snores lightly when asleep
5. Remembers why he's laughing
6. Is in good enough shape to stand up by himself
7. Usually wears some clothes
8. Likes soft foods
9. Remembers where he left his teeth
10. Remembers that it's the weekend

What I Want in a Man, Revised List (age 72)
1. Breathing.
2. Doesn't miss the toilet.

-----------------
AFTER BEING MARRIED FOR 44 YEARS, I TOOK A CAREFUL LOOK AT MY WIFE ONE DAY AND SAID, "Darling, 44 YEARS AGO WE HAD A CHEAP APARTMENT, A CHEAP CAR, SLEPT ON A SOFA BED AND WATCHED A 10-INCH BLACK AND WHITE TV, BUT I GOT TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT WITH A HOT 25-YEAR-OLD GIRL. NOW I HAVE A $500,000.00 HOME, A $45,000.00 CAR, NICE BIG BED AND PLASMA SCREEN TV, BUT I'M SLEEPING WITH A 65-YEAR-OLD WOMAN. IT SEEMS TO ME THAT YOU'RE NOT HOLDING UP YOUR SIDE OF THINGS."

MY WIFE IS A VERY REASONABLE WOMAN. SHE TOLD ME TO GO OUT AND FIND A HOT 25-YEAR-OLD GAL, AND SHE WOULD MAKE SURE THAT I WOULD ONCE AGAIN BE LIVING IN A CHEAP APARTMENT, DRIVING A CHEAP CAR, SLEEPING ON A SOFA BED AND WATCHING A 10-INCH BLACK AND WHITE TV.


AREN'T OLDER WOMEN GREAT? THEY REALLY KNOW HOW TO SOLVE YOUR MID-LIFE CRISIS ===========================================================

How to cope with diversity

     About this blog   |    About my company, Brazen Careerist   |    Penelope's guide to starting a blog

 

How to cope with diversity

Posted to: Diversity

June 21st, 2010


http://blog.penelopetrunk.com/2010/06/21/how-to-cope-with-diversity/


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All projects run longer than scheduled. So when I planned for remodeling the farmhouse as a two-week project, I figured it would take four weeks. But we are on week eight because we’re waiting for tile. And when the farmer and I have an argument, he says, “Go to Home Depot and buy some tile so we can take baths.”

It is useless to try to explain to him why Home Depot tile is not innovative design. He doesn’t care. He just wants to be clean. I used to think diversity was my best friend marrying a black guy. But the guy graduated from rich-kid private schools and has tenure at UCLA and, at this point, I think diversity is not skin color but rather social upbringing.

I noticed there’s a lot of information on how to create diversity, but there’s not a lot of information about how to cope with it once you have it. So here are my tips:

1. Accept that some people don’t care about what you care about.
It’s true that we have not been very clean during the remodeling. All the plumbing is on hold. We take showers under the spigot for the well, and I keep thinking a towel is dirty, and put it in the dirty laundry, and then a week later it looks relatively clean, so I use it.

The farmer is concerned that people will think we don’t wash. He says people in the country judge you by whether you’re clean. This is the hardest part of remodeling for him.

The hardest part for me was painting because everyone besides my designer, Maria Killam, told me that it's a sin to paint woodwork. I painted anyway.

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The painters were so offended by the idea of painting woodwork that after they did the whole upstairs they asked if I changed my mind because they could still leave the woodwork downstairs unpainted.

Also: The painters wouldn’t paint the pink bedroom until the farmer expressly approved, in person, the color of paint.  (His commentary: “Don’t call me in from the field to look at paint again, okay?”)

2. Know when you have to get your way.
What we ended up with are colors that make me happy and creative.

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In fact, these are the same colors I chose for my childhood bedroom. My parents were so sure that I’d hate the colors when I went through puberty that they bought everything really cheap. But I never stopped loving my bright blue carpet. (Even now I remember the crayon I used to pick the carpet color: Cornflower blue.)

3. Don’t try to change others. See the world differently yourself.
I was going to go for farmhouse chic decor. But only non-farmers like farmhouse chic: you don't need an old bench in your house when you have four in your barn. So I decided that steampunk is a better look for me, and maybe I should sell our old barn boards – which I constantly rescue from the farmer’s bonfires – to the farm-fetish people of New York City.

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4. Seek out opposing views, just to practice processing them.
Oh. Wait. Speaking of New York City, when I tell a New Yorker that I live on a farm, do you know what they ask? “How many bedrooms is the house?” Like all houses are weekend houses on the Hudson.  And do you know what Wisconsin natives ask when I tell them I live on a farm? “Do you burn couches?” It’s so common for farmers to burn furniture in their yard that people in Wisconsin know which furniture makes the best fire. (Yes, we did, in fact, burn furniture. But I didn’t realize it until my nanny asked if she could have the dresser we’re not using, and the farmer said, “It was cheap wood, anyway.”)

5. Use innocuous obsessions to distract from genuine conflict.
While I’ve been waiting to unpack, I have been gardening — adding plants the Amish farmer down the highway has on sale because it's too late in the summer to plant them.

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Also while I've been waiting to unpack, I have been sort of unpacking. Going through books. I always try to throw some books out when I move because I have too many. In my 20s, my walls were covered in books. But once I realized that living a life buried in books is a sign of dysfunction, I’ve been trying to cut back. I still am not able to read a book from the library. I have to own it. But I am able to throw out a book if I no longer remember anything about it.

6. There's relief: A new, jarring way of thinking becomes tame over time.
I read Fear of Flying the first year out of college, and then I realized I was missing a whole part of the literary canon, so I spent a year reading the history of women writing about sex. It was an eye-opening year, but twenty years later, the books are not as challenging. I throw out almost all the books, but I save:

Fear of Flying, by Erica Jong

The Pillow Book, by Sei Shonagon

Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, by Jeanette Winterson

My Secret Garden, by Nancy Friday

The Story of O, by Pauline Reage

Then I got worried that the town is so small that everyone watches what everyone throws out, and people will not appreciate the literary aspects of books like House of Incest.

I told the farmer that he should be careful bringing the box to the dump because some people would think it’s porn.

“Oh, really?” was all he said. And he moved those books a little bit away from the trash pile.

Then I noticed the books were making their way slowly, one by one, to our pink bedroom.

7. Real diversity requires real patience.
The tile is not the only thing holding us up. Also the faucets. Which the farmer assumed was the contractor’s fault and not mine because what sane woman would wash dishes in an outside well for eight weeks on her own volition?

“Actually,” I say, “I need brass polished finish for the s-trap, and I have had a hard time finding it.”

The farmer tries very hard to understand why a nickel finish on the pipes would not be steampunky-y enough for my farmhouse kitchen. “I hate to end up with a kitchen that is actually ironic commentary on our farm life instead of insightful commentary.”

“What? What are you talking about?”

“It’s why I need brass pipes instead of nickel. Steampunk is insightful commentary on vintage decorating.”

The farmer hugs me. He knows I’m onto something, and maybe he can wait another week. Or three.

We go up to the bedroom. We knock over the stack of maybe-porn and we bump into the chandelier so hard that it sounds like wind chimes. We pull off the duvet that I had to travel to New York City to find, and just as the farmer is about to go down on me he says, “What’s this?”

“What?”

“There’s dirt.”

“Really?”

“How do you get dirt in your underwear? Were you gardening nude or something? How does this happen?”

I think about the dirty towel getting me dirty instead of dry. I think the farmer is not going to want to hear that we have no shower and no washing machine and no end in sight. So I say, “Yeah. I think it’s gardening.” And somehow, he’s relieved.

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I finally figured out ... the only reason to be alive is to enjoy it.

Ned Snyder  

E-Mail: nedsnydr@ix.netcom.com

http://unhub.com/NedSnyder

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