Music of Elvis Presley
Ballet San Jose Silicon Valley
6 min 27 sec - Nov 8, 2005
www.balletsanjose.org
Performed by Ballet San Jose Silicon Valley, Blue Suede Shoes follows the lives of three people growing up during the Elvis Era, from High School through adulthood. Artistic Director Dennis Nahat secured the use of original Elvis Presley master recordings as the backdrop for this ballet. This movie has some of the highlights from the 1:30 performance.
Monday, April 03, 2006
Google Video: Some Old Elvis
Now, let's rock the whole place up, with some Elvis melodies of the 50's and beyond.
Some Thing Light: From Google Video
Nothing like sitting back and enjoying the lovely countenance of a beautiful woman, albeit that many of us may not understand what she is saying in French. For this somber Sunday afternoon, with the sky gods quite undecided on which grand display to honor us with - rain clouds or sun.
But it should be more than sufficient to admire this earth-bound beauty for the next two minutes, listening to the lilting sounds of the regal language of diplomats, French.
Enjoy!
But it should be more than sufficient to admire this earth-bound beauty for the next two minutes, listening to the lilting sounds of the regal language of diplomats, French.
Enjoy!
Eyes In The Sky
We have always considered and associated as secret and clandestine info, charts and maps relating to things military and national security. But nowadays, these things need not be so and in some instances they are common knowledge.Consider what one can find in a site innocuously titled Google Sightseeing.
This is a sparklingly clear picture of a military base in Utah, with the spanking new BI bomber sitting on the runway.
Here’s how the graphic is described in the site above:
This is a cracking shot of a B-1 bomber on the runway at Hills Air Force Base in Utah. The B-1 long range strategic bomber was first built in 1984 and has seen combat in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq. It is a big beast of an aircraft with a crew of four and that cool “Swing-Wing” thing. This allows it to take advantage of the aerodynamics of swept back wings at high speeds (top speed of Mach 1.2) while avoiding the drawbacks of such a configuration at lower speeds. It can carry a frightening 34,000kg in ordnance in three internal bays.And here is one comment for this blog entry:
The B-1R is a proposed replacement for the aging B-1 fleet and would have air-to-air missile capabilities and the engines of an F-22, allowing it a much improved top speed of Mach 2.2.
Another unusual aspect of this very clear photo is that there is a B-1 in it at all… Hill AFB is where F-16s, A-10s and C-130s get fixed up en masse. They also support maintenance of the Minuteman IIIs. I suppose they could have support services for B-1s, but there aren’t huge stacks of them there for maintenance like the other planes. I suppose its also possible the B-1 could be there on a visit to the Utah Test Range (which is one of the sub-commands of the base) (though, its not like South Dakota is too far for an Armed B-1 to come to Utah for practice….).Visit Google’s site and search for more to your heart’s delight.
A brave new world, indeed, not necessarily to Aldous Huxley’s delight or congruent with his vision.
Saturday, April 01, 2006
Should We Mind Corrrect English Usage?
Three Updates So Far. . .April 15. 2006 Scroll down
Updates * * * Scroll down * * *

Puzzled?
Well, that was the intention. The above ten statements were lifted randomly from a Google search in the blogosphere of the phrase, beg the question. Google gave out 30,973 results. And indeed, upon reviewing the above statements, you will find that this phrase forms the common thread that binds them all together.
And your purpose is?
English being such a dynamic and universally used language, one cannot help finding and discovering words and phrases whose usage have changed over time, either subtly or abruptly in some kind of barrage in popular usage. And the common phrase above is one such classic example. And if current usage as exemplified by most (one exception, maybe) of the above statements is to be accepted, then consider how differently the original meaning compares with the current one. Not unlike another classic example, the verb, to cleave, which in olden times meant to join together or unite. But now means to cut apart as evidenced by the use of the term, meat cleaver.
In its original concept, using the term to beg the question is to point to a logical fallacy, brought out when one argues taking for granted or assuming the thing that one is precisely trying to prove. In other words, in a roundabout or circular way one evades the issue by not giving a straightforward answer, or making the argument part of the proof.
Believe it or not, Aristotle defined this fallacy:
So?
Well, if you accept the current usage as reflected by most of the above statements, the phrase then comes to mean:
That the statement made prompts or forces the question to be asked.
While the original intent of the term was to point to a fallacy, like for instance when one makes the following statement:
We should not kill because all people should be allowed to live.
Then one can respond that the above argument is begging the question.
Consider the confusion then when both become standard and accepted usage. Readers will not be sure what the intended meaning of the writer is and in this instance one is very different from the other.
Are there more out there?
UPDATE
To Reader PhilippinesPhil:
As one can deduce from this blog’s archives, I appear quite attached to and enamored with the subject of the English language. Wrote a blog entry about English being the unofficial lingua franca of the blogosphere
Another word that has raised the hackles of many language purists is disinterested, its usage and meanings. Now many use and accept it to mean as not interested, rather than the more traditional and standard one which is to denote impartiality. Imagine picturing a “disinterested judge” as yawning at the proceedings, rather than listening intently and showing no biases.
I regularly resort to Google to try and learn about words, their etymology, current usage and meanings, etc.
Are many aware that one can Google using foreign language characters? After all many sites are written in languages other than English.
Sometimes morbid curiosity can amount to some good, such as accidentally tripping into some yet untapped features of some resources.
I had wanted to learn more about an unknown Russian actress raunchily featured in one episode of the Red Shoe Diaries series, a project of David Duchovny, made famous by that sci-fi thriller of HBO as one of the duo FBI agents, Mulder and Scully.
Well, I learned about her name but it was in Russian characters, from some Russian website featuring, you know what, pretty young Russian women.
So copied and pasted the name to Google and got the needed results.
SECOND UPDATE:
One essayist, a Mr. Michael Saffran, associate director of University News Services and an adjunct professor of communication at Rochester Institute of Technology, thinks bloggers should mind their grammar and spelling.
To accent his point, he has coined a word, wrogging, which at this stage may be too early to see if it will catch on in the blogosphere.
But as defined, wrogging is to be used “to distinguish higher-quality writing on some blogs from the personal-diary-like revelations on many others.”
He lists his wrogging requisites:
And I say, Amen.
THIRD UPDATE
Commented at Tiger Beat blog
English is a second language to me. And it took great pain and effort, and time too, to arrive at a place where I can write English decently and be understood by a host of readers coming from different backgrounds. And the learning continues to this day.
It comes as a surprise then to read that other writers of English, where it is the native tongue, would pose any question at all with your proposition that correct grammar and usage should be a standard in blog writing.
Beyond just being understood easily and properly, I personally find that the habit of using English properly can lead to a better mastery of the language. In this instance I subscribe to the cliché that practice makes perfect.
On another, but sadder, note, I am reminded of the old homeland where endemic poverty has not made possible the more universal usage of computers. Instead, they have the cheaper cell phones which they use essentially as their communicating tool. So instead of emails or blogwriting, many resort to sending texts to each other in packets of a few hundred characters. Most educated citizens are bi-lingual and English is the second language, though it is the medium of instruction in most schools.
Sad, because in their texting in English, they have somehow created an entirely new vocabulary designed primarily to save characters and speed up the process. And thus, to the uninitiated, they come out like coded messages. Missing vowels. Spelling based solely on how the word sounds. Lowercasing. Sentences interspersed with the dialect. Etc.
In effect, the process is mangling whatever English is learned in school because this corrupted form is now seeping into formal communication. Pretty soon, it could become second nature and reflexive.
Updates * * * Scroll down * * *

If he and Obasanjo run against each other, it will beg the question: is any civilian capable of running Nigeria?
After our short visit I had to beg the question the world has been asking finally has an answer: what's a middle-aged PR guy, who happens to work with a lot of biosciences companies, do to unwind on the weekends?
The experience does beg a question.
That should beg the question: What is a neocon?
It makes you wonder (no, it does NOT “beg the question”) why, though, the idea videotaping yourself lip-synching to pop music seems so, well, gay
Thomas’ solution (as CP notes) allows philosophy to operate according to its own principles—no revelation may enter as this would be to beg the question.
This does beg the question, why didn’t Locke first try to crawl threw the vents first?
It does beg the question of whether any form of enterprise architecture should be handled by consultants and what can corporate America see and learn from our government as to how not to do enterprise architecture.
My argument doesn’t beg the question by first assuming that God exists as following from premise (3). All premise (3) concludes is simply that the universe has a cause, not that that cause is necessarily God.
Doesn’t it beg the question of what’s wrong with their country of origin? And if there is something wrong, then why isn’t anything being done to change those countries?
Puzzled?
Well, that was the intention. The above ten statements were lifted randomly from a Google search in the blogosphere of the phrase, beg the question. Google gave out 30,973 results. And indeed, upon reviewing the above statements, you will find that this phrase forms the common thread that binds them all together.
And your purpose is?
English being such a dynamic and universally used language, one cannot help finding and discovering words and phrases whose usage have changed over time, either subtly or abruptly in some kind of barrage in popular usage. And the common phrase above is one such classic example. And if current usage as exemplified by most (one exception, maybe) of the above statements is to be accepted, then consider how differently the original meaning compares with the current one. Not unlike another classic example, the verb, to cleave, which in olden times meant to join together or unite. But now means to cut apart as evidenced by the use of the term, meat cleaver.
In its original concept, using the term to beg the question is to point to a logical fallacy, brought out when one argues taking for granted or assuming the thing that one is precisely trying to prove. In other words, in a roundabout or circular way one evades the issue by not giving a straightforward answer, or making the argument part of the proof.
Believe it or not, Aristotle defined this fallacy:
The fallacy was described by Aristotle in his book on logic in about 350BC. His Greek name for it was turned into Latin as petitio principii and then into English in 1581 as beg the question.
So?
Well, if you accept the current usage as reflected by most of the above statements, the phrase then comes to mean:
That the statement made prompts or forces the question to be asked.
While the original intent of the term was to point to a fallacy, like for instance when one makes the following statement:
We should not kill because all people should be allowed to live.
Then one can respond that the above argument is begging the question.
Consider the confusion then when both become standard and accepted usage. Readers will not be sure what the intended meaning of the writer is and in this instance one is very different from the other.
Are there more out there?
UPDATE
To Reader PhilippinesPhil:
As one can deduce from this blog’s archives, I appear quite attached to and enamored with the subject of the English language. Wrote a blog entry about English being the unofficial lingua franca of the blogosphere
Another word that has raised the hackles of many language purists is disinterested, its usage and meanings. Now many use and accept it to mean as not interested, rather than the more traditional and standard one which is to denote impartiality. Imagine picturing a “disinterested judge” as yawning at the proceedings, rather than listening intently and showing no biases.
I regularly resort to Google to try and learn about words, their etymology, current usage and meanings, etc.
Are many aware that one can Google using foreign language characters? After all many sites are written in languages other than English.
Sometimes morbid curiosity can amount to some good, such as accidentally tripping into some yet untapped features of some resources.
I had wanted to learn more about an unknown Russian actress raunchily featured in one episode of the Red Shoe Diaries series, a project of David Duchovny, made famous by that sci-fi thriller of HBO as one of the duo FBI agents, Mulder and Scully.
Well, I learned about her name but it was in Russian characters, from some Russian website featuring, you know what, pretty young Russian women.
So copied and pasted the name to Google and got the needed results.
SECOND UPDATE:
One essayist, a Mr. Michael Saffran, associate director of University News Services and an adjunct professor of communication at Rochester Institute of Technology, thinks bloggers should mind their grammar and spelling.
To accent his point, he has coined a word, wrogging, which at this stage may be too early to see if it will catch on in the blogosphere.
But as defined, wrogging is to be used “to distinguish higher-quality writing on some blogs from the personal-diary-like revelations on many others.”
He lists his wrogging requisites:
• No first drafts, also known as ramblings, streams of consciousness and brain dumping (some call that writing — it's not).
• Proper grammar, punctuation and spelling (this should go without saying; but without saying it, they're often the first to go on some blogs).
• Simple thoughts are sometimes OK; simplistic thoughts are never OK (there is a subtle difference between the two).
• Follow the writing process: Think — Write — Edit — Rewrite (Nowhere in the writing process will you find: "Post first draft of the first thoughts that enter your mind.")
• Have passion for words, writing and reading good writing.
And I say, Amen.
THIRD UPDATE
Commented at Tiger Beat blog
English is a second language to me. And it took great pain and effort, and time too, to arrive at a place where I can write English decently and be understood by a host of readers coming from different backgrounds. And the learning continues to this day.
It comes as a surprise then to read that other writers of English, where it is the native tongue, would pose any question at all with your proposition that correct grammar and usage should be a standard in blog writing.
Beyond just being understood easily and properly, I personally find that the habit of using English properly can lead to a better mastery of the language. In this instance I subscribe to the cliché that practice makes perfect.
On another, but sadder, note, I am reminded of the old homeland where endemic poverty has not made possible the more universal usage of computers. Instead, they have the cheaper cell phones which they use essentially as their communicating tool. So instead of emails or blogwriting, many resort to sending texts to each other in packets of a few hundred characters. Most educated citizens are bi-lingual and English is the second language, though it is the medium of instruction in most schools.
Sad, because in their texting in English, they have somehow created an entirely new vocabulary designed primarily to save characters and speed up the process. And thus, to the uninitiated, they come out like coded messages. Missing vowels. Spelling based solely on how the word sounds. Lowercasing. Sentences interspersed with the dialect. Etc.
In effect, the process is mangling whatever English is learned in school because this corrupted form is now seeping into formal communication. Pretty soon, it could become second nature and reflexive.
Healing Power of Prayer Fails Test
Here are excerpts from a news report documenting prayer’s healing failure in the largest study so far:A study of more than 1,800 patients who underwent heart bypass surgery has failed to show that prayers specially organized for their recovery had any impact, researchers said on Thursday.
In fact, the study found some of the patients who knew they were being prayed for did worse than others who were only told they might be prayed for -- though those who did the study said they could not explain why.
Read the entire study.
Tests like this are of course contributory signs of our growing agnostic and secular times; thus even such a benign but very reverentially sacrosanct practice as praying is now put to a litmus test. Tested essentially to determine its efficacy in healing illnesses of people being prayed for or being prayed over.
To be fair the test really was focused on group praying rather than individual, personal or family praying. And praying done essentially by strangers. Most probably buoyed up and inspired by some reported successes of group intercessory prayers. Like those typically witnessed in religious revival meetings and those conducted in charismatic movements and similar gatherings or movements.
And for further illustration, the Catholic Sacrifice of the Mass would be a perfect example of group praying. And another would be praying done by those in monasteries. The report skirts the more thorny issue of personal prayers with the carte blanche statement that such was popularly believed to be efficacious. Quite ironic considering that even a statement of Christ would defer more to group praying rather than individual praying. Christ avers in the following paraphrased statement that: when two or more of you gather and pray in my name, I will be in your midst. Implying that his presence, and hopefully intercession, is guaranteed under such a milieu.Praying and prayers have historically and traditionally been viewed with awe-some deference in most major if not all religions. As a ritual and regular practice, devotees have always been enjoined to develop the habit of praying, especially during times of need, both personal and otherwise.
Some religions more than others have embraced praying as a very critical and integral component and vehicle of worship and adoration.
And devotees are strongly encouraged to pray for anything and everything their hearts may desire. So long as they are all for morally good and upright purposes.
Growing up Catholic, we were taught that one’s entire day of actions, words, and thoughts could be all rolled up and offered as one big efficacious prayer. The formula was to intone the Morning Offering first chance in the morning.
It went this way:
O Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer You my prayers, works, joys and sufferings of this day for all the intentions of Your Sacred Heart, in union with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass throughout the world, in reparation for my sins, for the intentions of all my relatives and friends, and in particular for the intentions of the Holy Father. Amen
We were quite unquestioning and unequivocal about praying and prayer. We simply did it. And hoped for the best.
Many of us never really delved into the whys and wherefores, or even if it made sense at all given what we know about our created existence and the God who made that possible. The God who is all-knowing, all-powerful and all- mighty.
Thus, for example, it never occurred to us kids that that God already knows everything because he is omniscient. He already knows everything past, present, and future. Thus, in His eyes everything for everybody including inanimate objects in creation is already neatly laid out, unchangeable and unalterable. Why then, the need for praying to ask for things or to allow things to happen? What could we possibly do, either individually or collectively, to affect or change any or all that?
Nor did we consider the very obvious dilemma as characterized by prayers for victory being offered by two opposing teams prior to their competition. How could that one same all-good God possibly resolve which team would get His nod?
Just the same the efficacy of praying was never in doubt, whether for its healing powers or its abilities to bring about things wished for.
Here’s an earlier blog entry dealing more deeply into Praying and Prayer.
But to reiterate, from an Ignatian Perspective, here is how praying should be viewed and undertaken:
That we must pray as though the matter we desire depended entirely on God and then work on it as though it depended entirely on ourselves.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
