Friday, October 31, 2008

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0013

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0013

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0013.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0013.m4a


Halloween Theme Song
..

Halloween Theme
..

AVE SATANI- GREGORIAN (THE OMEN)
..

This is episode 13. On a spooky Friday... Haloween...

We're now near real time but I'm going to the same halloween parties you are so in order to entertain myself as well as other stoons, this show is being recorded on Thursday night.

I intend to eat, drink and make merry for tomorrow we die. Mouahaha ha, ha,

second track:
*hack*, *cough* *wheeze*

Ha ... ha ... choo!

Igor And shut those damn werewolves up, will you?

Igor: Dang, I told 'em to sweep the cobwebs into this place and let the dust of the ages settle.

But no. It has to be done right away.

Like now Igor.

Hop to it Igor.


I never get to ...

----


Well, thanks anyway Igor.

( I'll never let him pick the music. Have you ever hear a Transylvanian Rapper.

What they lack in musical talent, they make up for in sheer excruciating lyrical dis-ability.

They GAVE lessons to the Vogons who are now the third worst poets in the multiverse.

-----

And as is my wont, (as opposed to my won' t,) I'm starting this show with something that may yet be popular.

"Toccata och fuga i d-moll, Toccata and Fugue in D Minor BWV565" by "J.S. Bach" here on WSPCs ThymeWarp.

----

We got PSAs:

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID.)

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and vote!

Do your patriotic duty.

And remember, you can be a liberal Republican or a conservative Democrat.

The politics don't have a thing to do with the parties.

You could even be, , a free thinking independent.

Just go out and vote.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos, well except for "moi."

bed: Oilsands by John Jack

Tuesdays at 5 at WSPC:

"Peak Oil" , what it is, what it means to us all (and believe me it does, if you thought that 4.00 a gallon gasoline was bad, (and don't let the pre election slump and sag fool you,) the price of oil will reveal just how incomodious a commodity it is.

I'll be featuring podsafe music so I can retransmit them on a full-blown podcast, with an RSS feed, on iTunes without having to pay my soul out to the RIAA.

----

The music for this show is "all over the place and the purely classical theme of this show has been drop kicked in the fork and sent packing to the netherworld, .


Igor: Master, master, can I read a poem?

Master: Must you?

Its just a short little tiny one.

"See, see the dead sky
Marvel at its big puce depths.
Tell me, Eugene do you
Wonder why the lung fish ignores you?
Why its foobly stare
makes you feel bright.
I can tell you, it is
Worried by your specious facial follicular growth
That looks like
A fractal ligonberry.
What's more, it knows
Your sprat potting shed
Smells of grape.
Everything under the big dead sky
Asks why, why do you even bother?
You only charm rancid milk."



Master:

Oh for Bram Stoker''s sake. Don't encourage him.

He'll be all "Titus Andronicus" for most of next week.

Ah, well ... Let the beatings begin...

"Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp


"Toccata and Fugue in D Minor BWV565" by "J.S. Bach" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Haloween Mistake" by "CanTrip" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Halloween" by "Fishing For Comets: here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Halloween Girl" by "Ghosts On The Radio" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Halloween" by "Coffin Shakers" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Halloween" by "Retail" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Ghost With The Most" by "B Movie Brits" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Closer To The Animal" by "AliMan" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Ghost Of A Band"by "THE RAILS" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Im not very good at being scary" by "gilly slinn" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Scary Guy" by: "Maria Danes" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Fearful" by "Hungry Lucy" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Fear of Reason" by "Lumberjack Mafia" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

You can send me feed back. suggestions, or just some sign that there anybody actually outside the studio.

Address email to charles at msbpodcast.com

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0012

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0012

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0012.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0012.m4a

Communication Breakdown - Led Zeppelin

..

This is episode 12.

I'm working on a special show for Halloween. That's this Friday. The classical theme may go straight in the crapper for this one. (Not that that matters.)

We're now near real time.

Its so friggin' cold tonight in my little home office that I'm seriously contemplatin' setting a roaring fire in a trash can out in the side yard below the window.

Maybe I could burn some old tires, 2 by 4's, trash an' crap like that next to a giant inflatable rat.

Times are tough... My union buddies can use all the help they can get these days.

Speaking of tough times....

Tonight confirmed my feelings about this show: in the school, nobody listens.

One of my fellow students reviewed every show but mine. Like that's supposed to make me feel good. I don't even get reviewed when its the friggin' homework. Yeah, sure. Go suck an egg...

Like the video says in the show notes, its a communications break down, and of the dumbest kind.

Thank heavens for my podcast listeners...

Some of you have started to download the shows again.

-----

And as is my wont, I'm starting this show with something that may yet be a classic.

"If Farts Were Made Out of Superball Stuff (w/ Fart Sounds)" by "Lynn JULIAN aka CookieCutterGirl" here on WSPCs ThymeWarp.

----

We got PSAs:

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID.)

-----

Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

This ends this Friday.

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and vote!

Do your patriotic duty.

And remember, you can be a liberal Republican or a conservative Democrat.

The politics don't have a thing to do with the parties.

You could even be, , a free thinking independent.

Just go out and vote.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos, well except for "moi."

bed: Oilsands by John Jack

Tuesdays at 5 at WSPC:
"Peak Oil" , what it is, what it means to us all (and believe me it does, if you thought that 4.00 a gallon gasoline was bad, (and don't let the pre election slump and sag fool you,) the price of oil will reveal just how incomodious a commodity it is.

I'll be featuring podsafe music so I can retransmit them on a full-blown podcast, with an RSS feed, on iTunes without having to pay my soul out to the RIAA.

----

The music for this show is "Air of Spring" off an album by the same name.

Its a statement of sheer optimism...

Spring will come again... Eventually... Just as it does in Helliconia... (By Brian W. Aldiss ISBN: 978-0743-444 729 )

[ http://www.amazon.com/Helliconia-Spring-First-Book-Trilogy/dp/0743444728 ]

No news yet on the show promo. But I'll pretend that its going to happen.

Tonight, the magic word will be, but that would be telling...

Listen and wait for it.

Meanwhile,

"Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"Holberg Suite, Opus 40: 'Prädludium'" by "Grieg" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring" by "Frederick Delius" here on WSPC'sThymeWarp.

"The Four Seasons No 1 in E, RV269: Spring"by "Vivaldi" here on WSPC'sThymeWarp.

"Songs Without Words, Book 5, Op.62, No.6, 'Spring Song'" by "Mendelsson" here on WSPC'sThymeWarp.

"Symphony No.1 in B-flat, Opus 38: Fourth movement 'Spring'" by "Robert Schumann" here on WSPC'sThymeWarp.

"Schwanengesang, 'Das Fischermädchen'" by "Franz Schubert" here on WSPC'sThymeWarp.

"Horn Concerto No.4 in E Flat, (third movement) 'Rondo'"by " Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart" here on WSPC'sThymeWarp.


----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

You can send me feed back. suggestions, or just some sign that there anybody actually outside the studio.

Address email to charles at msbpodcast.com

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

wspc_P34kO1l_0002

wspc_P34kO1l_0002

media files:

mp3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/wspc_P34kO1l_0002.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/wspc_P34kO1l_0002.m4a


Bed: "Wrapped in Tinfoil" by "Digital Droo" off of "Active Lancer Original Soundtrack"

Intro

P34k O1l is a strange concept to wrap your minds around. (I asked my "Radio 201" classmates if "any" of them had heard of peak oil. I got some great "deer in the headlights" stares. I really want these guys and gals to catch all of the episodes of this show because they're so incredably unprepared. I'm podcasting this show for "them.")

How can we run "out" of oil?

How can we "run" out of oil?

Easy, use more than we make (or more accurately, than we find; we don't make any outside of a laboratory,) and eventually it will become scarce and then scarcer, and cost more and more, and more.

Don't think it can happen?

Texas "used" to have oil didn't it? And now it doesn't.

Pennsylvania used to have oil, didn't it? And it hasn't for quite a while.

(Made John D. Rockerfeller the richest man on earth for a while, then he died. "Sic transit, gloria mundi")

What happened? Peak oil for the 'States did. Back in 1972.

It doesn't matter if you think that oil comes from dinosaurs (like a few naive folks out there do,[fossil fuel indeed,]) or if you think that oil is the result of abiotic, geological processes and that oil arises from underground and therefore inorganic, anaerobic sources.

The fact is that, either as non-renewable fossil fuel, or as geologically slowly renewing abiotic fuel source, we're running out.

Our resource depletion outstrips resource discovery (or natural production.) And its only going to get worse.

Here's a site for some media you can go and get: http://www.oilcrashmovie.com/ into Google, iTunes and watch it whenever, (if you've got a video capable player, you can even watch it wherever.)

Its not a perfect movie but if you need something to scare the crap out of you, it can do that.

Its a bunch of rich white dudes becoming a bunch of, uh, concerned, rich white dudes hoping that they don't get burned in effigy or lynched when it plays out.

Googling "Peak Oil" gives you a wealth of stuff, some of which is utter crap and some of which is reasoned, well researched, well thought out stuff.

Stuff like "Peak Oil" [ http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2141508903056009420 ]

----

"In Search of Cryptic Authors" by "Stavka (Andy Lightfoot)" off off "Against The Programme"

----

We've got PSAs:

----


Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----

Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----

There are still no prerecorded promos so I'm going to fake one right now.

How about if I tell you about "Dan and Dave on Sports in the Morning"

"Looking for quality sports talk?

Then look no further than Dan Drutz, our own assistant director of athletics, and David Freeman.

They’re here to give you all the latest news and discussion in both college and professional sports.

If you’re a sports fanatic, you won’t want to miss a second of what these two guys have to say.

So be sure to catch “Dan and Dave on Sports in the Morning.”

Every Tuesday from 11 to 12 noon. Only on WSPC: The Sound of Saint Peter’s College.

I just caught their show here in the studio and its "pretty darn good!".

----

Bed "Red on white" by "Michael Ulery"

Thesis:

We're looking at the first chapter of "The Party's OVER, Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies" by "Richard Heinberg" ISBN: 0-86571-482-7.

"Business Ain't Music" by "Maria Daines" off of "Wisdom's Tooth"

Bed: "Wrapped in Tinfoil" by "Digital Droo" off of "Active Lancer Original Soundtrack"

Synthesis:

The first chapter is called "Energy, Nature and Society" and it explores the earth's energy budget, 1,372 watts of sunlight energy hit every square meter of this planet.

It then goes into how nature uses that energy in, "Energy in Ecosystems: Eating and Being Eaten" which gets us into a system's "carrying capacity", that is the maximum population load per species.

There are lots of examples of things exceeding an environment's carrying capacity and having population crashes or outright extinction.

Some of those things are people who altered their environments, exceeded the carrying capacity of the new environment and died various kinds of messy, slow and agonizing deaths. (Extinction is "never" clean, quick, or painless.)

It then goes into how people use that energy, "Social Leveraging Strategies: How to Gain an Energy Subsidy" which gets us into the exploitation of some mechanisms for expanding the environment's carrying capacity.

* takeover
* tool use
* specialization
* scope enlargement and
* drawdown.

I am not going to repeat everything that the book says, including the sources. Go and buy a copy. This is a "precis" not a copyright violation.

It then goes into how, since we've outstripped the earth's carrying capacity through our increasing dependence on one non-renewable resource: "OIL", we're going to have to manage "Complexity and Collapse: Societies in Energy Deficit" and gives examples of civilizations that didn't.

Lastly it goes into "Applied Socio-Ecohistory: Explaining the American Success Story" and explores the chemistry of energy historic and current role of energy and its effect on social economic, military and political structures.

----

"Business As Usual" by: "Sudden Death" off of "Die Laughing"

Bed: "Bomb In A Suede Smoking Jacket" by: "Juliet Hotel" off of: "Sojourn"

Conclusion:

I hope you're paying attention (I mean really, "really" paying attention, [ I'm not worried if you're enjoying the show. { This is college radio after all, aint nobody's listening but us stoonts... } ] )

The history of all society is the history of the search for exploitable sources of energy.

Until the harnessing of hydro power and then steam, that source was the dog, the horse and the oxen; basically animal power.

Then about 1850 one of the animal sources for energy, whales for oil to light our lamps with, became extremely scarce and extremely expensive. (You will find this to be an economic truth which will haunt you for your entire lives, your succes as human beings will be directly related to your sucess at husbanding resources of varying scarcity.)

Over the next six shows, we will explore the world as it will unfold, as hinted at in "The Party's OVER, Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies" by "Richard Heinberg" ISBN: 0-86571-482-7.

If, no, when, you get the book, read it and email me about your own thoughts, at charles (at) MSBPodcast.com.

This plea for comments, reaction and contribution goes for everyone, since the show is being podcast on MSBPodcast 'canal', and is available on the web, as well as through iTunes, and as streamed here on WSPC.

----

"Communicate" by "Brian Scibinico"

Bed "Forensic" by: "Nick Murray"

Outro

Go and get the book "The Party's OVER, Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies" by "Richard Heinberg" ISBN: 0-86571-482-7.

You can even go and re-bury your head in the sand afterward.

But you should know what's going to happen and let it guide you and your decisions.


This episode featured the following music:

* Bed: "Wrapped in Tinfoil" by "Digital Droo" off of "Active Lancer Original Soundtrack"

* "In Search of Cryptic Authors" by "Stavka (Andy Lightfoot)" off off "Against The Programme"

Bed "Red on white" by "Michael Ulery"

"Business Ain't Music" by "Maria Daines" off of "Wisdom's Tooth"

Bed: "Wrapped in Tinfoil" by "Digital Droo" off of "Active Lancer Original Soundtrack"

"Business As Usual" by: "Sudden Death" off of "Die Laughing"

Bed: "Bomb In A Suede Smoking Jacket" by: "Juliet Hotel" off of: "Sojourn"

"Communicate" by "Brian Scibinico"

Bed "Forensic" by: "Nick Murray"

Monday, October 27, 2008

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0011

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0011

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0011.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0011.m4a

Brigitte Fontaine - Genre humain

..

This is episode 11.

We're nowhere near real time. Its Friday night and I'm working on next Monday's show.

So did anybody catch today's show?

Friday October, 24th 2008?

Anybody? Anybody? (I feel like I should soon be mumbling "Beuler? Beuler?")

(Gad, there was nobody in the studio and I don't there's anybody listening either. [I think I'm going to put a link to a video on the show notes just to draw in the YouTube addicted. {Okay, its not original. I was doing this in my MSBPodcast show notes too, as an extra.}])

Well, I'll just soldier on knowing that I'm far older, weirder and more awake/aware than most of the "Discipulus somes."

-----

In keeping with the habit, (not the discipline or the tradition, [get over yourself,its a habit, a custom, a practice, a wont,]) we begin with "La Femme A Barbe" by "Brigitte Fontaine" off of the album: "Genre Humain," just because I wanna.

----

We got PSAs:

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and vote!

Do your patriotic duty.

Besides. If you don't vote, you'll have noting to complain about when the selected elected officious officials bend you over and do you dry...

----

There are still no prerecorded promos, well except for "moi."

bed: Oilsands by John Jack

Tuesdays at 5 at WSPC:
"Peak Oil" , what it is, what it means to us all (and believe me it does, if you thought that 4.00 a gallon gasoline was bad, (and don't let the pre election slump and sag fool you,) the price of oil will reveal just how incomodious a commodity it is.

I'll be featuring podsafe music so I can retransmit them on a full-blown podcast, with an RSS feed, on iTunes without having to pay my soul out to the RIAA.

----

The music this show is "Great Overtures" off an album by the same name.

I have a yen to start a promotion on and for this show, which will probably cost me nothing 'cause it feels like nobody's listening anyway.

I'd use a magic word somewhere in my show, (maybe, the name of a piece of music on my iPod [and its got over 13 thousand tunes as of right now, and some of these are just plain weird, so It's going to be beyond guessing.])

I'd have this in over its own flourish in between tracks.

(And I'm NOT writing it in the show notes either. You have to LISTEN! [And because I'm also podcasting these show, I will give a week from from the air date to award the prize. {Because this prize is also open to my MSBPodcast listeners, as well as to my WSPC listeners, I will be paying for it out of my own unemployed pocket if one of them wins.}])

The first time, to get my feet wet, so to speak, I'd give away some WSPC T-Shirts.

I'm running this past professor Lamachia.

Meanwhile,

"Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"Carmen Suite" by "Bizet" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Overture to Candide" by "Leonard Bernstein" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"La Traviata, Prelude" by "Giuseppe Verdi" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Oberon Overture" by: "Carl Maria von Wever"

"The Wasps, Ouverture" by "Ralph Vaghan Williams" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"The Marriage of Figaro, Overture" by "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"The Mastersingers of Nuremberg, Overture" by "Wagner" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"The Yeomen of the Guard, Overture" by "Gilbert & Sullivan" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp



----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

You can send me feed back. suggestions, or just some sign that there anybody actually outside the studio.

Address email to charles at msbpodcast.com

I'll let you know what Professor Lamachia and I work out about the promotion.

You will of course be kept in the loop.

What the heck, you're potential winners,

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0010

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0010

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0010.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0010.m4a

This is episode 10.

We're nowhere real time. It's Wednesday night October 22, 2008 and I'm feeling inspired.

Apart from the major portion of this show being an expression of love (as in the album "Expressions of Love") I made some off hand reference to professor Lamachia about having some Tuvan throat singing music.

We had a good laugh, but I started remembering when they'd come to "The Knitting Factory" back in November of 2001 (if memory serves me.)

My wife, her cousin and her husband, and myself were in serious need of distraction, some sultan wannabe Fascist imbecile having recently torn a hole in our sky and brought down our next door neighbor in a piece of Arab street theatre.

We we're wandering, still a bit shell-shocked, through our old haunts in lower Manhattan when we happened upon the Tuvan Throat Singers of Richard Feinman fame.

I had the distinct pleasure of seeing these artists play the tunes you're going to hear frst and last.

-----

We begin with "Medly Of Throat-Singing Styles" by "Kongar-Ool Ondar Accompanied By Doshpuluur" off of the album: "Deep In The Heart Of Tuva"

----

We got PSAs:

----

Are you hardcore enough to go without talking for 24 hours?

Then stop by Campus Ministries to sign up for the Montserrat Retreat which runs October 25-26.

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and vote!

Do your patriotic duty.

Besides. If you don't vote, you'll have noting to complain about when the selected elected officials screw you.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos, well except for "moi."

bed: Oilsands by John Jack

Tomorrow in this time slot at WSPC:
"Peak Oil" , what it is, what it means to us all (and believe me it does, if you thought that 4.00 a gallon gasoline was bad, (and don't let the pre election slump and sag fool you,) the price of oil will reveal just how incomodious a commodity it is.

I'll be featuring podsafe music so I can retransmit them on a full-blown podcast, with an RSS feed, on iTunes without having to pay my soul out to the RIAA.

----

The WSPC wiki is up and running and will be a resource for everybody on the WSPC staff. It can also be accessed "non-destructively" by anybody else. "Yay!!!"

Most of the selections on this show will come off of the CD "In Classical Mood, Vol 05: Expressions of Love".

But the first tune will come off of "Bolero" by Maurice Ravel, which caused riots in Paris when it was unveiled to an over excitable public; we're then going to have plain classical and then the music will come off of "Koyaanisqatsi (Soundtrack from the Motion Picture)" which is the equivalent for an unromantic age, and the show will book-end with a closing shamanic prayer by "Kongar-Ool Ondar" for Richard Feinman off of the album "Deep In The Heart Of Tuva"

"Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"Bolero" by "Maurice Ravel" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Romeo & Juliet Overture" by "Tchaikovsky" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Romeo & Juliet Overture" by "Tchaikovsky" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"The Planets, Op. 32 - 2. Venus, The Bringer Of Peace" by: "Holst" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Porgy & Bess - Bess, You Is My Woman Now" by "Gershwin" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"The Maiden & The Nightingale" by: "Granados" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Koyaanisqatsi" by "Philip Glass Ensemble" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Shamanic Prayer For Richard Feynman"" by: "Kongar-Ool Ondar" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

And you can send me feed back. suggestions, or just some sign that there anybody actually outside the studio.

Address email to charles at msbpodcast.com

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0009

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0009

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0009.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0009.m4a

This is episode 9.

We're almost real time.

Ah, its the apprentice nobleman's life for me. I shall cut such a dashing figure on the marbled floor of the hall of mirrors.

And we're not going to France. The ladies there tinkle under their skirts. (Mel Brooks had half right in "History of the World Part 1." French nobility also included women.

No. This episode has for a theme "Nights in Vienna".

-----

We begin with "The Wiener Schnitzel Waltz" by "Tom Lehrer" off of the album: "Songs by Tom Lehrer" and its all downhill from there. "-)

----

We got PSAs:

----

Are you hardcore enough to go without talking for 24 hours?

Then stop by Campus Ministries to sign up for the Montserrat Retreat which runs October 25-26.

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and vote!

Do your patriotic duty.

Besides. If you don't vote, you'll have noting to complain about when the elected officials screw you.

----

BED: "Money" by "Theory In Motion" or "Money, money, money" by "ABBA" or "An Honest Job" by "Treat Her Right"

The Office of Career Services is having its 25h annual fall career fair.

Interview for Jobs!

Network with more than 40 companies!

Bring plenty of résumés and

dress for success.

It will be held Wednesday, October 22, 28 at the

McIntyre Lounge in Dinneen Hall

from 09:00 to 13:00 (1:00PM)

Al Saint Peter's College students and alumni alumnae are welcome.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos, well except for "moi."

bed: Oilsands by John Jack

Tomorrow in this time slot at WSPC:
"Peak Oil" , what it is, what it means to us all (and believe me it does, if you thought that 4.00 a gallon gasoline was bad, (and don't let the pre election slump and sag fool you,) the price of oil will reveal just how incomodious a commodity it is.

I'll be featuring podsafe music so I can retransmit them on a full-blown podcast, with an RSS feed, on iTunes without having to pay my soul out to the RIAA.

----

Lots of stuff happening.

I need to write stuff, get a wiki working, read a ton of email, and send replies, listen to a web seminar at 19:00.

I need some slack time for my slack mind. All of the selections this show will come off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 04: Nights in Vienna"

"Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"The Blue Danube" by "Johann Strauss" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Symphony #94 In G, "Surprise" - Mvt. #2" by "Joseph Haydn" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Moment Musical #3 In F Minor, D 780"by "Schubert" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Pizzicato-Polka" by "J. Strauss, Jr." here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Die Fledermaus - Brüderlein, Brüderlein" by "J. Strauss, Jr" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Liebesfreud" by "Fritz Kreisler" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Symphony No. 8 in F Major Opus 93, Second Movement " by "Beethoven" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Morning, Noon & Night In Vienna" by "Suppe" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Radetzky March" by: "J. Strauss" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Roses From The South, Op. 388" by "Johann Strauss II" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Der Rosenkavalier - Waltz Sequence #2" by: "R. Strauss" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

And you can send me feed back. suggestions, or just some sign that there anybody actually outside the studio.

Address email to charles at msbpodcast.com

wspc_P34kO1l_0001

wspc_P34kO1l_0001

Bed: "Machinery" by "Might Could" off of "All Intertwined"

Intro

Welcome to P34k O1l.

A show about surviving the apocalypse by someone who doesn't expect to, not by much anyway.

----

"The Fight That No One Can Win" by "Life Has Teeth"

----

We've got PSAs:

----

Are you hardcore enough to go without talking for 24 hours?

Then stop by Campus Ministries to sign up for the Montserrat Retreat which runs October 25-26.

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and register to vote if you're not already.

Voter registration forms can be found in the library.

And go and vote.

----

BED: "Money" by "Theory In Motion" or "Money, money, money" by "ABBA" or "An Honest Job" by "Treat Her Right"

The Office of Career Services is having its 25h annual fall career fair.

Interview for Jobs!

Network with more than 40 companies!

Bring plenty of résumés and

dress for success.

It will be held Wednesday, October 22, 28 at the

McIntyre Lounge in Dinneen Hall

from 09:00 to 13:00 (1:00PM)

Al Saint Peter's College students and alumni alumnae are welcome.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos

----

Bed "Machinery" by "Might Could" off of "All Intertwined"


Thesis:

Welcome to the show that will give you a little history about what happened and tell you what you can expect to happen next.

I don't want to scare the crap out of you, but if that's what it takes to wake you up than, so be it.

My own epiphany happened early last year, in 2007.

I came across a web site that led me to some other web sites and, after a bit, I started to ask myself if these kooks could just happen to be right. I bought a book (not an unusual event for me.)

It was called "The Party's OVER, Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies" by "Richard Heinberg" ISBN: 0-86571-482-7.

This book in 275 pages gives you all the insights you need to get started in surviving the oil era (I can't even call it an age, like the "Bronze Age" or the "Iron Age", its less that two hundred years old, and, in that short period of time, we've managed to blow through around half of it.)

Knowing the All American propensity for ignoring people until it was half past too late, I started to look through the cracks and discovered exactly what M. King Hubbert meant by the expression "Peak Oil".

By the way, if you doubt that ignoring people is what America does best, to its own detriment, does the name William Edwards Deming ring a bell with anybody?

He invented the entire field of statistical sampling, quality control and a methodology that was utterly ignored until he had to "leave the 'States" and go to Japan, where he turned around Japanese industry and, now that Toyota is eating GM's lunch, the value of his approach has been recognized.

How about the name R. Buckminster Fuller?

His Dymaxion car and the principles that guided his engineering and his architecture led to the Geodesic domes and his fame lives on in Material Science in "Fullerines" and nanodevices.

M. King Hubbert stated back in 1956 that peak oil in the 'States would occur between 1966 and 1972.

The peak in US oil production occured in 1970 and the oil reserves have been going down until there's no economically recoverable oil left. We've been squeezing the shelves on both sides of the continent dry ever since.

We're going to cover the book over the next six weeks. (One per chapter.) We're also going to give reference to the other sources of information on the web and point you to a whole series of YouTube videos on the subject.

And I get to play all this podsafe music for you while scaring the bejeezus out of your complacency, but forewarned is forearmed so its better that you know, rather than being blindsided by what will inevitably happen, and can make plans around weaning yourself off of America's oil addiction.

----

"First Date" by "Danko Jones" off of "Sleep Is The Enemy"

Bed: "Watching The Sky Fall" by: "Hugh Campbell" off of "The comedown machine"

Synthesis:

In 242 pages + end notes, a bibliography and an index, Mr. Heinberg manages to deflate the accomplishments of the past century and a half and depress the hell out of anybody who thinks that its just going to go on the same as it has been.

Its not a particularly fun read. (Sort of like my MS diagnosis was not a fun read.)

But after spending the first 5 charters and 200 pages establishing how oil got into our lives over the past one hundred and fifty years and altered almost every aspect of our power structures, the books launches into how we're going to have to manage the collapse of those power structures.

If we do this with a modicum of intelligence, the changes don't have to be the equivalent to Afghanistan under "Mullah Omar". (Shoot me now, because its just a question of time before he'd order his zealots to do it.)

The questions are myriad and the answers are always going to be "yes!"

* Yes, we're going to have to do everything in a sustainable manner and
* yes, we're going to have to factor in things like the energy required at every step of a product's life cycle, and
* yes, we're going to have fond memories of airline travel, private travel and even rapid travel, and
* yes, we're going to hate to commute and share the rides,
* yes, we're about to say goodbye to living in the suburbs, except for retirement communities,
* yes, we're going to have to recycle because we're no longer able to afford the cost of hauling away trash, and
* yes, we're going to have to deal with the resentment of everybody on the planet,
* yes, we're going to wave bye bye to fruits and veggies from everywhere on the planet,
* yes, we're going to get used to eating locally grown varieties, (which tends to be an oxymoron, variety will be limited to whatever you can order from a seed catalog and grow in farms and co-ops like the one my wife and I belong to,) and
* yes, we're going to have to get over having the kinds of hospital expenditures we've got now, (the HMOs are going to be absolute Hell to deal with as prices rise,[unless we wake up and have a health policy based on reason like the rest of the world's industrialized countries,]) and
* yes there are all kinds of things that are going to have to change and,
* yes, we're looking at a few major plagues and other ecological disasters that we won't be able to avoid, (floods in low lying areas, typhoons and hurricanes leaving more cities like New Orleans and leaving entire countries like Myanmar/Burma, earthquakes shattering economies like in China's south...)

The list goes on, but basically you're going to be left to rely on your own physical resources.

But, and this is the biggest and heaviest "but" we're ever going to have, we'll have a wealth of information at our fingertips since, while the schools may have to move because there's no more "energy in the budget", we've still laid down the foundations of the next economy, the next world order, in shining glass strands.

We're looking at hydro-electricity and bandwidth becoming becoming essential to life in the post-oil world.

----

"Me Llaman Calle" by: "Manu Chao" off of "La Radiolina"

Bed: "Take Time for the Tub" by: "Derek K. Miller" off of: "Penmachine Sessions"

Conclusion:

Over the next seven shows, we will explore the world as it will unfold, as hinted at in "The Party's OVER, Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies" by "Richard Heinberg" ISBN: 0-86571-482-7.

While its the kind of book that you reject as impossible because everything, and I do mean everything, "everything" that you know is going to change, or as improbable as man flying around in some machine (I am older than commercial jet service and my grand-fathers were older that aviation itself, so that argument flies out the window,) its also the kind of book that will not be denied.

Even unscientific non-believer creationists drive cars, well except the Amish, (and we'll look at them in more detail later. :-)

When we run out of oil, meaning when its just not worth it to suck it out of the ground like we've been doing, because we're gettin' pretty red in the face and about to pop an artery, well, we "all"run out of oil.

----

"Esperanza" by "Sophia Ramos" off of "Her Majesty"

Bed "Forensic" by: "Nick Murray"

Outro

This episode featured the following music:

* "The Fight That No One Can Win" by "Life Has Teeth
* Bed "Machinery" by "Might Could" off of "All Intertwined"
* "First Date" by "Danko Jones" off of "Sleep Is The Enemy"
* Bed: "Watching The Sky Fall" by: "Hugh Campbell" off of "The comedown machine"
* "Me Llaman Calle" by: "Manu Chao" off of "La Radiolina"
* Bed: "Take Time for the Tub" by: "Derek K. Miller" off of: "Penmachine Sessions"
* "Esperanza" by "Sophia Ramos" off of "Her Majesty"
* Bed "Forensic" by: "Nick Murray"
* "Clockwork Family" by "Dan Warren"

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0008

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0008

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0008.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0008.m4a

This is episode 8.

We're almost real time. Nahh. I podcast these things from home on the week-end.

I am busier than a ferret at an Animé chicken farm. (So many hentai Chibi Furry Chicks to feast on.)

This episode has for a theme "Tranquility".

-----

We begin with "Peace in Our Time" by "Carter USM" off of the album: "Peace Together" and its all downhill from there. "-)

----

We got PSAs:

----

Are you hardcore enough to go without talking for 24 hours?

Then stop by Campus Ministries to sign up for the Montserrat Retreat which runs October 25-26.

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and register to vote if you're not already.

Voter registration forms can be found in the library.

And go and vote.

----

BED: "Money" by "Theory In Motion" or "Money, money, money" by "ABBA" or "An Honest Job" by "Treat Her Right"

The Office of Career Services is having its 25h annual fall career fair.

Interview for Jobs!

Network with more than 40 companies!

Bring plenty of résumés and

dress for success.

It will be held Wednesday, October 22, 28 at the

McIntyre Lounge in Dinneen Hall

from 09:00 to 13:00 (1:00PM)

Al Saint Peter's College students and alumni alumnae are welcome.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos, well except for "moi."

bed: Oilsands by John Jack

Tomorrow in this time slot at WSPC I'll be starting my series on Peak Oil, what it is, what it means to us all (and believe me it does, if you thought that 4.00 a gallon gasoline was bad, (and don't let the pre election slump and sag fool you,) the price of oil will reveal just how incomodious a commodity it is.

I'll be featuring podsafe music so I can retransmit them on a full-blown podcast, with an RSS feed, on iTunes without having to pay my soul out to the RIAA.

----

I'm still working on the upcoming episodes so, for n ow... "Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"2 Arabesques, L 66 - Arabesque #1 In E" by "Clause Debussy" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 03: Tranquility" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Serenade For Strings In E Minor, Op. 20/2" by "Elgar" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Pictures At An Exhibition - The Old Castle" by "Mussorgsky" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Florida Suite - By The River" by "Delius" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Clarinet Concerto - Mvt. #2" by "Mozart" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Cantata, BMV 208, Where Sheep May Safely Graze" by "J.S. Bach" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Pavane, Op. 50" by "Faure" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Fantasia Para Un Gentilhombre - Mvt. #1" by "Rodrigo" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Orpheus & Eurydice - Dance Of The Blessed Spirits" by "Gluck" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

And you can send me feed back. suggestions, or just some sign that there anybody actually outside the studio.

Address email to charles at msbpodcast.com

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0007

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0007

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0007.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0007.m4a

This is episode 7.

We're nearly real time.

I don't really have a lot to say because, like you, I've got a lot of writing to do, a lot of reading to do, and a lot to reflect on...

-----

We begin with some jazz because I like it.

"Reflections" by "Thelonious Monk" off the album: "The Complete Blue Note Recordings 1947-1958"

----

We got PSAs:

----

Are you hardcore enough to go without talking for 24 hours?

Then stop by Campus Ministries to sign up for the Montserrat Retreat which runs October 25-26.

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and register to vote if you're not already.

Voter registration forms can be found in the library.

And go and vote.

----

BED: "Money" by "Theory In Motion" or "Money, money, money" by "ABBA" or "An Honest Job" by "Treat Her Right"

The Office of Career Services is having its 25h annual fall career fair.

Interview for Jobs!

Network with more than 40 companies!

Bring plenty of résumés and

dress for success.

It will be held Wednesday, October 22, 28 at the

McIntyre Lounge in Dinneen Hall

from 09:00 to 13:00 (1:00PM)

Al Saint Peter's College students and alumni alumnae are welcome.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos

----

I'm really, really busy so there's almost no chat for today..

Now... "Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"Suite #3 In D, "Air On The G String"" by "J.S.Bach:" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Piano Quintet In A, "The Trout" - Mvt. #2" by: "Schubert" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Piano Concerto #1 In B Flat Minor, Op. 23 - Mvt. #2" by "Tchaikovsky" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Carnival Of The Animals - The Swan" by: "Saint-Saens" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Appalachian Spring - Prelude" by "Aaron Copland" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Symphony #5 In C Sharp Minor - Adagietto" by "Mahler" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Trumpet Concerto In E Flat - Mvt. #2" by "Haydn" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"The Marriage Of Figaro - Porgi, Amor" by "Mozart" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Gymnopédie #3" by "Satie" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Requiem, Op. 48 - Sanctus" by "Fauré" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

"Serse - Ombra Mai Fu (Handel's Largo)" by "Handel" off of "In Classical Mood, Vol 02: Reflections" here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

----

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0006

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0006

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0006.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0006.m4a

This is episode 6.

We're nearly real time.

Sorry I missed last week but I had to leave town and officially completed becoming a orphan.

-----

We begin with a blues classic, because I got the blues.

"Summertime" by "Billie Holiday" off the album: "Blue Moon"

----

We got PSAs:

----

Are you hardcore enough to go without talking for 24 hours?

Then stop by Campus Ministries to sign up for the Montserrat Retreat which runs October 25-26.

----

Campus Safety urges students, faculty and staff to sign up for text alerts, online @ spc.edu/alerts

This will be used to inform students, faculty and staff in an emergency.

This was useful last year in the bomb scare.

To sign up, students must know their Spirit ID # (Bring their Saint Peter's College ID)

-----


Imagine if you did not have your cell phone, facebook or myspace page, twitter account or your IM or Skype ID to communicate with your friends?

Well, political refugees in Elizabeth (?? NJ [?? facility]) only have Snail Mail to communicate with, and yet they pay one dollar per stamp.

Community Service is asking for your help by buying stamp books for these refugees during October.

Use the Drop Off box at Community Services

----


BED: "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by: "John Philip Sousa"

Don't forget to get out and register to vote if you're not already.

Voter registration forms can be found in the library.

And go and vote.

----

BED: "Money" by "Theory In Motion" or "Money, money, money" by "ABBA" or "An Honest Job" by "Treat Her Right"

The Office of Career Services is having its 25h annual fall career fair.

Interview for Jobs!

Network with more than 40 companies!

Bring plenty of résumés and

dress for success.

It will be held Wednesday, October 22, 28 at the

McIntyre Lounge in Dinneen Hall

from 09:00 to 13:00 (1:00PM)

Al Saint Peter's College students and alumni alumnae are welcome.

----

There are still no prerecorded promos

----

I'm looking at a pile of recordings that were the last things that my mother left me, and on top of the pile is a recording called "In Classical Mood, Vol 01: Music for a Summer's Evening".

Guess what you're getting?

All of the music this episode will be from my late mother's collection and in fact, from the album "Music For A Summner's Evening."

I had a good summer and I'm feeling mellow about that at least so...

Now... "Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

" Eine Kleine Nachtmusik - Mvt. #1" by "Mozart:"

"Koanga - La Calinda" by "Delius"

"Nocturne In E Flat" by "Chopin"

"A Midsummer Night's Dream - Overture" by "Mendelssohn"

"Prince Igor - Polovstian Dances, Maidens' Dance" by "Borodin"

"Porgy And Bess - Summertime" by "Gershwin"

"The Four Seasons - 2. "Summer"" by "Vivaldi"

"Preludes, Book 1, L 117 - La Fille Aux Cheveux De Lin" by "Debussy"

"Madama Butterfly - Humming Chorus" by "Puccini"

"Memories Of The Alhambra" by "Tárrega"

""Fanfare for the Common Man" by "Aaron Copland"

here on WSPC's ThymeWarp

----

Goodbye mom. "Requietat in Pace"

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters with images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the music.

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0005

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0005

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0005.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0005.m4a

This is episode 5.

We're nearly real time.

-----

We begin with a future classic,

Its called "Final Fantasy Battle Medley" by "Piano Squall" off the album: "Game" (I know him 'cause his gramma has what I have, MS. {Yeah it sucks but there it is. I'm not a physically perfect specimen of manhood.)

----

There was a PSAs but it was for an event yesterday, so I missed it.

Hopefully, your club or association will, to quote Groucho Marx, "say the magic word and the duck will come down." (Comedy writing)

Or perhaps it will, to quote Karl Marx, say "Workers control the means of production." (Political Science)

I'm not going to ruin the mood by coming up with quotes from Louis Marx. (Micro-economic toy stories. [Sorry, I'm just showing off to my friends in West Virginny. {Yes, I've been everywhere man. I've been everywhere. (One of the advantages of growing up on rising slope side of "Peak Oil". [And that is a foreshadowing of an upcoming show which will fill up the Tuesday 5PM slot. {I've also got one on "Global Warming" to fill up the Thursday 5PM slot. (And I'm hoping to get a phone interview, or more, with Dr Kirsten Sanford out of UC Davis on the shows. Amongst a whole slew of other media, she does "This Week in Science" with her co-host Justin Jackson)}])}])

----

There's still no prerecorded promos (Well except for mine that I played for you on last show.)



----

I'm in a mood for the ends. (I'd play "Ends" by "Everlast" if I could, from "Whitey Ford Sings the Blues" ... But it just wouldn't be just stretching the definition of classical, it would make a loud snapping sound.

Now... "Adelante la musica"

Streaming here on WSPC's Thyme Warp

"Finale (The Dargason): St. Paul's Suite (Opus 29 No. 2)"
by: "English String Orch. - William Boughton" from the album: "The Spirit Of England Disc 4: Works for String Orchestra - II"
on ThymeWarp here on WSPC

"Finale"
by "Pamela Frank, Yo-Yo Ma, Emanuel Ax"
from the album: "Arrgh. I hate classical music companies who just don't get MP3 tags."

Well, anyway, you're hearing it on WSPC.

"Finale"
by: "Yo-Yo Ma & Emanuel Ax"
from another mislabeled MP3
here in the confused WSPC studio.

"Finale - Presto"
by: "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
from "Eine kleine Nachtmusik"
on WSPC.

"Finale: Allegro"
by: "Jean Sibelius"
performed by "London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Colin Davis"
from an album titled "Jean Sibelius - Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4"
here on WSPC

"Finale: In Principio"
by: "Hildegard Von Bingen"
from the album "Ordo Virtutum; (Disc 2)
on WSPC.

"Finale. Alla breve"
by: "Sergein Rachmaninov"
performed by: "Martha Argerich\Riccardo Chailly"
from an album titled "Great Pianists of the 20th Century - Martha Argerich 1 (Disc 1)"
here on wonderful WSPC.

----

Remember what Edward R Murrow used to say: "Good Night and good luck..."

The show notes, incuding the complete text of this episode, and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server ... somewhere.

And this show is also being podcast in m4a format, which means that it you use a compatible player, like iTunes, you get the content divided up into chapters, images and "hot links" to the the web, on the topic of the chapter or to accompany the tune.

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0004

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0004

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0004.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0004.m4a

This is episode 4.

Okay, we're now in near real time.

First lemme apologize for the level or timing flubs the last few shows.

I'm not used to the production mechanism here at WSPC so... I screwed it up a bit.

But this show should be okay.

What would life be without the occasional embarrassment, the episodic humiliation and total degradation of, me, your obviously inept and amateurish host, for these little soiree forays into classical moosica.

One of the reasons I love education is its a chance to screw up without having to face the wrath of a big man, his cheap necktie all askew, steam coming out of his ears, his florid face sputtering out in a scream that: I'll "never woik in dis town agin. Ya hear?"

-----

We begin with a future classic, and with this I hope to show that classical music doesn't have to be deadly dull and like watching oil paint dry.

Its called "Under the Rug" by "Digital Droo" off the album: "Active Lancer Original Soundtrack"

----

There's still no PSAs.

C'mon folks...

Somebody somewhere must have something they want me to say about their wonderful program, or something...

----

There's still no promos.

Well, screw it down and let the winds have at it.

Here's my 4 promos:

----

I'm in a mood for strings, as opposed to woodwinds or brass. (I used to be a classical guitarist in my misspent yout', so you're gonna be hearing some; played by "Andres Segovia", no less.)

Now... "Adelante la musica"

"Andante sostenuto" from the
Concerto No.2 G minor"
by "Arthur Rubinstein and Wallenstein"
from an album called: "Symphony of the Air"

"adantino Variato"
by: "Paganini-Ponce"
played by:"Andrés Segovia"
from the album: "The Romantic Guitar"

"Sarabande" from "Three Pieces For Violin"
by: "Bach"
played by:"Andrés Segovia"
from the album "The Segovia Collection (volume 1)

"Chaconne" also
by: "Bach" also
played by:"Andrés Segovia"
from the album "The Segovia Collection (volume 1)

"Allegro" movement from the
"Concerto 2 for two cellos and orchestra in G minor"
by "Antonio Vivaldi"
from an album called "Best of Baroque"

"Symphony No.6"PASTORALE" / Happy feeling aroused on arriving in the country" (which should tell you something about German to English translators)
by: "Beethoven" of course,
conducted by "Arturo Toscanini"
fron an album of "Beethoven Symphonies"

----

I'm almost resinged to the fact that classical record companies never do the MP3 tags properly. Almost...

The show notes incuding the complete text of this episode and any and all links to the artists featured, are on a server, somewhere.

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0003

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0003

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0003.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0003.m4a

This is episode 3.

There is still no feedback as of yet (I'm recording this on Saturday, September 13th, 2008,) I'm not expecting any because the episodes haven't even aired yet.

I know that I'm only supposed to be a diversion, and that the music should go in one ear and out the other without snagging any brain cells and distracting any you from anything important, but this episode is pretty much all Bach and I dare say some of you might even put down a pencil or paused in the tap tap tapping of the keyboard because, well it is Bach, and he "was" that "good".

We begin with a future classic,

"Twist In My Sobriety" by "Tanita Tikaram" from the album:"Ancient Heart" (4:52)

----

There's still no PSAs.

----

There's still no promos.

----

Now... "Adelante la musica"

"Badinerie" by: "J. S. Bach" played by: "37Hz" from the album: "Bach To The Future II" (1:42)

"Toccata & Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Philip Brunelle" from the album: "The Bach Organ Book" (8:38)

"Suite 4 E flat Major, BWV 815-1 Allemande" by: "J.S.Bach" from the album: "Bach, The French Suites" (2:11)

"Aria" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Vladimir FELTSMAN" from the album: "Bach: Goldberg Variations - Vladimir Feltsman" (4:59)

---

"Suite No. 1 (d minor), BWV 812: Allemande" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Glenn Gould" from the album: "Bach French Suites" (1:32)

"Courante" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Glenn Gould" from the album: "Bach French Suites"(1:04)

"Sarabande" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Glenn Gould" from the album: "Bach French Suites" (2:51)

"Menuet I" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Glenn Gould" from the album: "Bach French Suites" (1:13)

"Menuet II" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Glenn Gould" from the album: "Bach French Suites" (2:29)

"Gigue" by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Glenn Gould" from the album: "Bach French Suites" (2:13)

----

"CPE Bach: Concerto #2 in B flat major: Allegro" by: "CPE Bach" played by: "Rostropovich" from the album: "Cello Concertos: Rostropovich" (7:34)

"Prelude in B minor" by: "J.S.Bach" from the album: "Great Pianists of the 20th Century - Sampler" (3:05)

"Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 In F Major BWV1047 - 1." by: "J.S.Bach" played by: "Wynton Marsalis" from the album: "In Gabriel's Garden" (5:24)

"Allegro (from Brandenburg Concerto No. 5)" by: "J.S. Bach" from the album: "The Instruments of Classical Music: The Harpsichord" (10:10)

----

I'm almost resinged to the fact that clasical record companies never do the MP3 tags properly. Almost...

This is being recorded Saturday, September 13, 2008.

The show notes incuding the complete text of this episode and any and all links to the artists featured, are at http://msbpodcast.pbwiki.com/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0003

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0002

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0002

This is episode 2.

There is no feedback as of yet (I'm recording this on Saturday, September 13th, 2008,) not that I'm expecting any because the episodes haven't even aired yet. Get real after all.

Last week was a mishmosh of Chopin and assorted minor hits (Like I just just got winged by Handel man, and it hurts like [bleep]!)



As much as I'd want to do otherwise, I'm supposed to distract you, while not directly engaging your minds in open rebellion and plotting insurection against the "Powers That Be"

(And who said an education was a safe path to knowledge? Not me. [

I'm a child of the 'Sixties when foment and dissent were in the air.{

Which 'Sixties, the nineteen sixties and all those student rebellions that scarred the educational system of France to this day,;

the eighteen sixties with the Civil War, the War of Secession, raging all around claiming lives;

the seventeen sixties and the war of independence giving birth to this very country. (

No, education is never a "safe" path, but it is often is the "only" path to a better tomorrow. :-)}])

We begin with a future classic,

"The Future" by "Leonard Cohen" from the album:"The Future" (6:43)

----

There still no PSAs.

----

There's still no promos.

----

Now... "Adelante la musica"

"Spring (I Allegro) (The Four Seasons; Vivaldi)" by: "Antonio Vivaldi" played by: "Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Sir Neville Marriner (Alan Loveday, violin)" from the album: "The Greatest Classical Show on Earth, (Disc 2)" (3:12)

"Concerto in D Minor" by: "Antonio Vivaldi" played from the album: "Vivaldi: 6 Double Concertos" (4:40)

"Sonata fur Arpeggione und Klavier a-moll (D 821)" by: "Schubert" played by: "Misha Maisky" from the album: "Songs Without Words" (4:26)

"Piano Sonata No. 12 in A Flat " by: "Beethoven" played by: "Alfred Brendel" from the album: "Beethoven Piano Sonatas : Alfred Brendel 03/10" (3:38)

"Concerto for Guitar and Small Orchestra" from the album: "Guitar Concertos" (4:38)

"Op. 115 in B Minor" by: "Brahms" played by: "Stoltzman & Tokyo String Qt" from the album: "Clarinet Quintets" (13:19)

"Conterto for guitar and strings in D Major RV 93" from the album: "Guitar Concertos" (2:42)

"Concerto No. 3 in G major, K. 216" by: "Mozart" from the album: "The 5 Violin Concertos (Disc 2)" (9:12)

"Concerto in D Major" by: "Vivaldi" from the album: "Vivaldi: 6 Double Concertos" (3:07)

"The Neighbour's Dance" played by: "Allicia de Larrocha, Tereza Berganza" from the album: "Noches en los jardines de España" (time)

----

I still have no idea what's coming up next because, the schedules still hadn't been finalized by the time this show was prepared.

This is being recorded Friday, September 13, 2008.

The show notes incuding the complete text of this episode and any and all links to the artists featured, are at http://msbpodcast.pbwiki.com/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0002

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0001

spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0001

Direct link to the episode:

MP3 -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0001.mp3

m4a -> http://media.libsyn.com/media/msb/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0001.m4a

This is an introduction

* to me,
* to the format of the show,
* to something that I want to slip in each show, (Classical music is being made as we listen, as well as by old dead people you couldn't possibly have met,)
* to a PSA,
* to a promo,
* to the music itself,
* to a recap of what you heard.

So, lets get started:

I am an older student. I have had my eyes and ears open for what seems like an eternity and I "love" music; any kind of music, any genre, any language, any rythm, and any arrangement, as long as it is well played. (Either you know your instrument or you never made it into my iPod Classic.)

I will start off each show with a single tune from my eclectic collection; which may be anything, including Yelli of the "Baka Forest People" Tuvan Throat Singing, big band music, sixties folk, acid rock, "French Chanteuse", all the way to country & western "hurting songs".

Apart from the obvious introductory tune,we will be focusing on classical music, having a place for PSAs, WSPC promos, filling your ears with some classical music and then I will wrap up with a recap of the tunes you were subjected to in an uninterupted fashion for the prior hour.

The intro to this episode is "Television, The Drug Of The Nation" by: "The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy" from the album: "Hypocrisy Is the Greatest Luxury" (6:39)

The place for PSA (Public Service Announcements) is as yet unfilled.

The place for promos is as yet unfilled.

The music of this and most every episode is selected to not snag into your consciousness. You should be okay to jog around campus, read, study, sleep through a boring lecture ("No such thing... You're only as bored as you're boring!")

You don't have to pay any attention to the melodies whatsoever. (Except if you're a music student; then there's going to be a test after, so "stay sharp" [Sorry, stay in whatever key it says on the stave.])

Now... "Adelante la musica"

"Gymnopedie no. 1" by: "Erik Satie" played by: "Pascal Rogé" from the album: "After the Rain...The Soft Sounds of Erik Satie" (3:12)

"Nocturne no.2 in Eb, Op.9 no.2" by: "Fréderik Chopin" played by: "Vladimir Ashkenazy" from the album: "The Chopin Experience: Chopin the Poet" (4:03)

"'Minute' Waltz (Chopin)" by: "Fréderik Chopin", played by: "Vladimir Ashkenazy" from the album: "The Greatest Classical Show on Earth (Disc 1)" (1:52)

"Scherzo No. 3 in C sharp minor, Op. 39" by: "Fréderik Chopin" played by "Vladimir Ashkenazy" from the album:"The Chopin Experience - Chopin the Dramatist" (6:45)

"Piano Concerto in D minor, K 466 - I. Allegro" by: "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)" from the album: "The Mozart Experience - Piano Concerto in D minor and in C [disc 2/5]" (13:32)

"Peer Gynt Suite no. 1 op 46 Teil 1" by: "Edward Grieg & Jean Sibelius" from the album: "Valse Triste" (4:11)

"Ballade No. 1, Op. 23" by: "Frédéric Chopin" from the album: "Evgeny Kissin - 4 Ballades - Berceuse - Barcarolle -Scherzo No. 4" (9:54)

"... -- Allegro ma non troppo" by: "Serge Prokofiev" from the album: "Great Pianists of the 20th Century - Martha Argerich 1 (Disc 2)" (9:03)

I have no idea what's coming up next because, the schedules hadn't been finalized by the time this show was prepared.

This is being recorded Friday, September 12, 2008.

What? You didn't think this show was live did you?

Its not a sporting, political or other temporally delimited event, say on which money might be riding on the outcome, nor is there any need to tie you down at a single point in time, like a feedback topic show ... so there's no need for immediacy.

I will respond to email about this or any episode and pretty much anything else at charles at MSBPodcast.com

The show notes incuding the complete text of this of this episode and any and all links to the artists featured, are at http://msbpodcast.pbwiki.com/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp_0001

Thursday, October 23, 2008

msb-0342 Tell you what I'm going to do

msb-0342 Tell you what I'm going to do

This Time The Dream's On Me/Dream - Susannah McCorkle
..

I've just spent a very satisfying couple of days working on WSPC's wiki and the stoonts have jumped with both feets.

So I am going to release my shows again. There won't be any commercial focus and it will be aimed at a college audience but it will let you hear how I'm doing. (My sister thinks I'd deteriorated since heading down to Texas to see her. Well, be that as it may, I'm still having fun and revolutionizing how the media department is organized. [Now, lets just hope it lands me an internship somewhere as a writer and/or a researcher.])

Three shows a week will be featuring classical music but starting with a twist (because I start with something that "might" become a classic. [When have you ever known me to do anything straight up. {I'm having a ball with this. :-}])

The last episode (well tomorrow's as the station play's em) even featured some book-ending with "Tuvan Throat Singing" and some minimalist music (comparing and contrasting Maurice Ravel's "Bolero" with Phillip Glass' "Koyaanisqatsi".)

I'm also doing something about peak oil ("P34k O1l" in 'leet speak as anyone know from reading the comic strip "Mega Tokyo" [ http://akiko.megatokyo.com/ ],) and I've been getting "deer in the headlights" reactions from the kids so I know I'm getting to them. (I'm playing all modern podsafe music in that. :-)

Since all the music is either public domain or podsafe, I don't have to worry about stepping on anybody's copyrights.

So keep your iTunes subscribed and/or keep showing up at the web sites. (And thank you for the continued downloads of the show. I'm up to 97,000 now and I'm quite frankly stunned. :-)

Coming Monday: Podcasts of every episode of "ThymeWarp" and "P34k O1l"

Monday, October 20, 2008

msb-0341 Holmes and Watt's son

msb-0341 Holmes and Watt's son

Princess of Nebraska
..

intro

Disclaimer! Disclaimer! Disclaimer!

MSBPodcast is "not" any kind of a medical podcast.

It is by and for MSers.

Its purpose is to keep us entertained, to explain our symptoms, to remark on our discoveries, and to raise the general consciousness about our disease.

The path to illness is shadowy, murky and rough strewn.

The path to wellness is lit by the lamp of knowledge.

----

I have a quick and easy, painless and not too figgin' nosy customer survey that I really, really, really need you to go and fill out.

You can go to my podcast "page" [ http://www.msbpodcast.com/ ], click on the button on the left hand side of the page and anonymously answer a few simple questions.

I really need this.

----

Feedback comes first, so...

Sorry about the punny title for this episode, but there it is. (And if you don't get it, don't worry. Its a pretty obscure one...)

I'd like to make a prediction and we'll see how it pans out.

---- "Shes on the Money" by: "gamma ray sam" http://www.uncleslack.co.uk/

Feed Forward comes next, so...

This is "your" segment.

Say "your" piece on this segment.

Share with other MSers whatever "you" want to share.

Drop us an email: "charles at MSBPodcast.com"

---- "Money Control" by: "Voide" http://www.voide.net/

Feed Me comes third, so...

You're off the hook until I finish my Communications Degree from St. Peter's College. [ http://www.spc.edu/ ].

I am not soliciting any ads from anybody until I get my head and hands around running radio station promotions.

Just so you don't thing I've been slacking off, I've got one "Campus Radio" show on classical music three times a week, "ThymeWarp" [ http://www.spc.edu/wspc/ ] and I'm starting another one Tuesdays, "P34k O1l" (Peak Oil).

I'm putting all of my show notes and have direct links to the actual shows on my Wiki at http://msbpodcast.pbwiki.com/spc_wspc_ThymeWarp and http://msbpodcast.pbwiki.com/spc_P34k_O1l. (Drop by and take a listen if you want to.)

In the mean time, I've been thinking about the current economic crunch and I've got a prediction about what's going to happen macro-economically speaking.

---- "Only in it for the Money" by: "Noel Miller" http://noelmiller.net/

"Thesis:"

The market economy, which all economies fundamentally are, even when screwed with by government beyond the essentials, has been riding the value inflation of a bunch of bubbles since 2001.

I would like to predict that the irrationally exuberant increases that have come to the world, since the coincident creation of the world-wide web by the way, are "all" going to vanish "dans le néant", into "a state of non-being."

---- "Money From The Satisfied Man" by: "Paul Jefferey" http://

"Synthesis:"

I've been reading a lot of wise and learned articles as well as ignorant twaddle and tripe on economics (and "Reaganomics" [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reaganomics ] is amongst the latter, since its been proven wrong by several critics [look in the Wikipedia article for one of the most concise summaries.])

If we look at the increase in the USs' GDP since 1995, its been running at an average of 3.5% [ http://www.commerce.gov/ and http://www.bea.gov/ Have fun with the research.].

That means 13 years of compound growth based on nothing but suppositions and flying in the face of the web bubble debacle, the ongoing outsourcing/offshoring debacle, the ongoing melt down of the auto industry, the ongoing real-estate melt down debacle and "the straw that broke the camel's back", the ongoing finance/bank debacle.

That should tell you that the economy has grown over 51% since then ("ceteris paribus".)

If we take into the real growth in the economy, meaning that the web bubble debacle, the ongoing outsourcing/offshoring debacle, the ongoing melt down of the auto industry, the ongoing real-estate melt down debacle and "the straw that broke the camel's back", the ongoing finance/bank debacle are all "minuses," the "fictitious plusses" of the economy are greater than the 51%.

Well guess were the economy is going to readjust to?

The high less the real costs of the web bubble debacle, the ongoing outsourcing/offshoring debacle, the ongoing melt down of the auto industry, the ongoing real-estate melt down debacle and "the straw that broke the camel's back", the ongoing finance/bank debacle.

Our economy is about to contract is real dollar terms by that much. Bernanke and Paulson and the rest have done their best to avoid deflation and depression but some of it is inevitable.

That's what being in a depression means. Its not that everybody's broke and unemployed, they won't be, but its that a lot of people are going to suffer.

And with this disease, we know about phantom pain, and phantom euphoria, as well as real pain and real euphoria.

But we also know something else, the United States economy doesn't know what to do to or for, by, with of from, the aproximatively 15% of its citizens who are disabled and who are disadvantaged by the narrow optics of an economy that ignores everything without a leading dollar sign.

---- "kiss my moneymaker pt1" by: "harri best" http://www.harribest.com/

"Conclusion:"

Time will tell if the economy reaches an equilibrium at near 1995 levels (just think of how much the economy had grown since then, kiss it all "bye bye",) before starting on an up trend again.

Something have changed by and because of the introduction of the web, (we now have access to vastly greater stores of data, [and, some might say, of information,] because of Google,) while others are entirely fictional creations and served to pump up the "numbers" of the currency, while doing nothing for the "value" of the currency.

It still does nothing to address the issue of market value for things that are fundamentally only tangentially related to the market (like "Health Care", which is handled like "Health-Don't-Care" here while being properly served in the rest of the industrialized world.)

Until the United States recognizes that simple fact, "all" of it citizens will continue to be screwed over by the marketeers, (since even William F. Buckley got sick and died,) and the concept of market forces.

---- "money" by: "peter, bjorn and john" http://www.wichita-recordings.com/

Outro

Monday, October 13, 2008

msb-0340 Everybody Gets Old and Dies

msb-0340 Everybody Gets Old and Dies

Even my mother.

Here's some of the music to the soundtrack of my young life.

"J'm'en Fous Pas Mal" by "Edith Piaf",
"Piano Sonata No.14 in C sharp minor, Op.27 No.2 [Moonlight sonata]" by "Beethoven",
"What A Wonderful World" by "Louis Armstrong",
"The Fiddler (Soittoniekka)" by "Sibelius",
"La Foule" by "Edith Piaf"
"Nutcracker Suite: March" by "Tchaikovsky",
"Mood Indigo/Sophisticated Lady" or maybe "Caravan" by "Duke Ellington" and I intend to close with
"Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F major" by "J.S. Bach."