FOOTBALL POOL UPDATE: MR KAEISER HAS THROWN THE CHALLENGE FLAG.
Many of you were puzzled as we were last week when Mr. Kaeiser picked the Panthers over his beloved Bears. After further review the ruling on the blog is reversed and Mr. Kaeiser indeed picked the Bears and we read his email completely wrong. Mr. Kaeiser picked a winning team and he remains alive in the pool. We have forwarded his original email to all players.
We regret any inconvenience in this matter.
FYI- most but not all of the picks are in and everyone save one player has picked the Giants. One person has picked the Saints.
For the last 18 years, my mother and I have spent Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, at Tod’s Point beach in Old Greenwich, Conn., near where I grew up and where my mother still lives. I’m a TV producer living in Brooklyn now, but I still go back every year. My mom reads my father’s old prayer book while I order lunch for us from the greasy concession stand that stays open into the fall, double hamburgers with grilled onions and French fries.
To those who fast during the holiday, our version of a High Holy Happy Meal might seem sacrilegious, but we didn’t always spend it this way. We used to go to temple like everyone else. But when I was 17, my father, who had just turned 59 and had suffered from depression for many years, shot himself in the head. The police found his body two days later, on the eve of Yom Kippur.
...
My last conversation with my father was right before I left to go to the University of Wisconsin in Madison. We hadn’t spoken in months, and even then, only briefly and with much tension. When he called, I had just read through my new student packet and was bursting with excitement about the future I was trying so hard to create for myself. But he just asked for the phone number at my mom’s new office. As was so often the case, he was distracted; he wasn’t really listening. And that’s when I told him that I hated him.
Before I hung up, he cried into the phone: “Why are you doing this to me?” Three weeks later, on Yom Kippur, my mother called to say he was dead.
...
In some way, I thought I understood. In Jewish tradition, each person’s fate is written for the coming year on Rosh Hashana and sealed on Yom Kippur after the “Days of Awe,” the 10-day period of repentance, prayer and requests for a good new year. I had always been spooked by the final Yom Kippur service, Ne’ilah — meaning, in Hebrew, “as the doors close” or “as the gates of heaven close.” I remembered the ark that held the Torah in our synagogue when I was a kid, how it was kept open during the prayer, and how serious it felt when the rabbi warned us that it was time for our final prayers, before the ark closed and sealed our fates for the following year.
....
This is stupid, but scary
ReplyDeleteDS
U.S. Drug Policy Would Be Imposed Globally By New House Bill
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/06/us-drug-policy-war-congress_n_998993.html?ir=Crime
ps: LaShana Tova
the "I hate my daddy" plague
ReplyDeleteand now you deal with it for the rest of your life
Shumie=kabuki?
ReplyDeleteShabuki is the next big thing in dinner theatre.
ReplyDeleteThe last two posts, concerning Steve Jobs commencement speech and today's marvelous excerpt
ReplyDeleteabout guilt and forgiveness are the reasons I will miss
Rumpole and this blog when he steps down. Who ever he/she is has entertained and educated me for many years. I will put my identification with this post so that you can, covertly if you please, perhaps sit next to me in the halls of REG or sipping coffee in AP and know my appreciation for you and revel in it. Thanks so much for your touching me so often.
You are right, DS, the drug bill is dumb and un-American, typical of the federal trend of over-criminalization. It's scary that ideologues like Lamar Smith sit in the judiciary committee and get to make asinine laws like this one.
ReplyDeleteNever end a conversation with I hate you.
ReplyDeleteRump,
ReplyDeleteThe last two days blogs are so depressingly deep, it leads me to believe you yourself or someone close to you is terminally ill.
I hope that is not the case, but with your recent request for a replacement, this is an inescapable conclusion.
I am in tip top perfect health- thank you. FYI- all people over 45- go get a cardiac calcium scan. It takes ten minutes and can save your life. It is a test featured on the CNN special The Last Heart Attack. We can stop heart disease. FYI for a man in his 50's my score is in the single digits. Meaning I am a the lowest possible risk for a cardiac event. How did I get there? Low carb, clean organic proteins, glass of red wine a night, several important supplements (write me if you need the list) headed up by lots of fish oil everyday and 4000 of Vitamin C which helps keep inflammation in the body down.
ReplyDelete59 at the least . You know too much mjb history to be younger than that
ReplyDelete59? Surely you jest. Not even close.
ReplyDeleteRumpole is between the ages of 35-41.
ReplyDeleteno, I don't jest and don't call me Shirley!
ReplyDelete