Friday, March 30, 2018

From the Wall Street Journal. Friday March 30. 2018.




But when they get the chance, grandmas and grandpas still do
what they’ve done across the ages—turning the attention
of children to the very important business of telling
stories and singing songs.


I tell the grandkids stories -- never mind if they are true;
The purpose of my narrative is giving broader view
To cousin Robert’s follies or aunt Ruby’s failed romance,
And why their uncle Jimmy wore a dress instead of pants.


Of course I brag a little when it comes to my exploits;
How I joined the circus and then slew some mean dacoits.
My memory grows bolder as I embellish history;
What’s the use of lifeless branches on the fam’ly tree?


I figure that my grandkids will be sick of boring rote
Teachers are determined to stuff down their little throat.
So I give them all the fantasy and nonsense that they crave
Before my magic carpet whisks me down into the grave . . .




In some cases, government officials curb grazing to protect
natural resources from damage caused by cattle, and create
preserves for threatened species. In others, officials close land
to ranchers to give more access to the public for hiking and
other activities which fuel the fast-growing recreation industry.

Pardner, lemme tell you what; these prairie ranges shrink
Whenever jumped up dudes out East begin to plot and think.
Them varmints out in Washington think cows are critters best
Penned up like some desperadoes while they hold inquest.

Of course they eat up all the grass, and stir up all the mud;
But that don’t mean they’re causing global warming no way, bud!
If you folks want your hamburgers and steaks at decent price
You gotta let them doggies roam, not cage ‘em up like mice!

And why the sam hill do they close my water holes today,
Just so tourists can come out and fish and swim and play?
I’ve seen the elephant, old pal, and so I will vamoose;
You can get your meat, like oil, from some guy in burnoose!

Thursday, March 29, 2018

The Terrible Antones




One spring morning, in the year 1962, Jimmy Antone was in a terrific butting mood. Something had got his goat, ruffled his feathers, waved a red flag, and he was rarin’ to start butting. This was his standard reaction whenever he got mad. I was there, and saw it -- and narrowly missed being butted in the stomach myself. I have no idea what set Jimmy off. All I know is it wasn’t me. When Jimmy missed me by a hair’s breadth he backed up, made a deep gargle sound that he fancied mimicked an Evinrude outboard motor, and took off for the side of his parent’s car. Bang! His noggin left a dent in the side of the passenger door. Not satisfied with a probable concussion, Jimmy backed up again, gargled some more, and roared into the rose trellis next to the front porch. It fractured without impaling Jimmy with any wooden lathes. Then Mrs. Antone stuck her head out the living room window, screaming at Jimmy to stop messing around or she’d call his father home right this instant. Jimmy desisted, looking around him with smug satisfaction at the carnage he had already caused. Then we got back to spinning our Duncan tops on the cement sidewalk in front of his house -- a sidewalk that was cracked and uneven from elm tree roots. It made for rotten skating.

The Antones lived two doors down from us on 19th Avenue Southeast, in Minneapolis. Their home was notable for once belonging to Hubert H. Humphrey when he was Mayor of Minneapolis back in the Forties. Mr and Mrs Antone came from Lebanon, and they never let a chance go by to proudly mention their quasi-connection with a political bigwig like Humphrey. This did not sit well with my dad, who hated Humphrey with a passion rare in one of his usually phlegmatic (read: hungover) nature. It turns out that during his campaign for Mayor, Humphrey had stopped in at Aarone’s Bar & Grill, where my dad worked, and had a beer. He paid for it and left, without the customary tip to the bartender. This enraged dad, and he never let it go. One day Mr. Antone mentioned their connection with Humphrey once too often in the presence of my dad at a neighborhood barbecue. Dad fixed his beady red eyes on Mr. Antone and said, in a voice usually reserved for cursing Earl Battey at Twins games, “That Humphrey is so cheap he wouldn’t pay a dime to see Christ ride a bicycle!” The ensuing shocked silence was broken only when my mother sternly said “Don, it’s time to go home.” The look of murder in her eye would have cowed John Wayne. My sisters and I were told to stay at the barbecue and have another Oscar Mayer weiner before coming home. For once we were smart enough to obey our parents implicity, and thus avoided an undoubtedly gruesome domestic foofaraw at home.   

The Antones were Mr and Mrs, with four children: Judy and Rose, and Ronnie and Jimmy. Rose was the oldest; she was practically out of the house by the time I grew conscious of the female species -- having gone to beauty college and set up her own beauty salon in Nordeast Minneapolis. Judy I recall as a certified little angel -- always smiling and speaking politely. I’d like to say she grew up to be an axe murderess but in all fairness I don’t remember anything  else about her.

Ronnie, as the oldest boy, was expected to be rock solid and protective of his family. He and Mr. Antone got into some epic fights in their screened  back porch on summer evenings that reverberated throughout the neighborhood, and were listened to with keen interest from open windows back in those days when air conditioning was for movie theaters and not for private homes. The gist of these loudspeaker discussions was that Ronnie had better settle down and stop drinking beer and playing cards with his cronies down at the factory -- to which Ronnie always replied he would do whatever he damn well pleased and would the old man kindly take a bleeping leap into the nearest lake. After one stormy session Ronnie finally moved out and the family didn’t see him again for several years, by which time Mr. Antone had become the victim of several strokes which left him scrawny and hesitant in speech and gait. When Ronnie finally did come back home for a visit he brought with him his blue-eyed Swedish bride, and no one was more fond of her than swarthy old Mr. Antone -- who liked to hold her hand when she took him out for his daily walk around the block.

The pride and joy of the Antones, and the envy of the entire neighborhood, was the twenty-five foot Chris-Craft boat that Mr. Antone bought with the settlement money he got from the railroad when he was injured on the job and lost his right index finger. That was some fine boat, lemme tell ya.

And it was the only boat of such magnificent proportions in the entire area. Oh sure, nearly everyone had a dinky little aluminum punt that you could put a motor on and putt around on Lake Harriet -- but the Antone boat was made to battle the waves of an inland sea like Lake Minnetonka. Or even tow up to Lake Superior for the whiting run.

And the hell of it was, the Antones never invited anyone ever to sail with them. Never. Ever. It was for family only. Didn’t matter how much you tried cozening up to them. I gave Jimmy my Lionel train set, tracks, locomotive, and water tower, as a gesture of sincere friendship -- but do you think that entitled me to a ride on the Antone yacht? No way, Jose! My mother shared her recipe for watermelon rind pickles with Mrs Antone -- something she would not do with anyone else, not even his sister Ruby -- but that cut no ice with the Antones; she stayed as landlocked as ever.

Once the ice was out of the rivers and lakes, Mr Antone got the boat out of storage and parked it in front of their house, where he polished it with marine wax until it sparkled like the Kohinoor diamond. Jimmy and I would clamber all over it, shouting nautical and piratical phrases at each other, like “Avast, ye landlubber!” and “Shiver me timbers, matey!” We took turns standing behind the wheel and sailing her to as many far away places as our anemic geography could supply.

Then early Sunday morning, when the rest of us peons were getting ready for church, the Antones would hook the boat up to their truck and roll majestically away for a day of fishing and hobnobbing with the other moguls afloat. I have no doubt that many in our neighborhood, as they gathered at their various places of worship, harbored a half-formed wish that the Antone’s boat would be caught in a cyclone and go down with all hands. I know I did.

From the New York Times. Thursday. March 29. 2018.



A study by American and Swiss researchers
found that toy ducks appeared to be a
breeding ground for microbes. The
murky water released from four out of
every five ducks tested included Legionella
along with Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria,
often associated with infections acquired in hospitals,
the authors of the study said.

Taking baths ain’t fun no more
As the microbe count does soar.
Even rubber ducks now count
As a germ-infested mount.
Guess I must begin to stink

So I can stay in the pink.

From Ohio



from the Toledo Blade. 


There was a young man from Maumee
Who thought most reporters were free
From telling the truth;
Then too this stout youth

Thought Trump was a fib devotee.

The Devil is a Dirty Bird




. . . wherefore there must needs be a place of filthiness prepared
for that which is filthy.
First Nephi. Chapter Fifteen. Verse 34.


The devil is a dirty bird, who wants to kill hygiene
In the soul and body so that nothing’s ever clean.
Don’t fool yourself in thinking that if it is just organic
It must be good and wholesome, not a bit at all satanic.

Just like cleaning up the house and yard are righteous duties,
So the heart and soul need constant grooming to stop cooties.
Prayer and scripture study wash away the daily grime
That keeps us from performing at our everlasting prime.

I’ll have to start spring cleaning to remove the winter’s crust
Of sloth and negativity that’s gummed up faith and trust.
My dust bunnies of sin and doubt need sweeping right away,

So my house is in order for the coming Judgement Day!

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

the mirror opens



the mirror opens
to a puddle settling
in the pale stillness

From the Wall Street Journal. Wednesday March 28. 2018.



In a recent study, Adobe found that about 28% of website traffic
showed strong “non-human signals,” leading the company to
believe that the traffic came from bots or click farms.
The company studied traffic across websites belonging to
thousands of clients.


My click farm is such a fine place;
Tucked away in cyberspace.
I do not raise wheat,
squeeze sugar from beet --
Just make up a customer base!


Human-resource departments are becoming a bit less human
as companies turn to artificial intelligence for help with hiring
and firing—and to learn how employees really feel about
their bosses.

If my boss knew just how I felt
About the way his feet have smelt,
Or how his stale breath
Brings thoughts of quick death,
His ego would certainly melt.



Long shunned as a pariah by the international community,
Mr. Kim and his regime have sought legitimacy and recognition as a
nuclear-weapons state as the country’s dilapidated economy has
faced ever-tougher sanctions.


That Kim is a popular guy.
He’s stunning in his windsor tie.
A gadabout, sure,
But with his allure
He’s leaving behind the small fry.

. . . that he may lead us away into some strange wilderness . . .




. . . that he may lead us away into some strange wilderness . . .
First Nephi. Chapter Sixteen. Verse 38.

In this world of flimflam there are many who will lead
The unwary and gullible to trouble with great speed.
They write a book; they give a talk; they put ads on TV;
They may have started honestly, but soon turn slippery.

Strange places they will take you, if you listen to their spiel.
And what they have to offer always borders on surreal.
We want a New Jerusalem; we crave a sudden fix,
And so these scoundrels multiply with all their crafty tricks.

I, too, have fallen for their guff from time to time, alas;
So learn from my experience and give these knaves a pass.
Take your feelings straight to God when schemers come your way;

Wisdom comes to even fools once they have learned to pray.

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

cold rapture




too late for winter
cold branches writhe in anguish
or perhaps rapture


From the Wall Street Journal. Tuesday March 27 2018.



Guests on “Hot Ones” regularly freak out—and give candid interviews
to audiences in the millions. On the program, which posts a new episode
online every Thursday morning, host Sean Evans asks celebrities about
their careers while together they eat 10 progressively spicier chicken
wings. Episodes run around 22 minutes.


Cain slew Abel not because he hated godly things,
But because poor Abel wouldn’t share his chicken wings.
The Flood that Noah circumvented on his wooden ship
Was caused by all the tears shed eating chick wings with hot dip.


Caligula, that awful man, would torture victims by
Dousing them with hot sauce till for mercy they did cry.
And Ghengis Khan rode roughshod over half of Europe cuz
He couldn’t find a drink to counteract that hot wings buzz.


Minions of the Inquisition kept a pinion pot
Boiling by their victims side and fed them piping hot.
Gestapo agents also used the fear of Scoville levels
To rip confessions from gourmets in Vichy France -- the devils!


It’s clear to me hot chicken wings are not meant for mankind.
Their spiciness and greasiness will make you lose your mind.
Abusing tastebuds with such stuff is such a curse, not blessing --
So pass another wing this way, along with the ranch dressing!