13 July 2010

Louise Whited (1943-2010)

Louise Whited passed away on Sunday, July 11 2010 at Jane Phillips Medical Center in Bartlesville, Oklahoma.

Louise was born in Pawhuska, Oklahoma on May 28, 1943 to Joe Smith and Mary Katherine “Mitzi” Smith.

As a young woman, Louise enjoyed exploring new places, and spent time working in both Denver and the Grand Canyon areas. She later returned to Pawhuska, where she worked for some years at the Manhattan Cafe and Duncan Hotel restaurant. She married her husband of 42 years, Frank Whited, on March 20, 1968 in Honolulu, Hawaii. After a short time in Orange, Texas, they returned to Pawhuska, where she devoted herself to family. In recent years, she worked as an Avon representative and also was active on the internet.

Louise is survived by her husband Frank, son Kevin and his wife Callie, sister Sabra Trochta, brother Charles R. “Chuck” Smith, and numerous nephews and nieces. She was preceded in passing by sister Sandra Jackson and brother Joe “Brownie” Smith. She was a devoted daughter, wife, mother, sister, aunt, and friend.

Funeral services will be held Thursday, July 15 at 10 AM in the McCartney’s Johnson Funeral Home chapel. Longtime family friend Rev. Lottie Adams Ozbun will officiate. Interment will be in the Pawhuska City Cemetery.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 07/13/10 07:44 | Other | Comments (8)


09 July 2010

Think Ford might like this one back?

Photo of the gas cap from our Ford Fusion rental (a below average compact class car) in Alaska:

I’m thinking Ford might like that one back about now.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 07/09/10 21:48 | Other | Comments (1)


24 June 2010

Linkpost (06/24/2010)

Oh yeah, I have this blog going again…. I better put something up before BigBro yells at me.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/24/10 20:44 | Other | Comments (0)


20 June 2010

Happy Father’s Day…

... to all you dads out there!

We’re headed back to Houston later today after spending the weekend with my dad (who’s busy cooking us breakfast, ‘cos some dads just don’t take a holiday no matter what the greeting card industry decrees).

Posted by klw2005 @ 06/20/10 07:50 | Other | Comments (2)


19 June 2010

Linkpost (06/19/2010, the “made in Oklahoma” edition)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/19/10 11:53 | Other | Comments (1)


15 June 2010

Linkpost (06/15/2010)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/15/10 20:53 | Other | Comments (1)


10 June 2010

Linkpost (06/10/2010)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/10/10 21:40 | Other | Comments (0)


09 June 2010

Linkpost (06/09/2010)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/09/10 21:39 | Links | Comments (0)


08 June 2010

Linkpost (06/08/2010)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/08/10 18:55 | Links | Comments (1)


07 June 2010

Linkpost (06/07/2010)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/07/10 21:42 | Links | Comments (0)


06 June 2010

Linkpost (06/06/2010)

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/06/10 11:57 | Links | Comments (1)


03 June 2010

Linkpost (06/03/2010)

Leroy Stick – the man behind @BPGlobalPR (StreetGiant.com)

I don’t want to get on this dude’s bad side!

The danger of a government with unlimited power (George Will, WaPo)

Wilsonian government, meaning (in Wilson’s words) government with "unstinted power," is hostile to Madison’s Constitution, which, Madison said, obliges government "to control itself." Thus our choice is between government restraint rooted in respect for nature, or government free to follow History wherever government says History marches.

I never viewed Will as a Natural Right v. History Straussian (okay, I still don’t), but it’s good to see him taking cues from the Claremonsters on the topic, which they get right most of the time.

Economic growth is key to our national security (Carl Schramm, Robert Litan, and Dane Stangler, RCP)

Agreed. Too bad the Dem leadership is ramming through a redistributionist/regulatory/borrowing agenda instead of a growth agenda, hmm?

History returns to Europe (Victor Davis Hanson, RCP)

‘The Euro Zone Has Failed’ (Vaclav Klaus, WSJ)

Economic growth in Europe has been slowing down since the 1960s, thanks to the increasingly damaging economic and social system which started dominating Europe at that time. The European "soziale Marktwirtschaft" is an unproductive variant of a welfare state, of state paternalism, of "leisure" society, of high taxes and low motivation to work. The existence of the euro has not reversed that trend.

Rotten Food Complicates Chávez’s Reign (Dan Molinski, WSJ)

Venezuelan authorities discovered nearly 1,200 shipping containers full of rotten food at a state-run warehouse and have arrested a former top official in the government’s food distribution network.

The discovery of the 30,000 tons of out-of-date milk, rice and wheat flour at the warehouse in the port city of Puerto Cabello is seen as an embarrassment for President Hugo Chávez, who has been blaming opposition forces and private industry for a recent rise in food shortages.

President Chávez, addressing the issue late Tuesday, said the food was left to go bad due to "mistakes, inefficiency" and "bureaucracy" within the government, but also said corruption was likely involved. He promised his administration would prosecute those responsible.

That sounds a little too close to our own Purveyor of Hope!

Al Jazeera: More powerful than ever (Economist)

James Hansen: 2010 likely the warmest year on record (SciGuy)

I am sure, however, that his data will be roundly questioned and criticized. Of the validity of the criticisms I cannot judge.

Berger can play untrained meteorologist all day long when it comes to witnessing for the Faith of Global Warming, but vows never a critical word/thought because, really, how could he ever know? Wow.

Tom Franklin Cements Ties With Cougars (Hair Balls)

Good news for Cougar fans! TF does a nice job for UH.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/03/10 21:26 | Other | Comments (0)


02 June 2010

Linkpost (06/02/2010)

We’ll try a little linkpost for the first time in ages—composed in Windows Live Writer (if everything works correctly, which is doubtful).

Nuke It? (Daniel Foster, NRO)

It’s a little less crazy than it sounds.

It doesn’t sound crazy at all.

Why The Gaza Flotilla Attack Proves That I Am Right About Israel / Palestine (Wayne Myers, Conniptions)

Genius!

Is there still hope for (American) Syrah? (Eric Asimov, NY Times)

The French do beautiful things with the grape. The American approach rarely suits me.

In a welfare state, how much is ‘enough’? (Jonah Goldberg, NRO)

Obama doesn’t have a clue (Dick Morris, The Hill)

Who would have thought that this president, so anxious to lead us and so focused on his specific agenda and ideas, would turn out not to know what he is doing?

Umm, most anyone who looked at his career and achievements and experience running anything (actually, nothing)? Sadly, we were the cranks while all the smart people were drugged out on Hopium during the last election cycle. *shrug*

UPDATE: Live Writer ditched because it just produces some fugly output. It’s MS, so I shouldn’t be surprised probably.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 06/02/10 21:42 | Other | Comments (3)


31 May 2010

Migrated (mostly)

The blog is now (mostly) migrated over to Expression Engine.

A number of features aren’t working just yet, and I’m sure a bunch of crap is broken, but the big stuff seems mostly okay.

It probably would have been a lot easier just to redo the site than to shoehorn the old Nucleus design into different software, but whatever.

I’ll probably start posting crap again fairly regularly. Otherwise, my virtual big blog brother is probably going to give me grief. *shrug* What can ya do?

PS If you find something that seems badly broken, please leave a comment or shoot me an email (publiustx-at-gmail-dot-com). Thanks!

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 05/31/10 22:16 | Announcements | Comments (7)


27 January 2010

Remodeling Hiatus

No, it’s not another home-improvement post (although I do have plenty of those projects on my to-do list).

Rather, it’s a post about my blog software pretty much being at end of life (even though the development community would say that’s wrong, technically) in terms of being useful to me.

I’m planning on moving this site to Expression Engine in the near future. Then more regular blogging will resume, I think.

So I guess this isn’t a remodeling hiatus so much as a re-plumbing/re-wiring hiatus.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 01/27/10 07:08 | Announcements | Comments (0)


24 December 2009

White Christmas!

We’re in the midst of quite a winter storm at the moment in NE Oklahoma (screenshot courtesy WeatherChannel.com):

Xmas2009-Pawhuska, Courtesy WeatherChannel.com

There has been a pretty heavy downfall of sleet pellets for the last few hours. Actually, that’s not quite right. The wind is roughly 20-25 mph gusting to 40+ mph, so it’s more of a blast of sleet pellets than a gentle downfall. I had to step outside to bring in presents that stayed in the Rogue overnight due to our late arrival, and let’s just say that was… invigorating.

The Rogue isn’t used to this weather. I think TR is shivering

Brrr

Brrr. The forecasts suggest this stuff will turn to snow later, so I think a White Christmas is definitely on tap here in NE Oklahoma. Here’s wishing you a great one, whatever the weather!

UPDATE: A few hours later, the sleet pellets are starting to turn to snow:

Turning to snow

UPDATE 2: Last photo before sunset.

Snowy Xmas

We’re definitely in for a White Christmas!

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 12/24/09 00:12 | Other | Comments (0)


19 December 2009

How To Care For Your Mid-Century Modern (12-19-2009 edition)

So, at the end of November we bought a cozy mid-century modern home in Tanglewilde, and moved on 4 December (during the snowstorm—HUH!?).

We really like a lot of what the previous owners did with the place, but as with any old house, there’s just lots of stuff that could use a little care. And that’s what is occupying a lot of our time right now, and will be occupying a lot of time in the near future. My to-do list is full of small projects and some bigger projects we’ll probably call in some help for.

One bigger project that’s probably going to require some help is the A/C air return plenum. It’s just a mess, which is probably why the AC guys who put in the fairly new AC and furnace units decided it would be easier just to filter the air at the blower unit and not rebuild the air-supply plenum. That’s fine, except the filter coverage in the unit really isn’t adequate for the size of the home. So the plenum needs a rebuild at some point, which will include a build-out of filtered air-return grilles on two different walls. But for now, the short-term workaround is a filter for inside the furnace that I fabricated earlier that should work a little better than what was in their before. But I really want to rebuild that plenum in the coming weeks. It annoys me that the AC guys who installed the new equipment for the last owners didn’t do it then, when it would have been much easier.

Today’s other project involved replacing a tired, leaky Delta kitchen faucet with a nice Moen pull-out sprayer model. When we initially bought the house, we thought we’d probably replace the sink and faucet at the same time, but I think this may be the original 50s sink. And it is one hell of a deep, heavy-duty, retro sink. I kind of like that, so we decided it should stay. Of course, nothing in an old place goes according to plan—the water supply fittings under the sink didn’t mate to the new faucet properly, so Callie was dispatched to the neighborhood Ace Hardware, which had the flare fittings we needed. I love that store, and have spent enough time there so far that one manager knows me by name. It’s nice to have a really good hardware store you can walk to. smile

Tomorrow’s project involves Ace rekeying some locks for me, but no more tonight. Time to do some more unpacking and decluttering.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 12/19/09 07:22 | Home Improvement | Comments (1)


13 December 2009

Yes, we are still here

Closing the Borders at Westheimer and Gessner (Swamplot, 7 December 2009)

Oh sure. I got to the new neighborhood three days too late to save the bookstore within walking distance.

Blar.

A little over a week after the move, though, we are almost unpacked. Look for new substantive posts from the new homeowner soon…. (and about missing that last 2009 regular season Big 12 Wrap… who cares, ya know? The conference this year overall wasn’t as good as the Mountain West. Good riddance to this mediocre football season—although I’m not sure that next year will be any better since Colorado retained their loser and Kansas chased their winner).

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 12/13/09 06:51 | Other | Comments (1)


22 November 2009

Big 12 Wrap: Week 12

Packing is taking precedence over football watching right now, which may not be a bad thing this season. Here’s this week’s action:

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 11/22/09 08:21 | Big 12 Football | Comments (0)


15 November 2009

Big 12 Wrap: Week 11

I actually had a few games on in the background this weekend, amidst cleaning and packing and such. I can’t say I found it interesting enough to look up very often, though.

Posted by Kevin Whited @ 11/15/09 08:55 | Big 12 Football | Comments (0)


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