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MARCH
14,
2016 I was sitting near the stage of an outdoor arena in my little hometown. All around me, hundreds of adults were hurling insults at two men theyd never met a Mexican and a Muslim. My father was beside me, and he joined in booing and heckling the foreigners. As a shy adolescent who on Tuesday would be starting the eighth grade, I was slightly embarrassed to be there. The crowd shouted for the strangers to be clobbered and punished. They wanted to get them out of there. One was using the alias of Pancho Villa, the notorious Mexican bandit turned revolutionary. The other called himself Ali Pasha, The Terrible Turk. This was, of course, a professional wrestling show at the Richwood Fairgrounds in 1960. I mentioned it at the end of this article. It was great entertainment for folks who enjoy that sort of thing. There are people who know how to incite crowds like that, to whip them up to hate the designated villains. One such agitator was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame just three years ago.
Now that hes set his sights on the White House, his political followers have started to act like wrestling followers. But they dont seem to be play-acting. A riot could break out at any time. It isnt only the demagogue whos responsible for the bad behavior of his rabble. Its the rabble themselves.
...I implore you, if you're thinking about voting for Trump, reconsider. You are only promoting chaos and hatred. I witnessed it firsthand. And trust me, this is not something you want to see in person. This is not what you want to happen to our country. MARCH 2026 UPDATE: About Trump's war on Iran, Robert J. Elisberg writes, "this is what happens when unqualified incompetent, wannabe macho civilians are in charge. Posturing, swaggering, fist-bumping. War is serious. People die. Costs rise. Life is disrupted. And no matter how much claims he can just declare the war over, it's still going on because there's no exit strategy. Nor goal."
MARCH
4,
2016 I often turn left at the intersection shown below, from PA 910 onto Freeport Road. (The pictures are from Google Earth.)
Its hard to see the markings, especially on a rainy night. Where exactly should I go? There ought to be a Keep Right sign at 1, but there isnt. (Maybe there used to be, until someone cut the corner short and ran over the divider and knocked down the sign.)
Closer to the city, the left turn shown below is thoroughly marked. It's from the 40th Street Bridge onto PA 28, headed into Pittsburgh. Not only is there a Keep Right at 1, its flanked by a Do Not Enter at 3, and there are Wrong Way signs at 4 and 5. And there are arrows on the pavement.
Nevertheless, last Saturday morning 81-year-old Perry Kastanias made his left turn too sharp. He passed to the left of the Keep Right and headed down the off-ramp. Going in the wrong direction, he struck one vehicle and then collided head-on with a second. Mr. Kastanias did not survive. UPDATE: In February 2026, an SUV traveling the wrong way after midnight bounced off three tractor-trailers, setting fire to one and scattering debris across all the lanes of Interstate 70 near New Stanton. The highway had to be closed for ten hours.
MARCH
1, 2026 Many folks love the musical Wicked and its movie adaptation. I never warmed up to any of its songs except the dramatic "Defying Gravity" and this one, "Popular," which caught my ear because of the way Stephen Schwartz has inserted an extra lilting syllable into the title during a chord change, to boot. I couldn't figure out exactly how he did it until I looked at the sheet music.
FEBRUARY
26, 2026 In real life, most couples get married in their local church or city hall and plan to stay together forever. That's despite the fact that "the whole courthouse and the paperwork and the permanence of it, you know, kind of kills the romance," to quote one of the characters on the TV series High Potential.
A Redditor posts, "I always thought prenups were for rich people or celebrities who have millions to protect. Are prenups actually useful for regular middle-class people, or is this just lawyers trying to make money?" Another Redditor replies that a prenup may be useful because it requires "a discussion about how you see money what you see as yours, mine,and ours. It helps you be financially transparent and to ensure you're entering into a marriage with good communication." However, that's not the real reason storybook characters on TV are talking about prenups. It's just another plot point to generate some dialogue.
FEBRUARY
23, 2026 Every week I receive a copy of the Richwood Gazette, the newspaper from my old home town in Ohio.
I have no idea where that publication may have been hibernating for the previous three months. When I was a Richwood High School student 60 years ago, I was one of the managers who supported sports teams. In the winter that meant basketball: varsity, reserves, and freshmen.
FEBRUARY
20, 2026 I'd forgotten that I created this graphic, and I was amazed to find it buried in my files.
FEBRUARY
17, 2016 John Poindexter, the owner of the Texas ranch where Justice Antonin Scalia died, reported that the judge was found in bed with a "pillow over his head." Conspiracy theorists took notice. "They say they found a pillow on his face, which is a pretty unusual place to find a pillow," Donald Trump said Monday. His host, conservative broadcaster Michael Savage, said this might point to murder. There should be an investigation!
The problem is the imprecise meaning of "over," particularly when a person is in a horizontal position. In this case I think "over his head" means "adjacent to what would be the top of his head if he were standing up."
They had to dig out an access route from the house to the barn, of course, and she remembered "the snow was over my head!" I pictured a tunnel. If she walked through it, she'd be surrounded by snow on all sides, including the ceiling of the tunnel above her. But after further review, I realized that they'd merely shoveled the snow into piles alongside the path, and the piles were taller than the little girl. That's still a lot of snow, but the original description had gone over my head.
Japanese women could be so jealous. Obviously and I'm not kidding the title of this print is "Woman Throwing a Snowball at a Girl Reading a Love Letter."
The 18th-century color woodblock print, by artist Suzuki Harunobu, is part of the collection of the Allen Memorial Art Museum. That's located at my alma mater, Oberlin College. (Motto: On the Forbes list of America's Top Colleges, we're #46!)
FEBRUARY
13, 2026 My family has been associated with the Methodist Church since at least as far back as 1837, when my great-great-grandfather Dr. Archibald Thomas, a member in Springfield, Tennessee, sold a lot on which to erect a building for his local church. Some 120 years later in Richwood, Ohio, my father, who had previously solicited donations door-to-door, explained to the congregation how $80,000 for a new Sunday school wing was going to be obtained via voluntary contributions.
FEBRUARY
10, 2016 "Why don't all drivers out there stop at stop signs?" asked Keith Whitmore of Duquesne, PA, yesterday in a letter to the editor. "I am tired of coming up to an intersection and having a jerk come up to the same intersection and blow through a stop sign. Just by the grace of God I see these drivers first and avoid them before they hit me. ...My dad used to say, 'He must be late for his own funeral!'" Personally, I haven't noticed many cars failing to at least come to a "rolling stop." And almost everyone seems to stop at a red light and wait obediently for it to change, even with no other traffic in sight. (Why do red lights command more respect than red signs?) On the other hand, my uncle Jim didn't even slow down for a stop sign if he deemed it unnecessary. If he could clearly see there were no other cars within half a mile of a rural crossroad, he'd fly through it doing 70.
FEBRUARY
9, 2026 The overall warming climate has changed what we're used to. "People have forgotten just how cold it was in the 20th century," Texas A&M University climate scientist Andrew Dessler tells the Associated Press. For the U.S. in the 21st century, compared to 1976-2000, Climate Central says the average year has had four fewer days of subfreezing temperatures. And consecutive spells of subfreezing temperatures haven't lasted as long. Until this year, that is. In Pittsburgh, we're about to emerge from the 5th longest subfreezing streak in local history. After 18 consecutive days below 32°, the thermometer is predicted to reach 52° here tomorrow!
During the three relatively survivable days in the middle, I made it to the pharmacy, the grocery, and the doctor before the wind chill returned to -16°.
Ice killed a local citizen Friday morning. Not ICE, but frozen precipitation on Interstate 79 that caused a fatal 25-vehicle pileup. A Slippery Rock University freshman died when he crashed his Subaru into a pickup towing a trailer. At least 20 other vehicles were disabled. But now it's almost time to break out of this prison!
FEBRUARY
7, 2026
Practical reader: I beg of you: don't use all those extra words about "the question" merely to sound educated. Simply say, "They lost all four. Is the current iteration even more disappointing?"
FEBRUARY
4, 2016
He served overseas but never saw combat. During the year when his age was 35, he was stationed at a base at Chabua in northeastern India and carried the ID card shown above. He was not tall, so he kept his actual height "private." By the time he was 36, the war was over, and he sailed home with thousands of his buddies on what could be called a Mediterranean cruise. I'm planning a new picture article about that experience for next month.
FEBRUARY
1, 2026 "Well, Hello Dolly," Louie Armstrong sang in 1964. "This is Lewis, Dolly."
But nobody seemed to be arguing about the "Dreyfus" part. How does one say "Drey?"
The vowel looks like it could be a long A,
as in "they" or "prey."
"I accuse Lt. Col. du Paty de Clam [an amateur graphologist] of being the diabolical creator of this miscarriage of justice and of defending this sorry deed, over the last three years, by all manner of bizarre and evil machinations. ...I accuse General de Boisdeffre of complicity in the same crime, no doubt out of religious prejudice ...I said it before and I repeat it now: when truth is buried underground, it grows and it builds up so much force that, the day it explodes, it blasts everything with it. We shall see whether we have been setting ourselves up for the most resounding of disasters, yet to come."
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