7.29.2007

johnny hit and run paulene

This is for my favorite blogger and surrogate niece - Holly.
X. The band that tore up the Whisky a Go Go, a nightclub in West Hollywood, California, at 8901 Sunset Boulevard on the Sunset Strip.

The Whisky played an important role in many musical careers, especially for bands based in Southern California. The Byrds, Alice Cooper, Buffalo Springfield and Love were regulars, and The Doors were the house band for a while -- until the debut of the "Oedipal Section" of The End got them fired. Van Morrison's band Them had a two-week residency in June, 1966, with The Doors as the opening act. On the last night they all jammed together on Gloria . Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention got their record contract based on a performance at the Whisky. Jimi Hendrix came by to jam when Sam & Dave headlined. Otis Redding recorded his album In Person at the Whiskey a Go Go there in 1966. The Turtles performed there when their newest (and biggest-selling) single "Happy Together" was becoming a hit, only to lose their new bassist, Chip Douglas (who had arranged the song), to the Monkees; guitarist Michael Nesmith invited him to become their producer. (He returned to the Turtles a year later, to produce them.).Neil Diamond also played at the Whisky on occasion.

Many British performers made their first headlining performances in the area at the Whisky, including The Kinks, The Who, Cream, Led Zeppelin, Roxy Music and Oasis. The Whisky was a focus of the emerging New Wave and punk rock movements in the late 1970s, and frequently presented local acts as diverse as The Germs (which recorded its first album there), The Runaways, X, Mötley Crüe and Van Halen while playing host to early performances by the Ramones,The Dictators, The Misfits, Blondie, Talking Heads, Elvis Costello, XTC and The Jam.

7.28.2007

is that a ferret - update two

Rapid City Journal (All Rights Reserved)
Interior, South Dakota. Recent photgraphic evidence suggests that released black footed ferrets are interbreeding with prairie dogs creating a mutant race scientists are referring to as "ferret dogs". Six ferret dogs have been isolated by state wildlife biologists in the Conata Basin since June suggesting many more exist but have gone uncounted. Federal park employee Norman Eisengeigle reported an encounter with the "gang of six", as the ferret dogs are referred to locally.
"I was pulling up on the edge of the buffalo sweet grass plateau, when three of these buggers attacked the front passenger tire. Three more came up from the left and attacked the rear driver's side tire." Norman recounted. "The sound was like a class of kindergartners with sharp scissors. I lost tire pressure at the same time I noticed the ferret dogs was [sic] gnawing on the door handles."
Two steel belted radials were shredded. The door handles could not be repaired and had to be replaced. Norman Eisengeigle was so shaken he took two days off and attended to the trauma so suffered at the Badlands Bar in Wall. We caught up with him there.
"It was cut, scrape and scratch getting out of there. Them ferret dogs can run faster than a kerosene cat and I took some damage to my pants and boots and calf level epidermis, but when I got to the gravel, they laid off."
"I walked south on the gravel. In the hot sun, legs razored up a bit, truck and guns left behind."
"I was picked up by Sam Whirlwindhorse and he took me into the Ben Riefel park station. It was only then that I truly felt safe," Norman said.
"I can tell you," he continued, "they are a danger to our beloved Prairie Dogs and our peaceful towns, but then I heard the Homeland Security departement was arming them with tiny RPG's and ground mouse commandos. If that's the case, we're in for a long, drawn-out conflict like nothing this country's ever seen before. God help us."

7.26.2007

change

This dude commands a corner on Mill Street wearing a hoodie even when it's blistering hot. He doesn't accept money. I watched from an adjacent pub while he refused all monetary assistance. He's only looking for change.
I could surmise that might include an indictment of current US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales for his recent perjury before congress regarding illegal wiretapping of US citizens. Or Gonzales' role in the firing of 9 US Attorneys who had the balls to protect our constitutional rights at the risk of their reputation and livelihood. Just two recent examples of the hubris of our present executive office. I fear terrorism less than I fear usurpation of constitutional rights by our own elected and appointed government officials. Be prepared to apply for your new National Identification Card complete with RFID and GPS. Terrorists and illegals need not apply.

7.24.2007

'is that a ferret' post update

It has now been disclosed after a perfectspy Freedom of Information Act request, that not only are Fish, Game and Wildlife agencies in several western states releasing "thug" populations of vicious Black Footed Ferrets into local peace-loving Prairie Dog compounds, they are training and releasing a species of desert ground mouse that is adept in the operation of a miniature automatic rifle with accompanying grenade launcher and infrared sights.


Pictured here, the desert ground mouse cuddles a modified AK-47 that fires a subsonic, nuclear-tipped, ground penetrating round at up to 2,450 feet per second. Ground mice combatants (or GMC in military parlance), were first released in the Big Horn Wilderness area in Wyoming to counter camper complaints of chipmunk harrassment.
They're success in that campaign lead to training for Prairie Dog burrow-to-burrow combat. Initial reports indicate a high ground mouse kill ratio (GMKR). Additional mice have been called up to determine potential success factors (PSF). We will follow this story closely and bring you the news as it breaks.

the doovde

7.23.2007

it's time


It's time you were introduced the Henry Chinaski (aka Charles Bukowski). An ugly poet from LA that never made a dime.

Here's a poem.


me and Faulkner


sure, I know that you are tired of hearing about it, but
most repeat the same theme over and over again, it's
as if they were trying to refine what seems so strange
and off and important to them, it's done by everybody
because everybody is of a different stripe and form
and each must work out what is before them
over and over again because
that is their personal tiny miracle
their bit of luck

like now as like before and before I have been slowly
drinking this fine red wine and listening to symphony after
symphony from this black radio to my left

some symphonies remind me of certain cities and certain rooms,
make me realize that certain people now long dead were able to
transgress graveyards

and traps and cages and bones and limbs

people who broke through with joy and madness and with
insurmountable force

in tiny rented rooms I was struck by miracles

and even now after decades of listening I still am able to hear
a new work never heard before that is totally
bright, a fresh-blazing sun

there are countless sub-stratas of rising surprise from the
human firmament

music has an expansive and endless flow of ungodly
exploration

writers are confined to the limit of sight and feeling upon the
page while musicians leap into unrestricted immensity

right now it's just old Tchaikowsky moaning and groaning his
way through symphony #5
but it's just as good as when I first heard it

I haven't heard one of my favorites, Eric Coates, for some time
but I know that if I keep drinking the good red and listening
that he will be along

there are others, many others

and so
this is just another poem about drinking and listening to
music

repeat, right?

but look at Faulkner, he not only said the same thing over and
over but he said the same
place

so, please, let me boost these giants of our lives
once more: the classical composers of our time and
of times past

it has kept the rope from my throat

maybe it will loosen
yours

from "Third Lung Review" - 1992

7.22.2007

survivor

Reprinted without permission:

Whenever I get a package of plain M&Ms, I make it my duty to
continue the strength and robustness of the candy as a
species. To this end, I hold M&M duels.
Taking two candies between my thumb and forefinger, I apply
pressure, squeezing them together until one of them cracks and
splinters. That is the "loser," and I eat the inferior one
immediately. The winner gets to go another round.
I have found that, in general, the brown and red M&Ms are
tougher, and the newer blue ones are genetically inferior. I
have hypothesized that the blue M&Ms as a race cannot survive
long in the intense theater of competition that is the modern
candy and snack-food world.
Occasionally I will get a mutation, a candy that is
misshapen, or pointier, or flatter than the rest. Almost
invariably this proves to be a weakness, but on very rare
occasions it gives the candy extra strength. In this way, the
species continues to adapt to its environment.
When I reach the end of the pack, I am left with one M&M, the
strongest of the herd. Since it would make no sense to eat
this one as well, I pack it neatly in an envelope and send it
to M&M Mars, A Division of Mars, Inc., Hackettstown, NJ
17840-1503 U.S.A., along with a 3x5 card reading, "Please use
this M&M for breeding purposes."
This week they wrote back to thank me, and sent me a coupon
for a free 1/2 pound bag of plain M&Ms. I consider this
"grant money." I have set aside the weekend for a grand
tournament. From a field of hundreds, we will discover the
True Champion.

There can be only one.

the day the music died

On July 15, 2007, they pulled the plug on Internet Radio. The corporations that sell you what you see and hear decided Internet Radio was depriving them and their shareholders of much needed revenue. They raised royalty rates for Internet Radio stations beyond their capacity to pay driving them off the cyber-airwaves.
No matter, many said. If it doesn't make money it's simply bad business and bad business cannot thrive. But when did art become business? It started with copyright law. Copyright law is constitutionally based.

Copyright law in the United States is part of Federal law, and is authorized by the U.S. Constitution. The power to enact copyright law is granted in Article I, Section 8, Clause 8, also known as the Copyright Clause, which states:

The Congress shall have Power [. . .] To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.

The U.S. Congress first exercised its power to enact copyright legislation with the Copyright Act of 1790. The Act secured an author the exclusive right to publish and vend "maps, charts and books" for a term of 14 years, with the right of renewal for one additional 14 year term if the author was still alive. The act did not regulate other kinds of writings, such as musical compositions or newspapers and specifically noted that it did not prohibit copying the works of foreign authors. The vast majority of writings were never registered — between 1790 and 1799, of 13,000 titles published in the United States, only 556 were registered.Copyright law has been modified many times since to encompass new technologies such as music recording and to extend the duration of protection.


Note the constitutional language: "securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."

In this context, the question is who owns the rights? The artist? Not likely in today's market. Michael Jackson bought the copyright to a majority of the Beatles catalog. What influence did he have on the Beatles? None, you say? You are correct, Grasshopper (oops, that might be a copyrighted Kung Fu term!). Corporations reserve rights to the repertoire of new artists to ensure advances against a potential goldmine - U2 is an example of just such a goldmine. Goldmines are hard to come by though and many that show promise come up dry and dusty.

If tended closely, copyright becomes a goldmine for the investor while the artist and listeners starve - actually and artistically. So the investor takes more. Cutting off their nose to spite their face. And the listener uses the internet to steal what was once free or inexpensive. Is he stealing from the artist? With the exception of assholes like James Hetfield of Metallica, the artist's approach is that no, listeners are not thieves. Simply interested in the music. Interested in going to shows and if interested enough, willing to drop $20 on a shiny new CD so they can hear their new favorite artist at the highest audio quality.

I'll end my rant now, but just remember 7/15/07 as the day the music died. Buddy Holly is spinning in his grave.

Don McLean - American Pie

I met a girl who sang the blues
And I asked her for some happy news,
But she just smiled and turned away.
I went down to the sacred store
Where I’d heard the music years before,
But the man there said the music wouldn’t play.

7.21.2007

.ogg files

So I'm downloading the entire Fugazi discography on Xtorrent when after doing so I discover I've downloaded over a gigabyte of .ogg files. What the heck is an .ogg file I ask myself (not out loud - I'm a Lutheran after all).
I dial it up on Wikipedia and find out it's cross-platform file format requiring digital conversion or an .ogg player. I don't have or want an .ogg player. I need to convert these buggers to mp3 files to play and record from my iTunes application on my Mac.
I go to Google Search and type "convert ogg to mp3 mac". Voila. I find a program called SwitchMac. It costs $24.95, but I can download a 30 day trial for free. I do so. With alacrity. Now I own the entire Fugazi recording catalog.
I'm so pleased with myself that I call Ian MacKaye who I first met in a record store near Stazione Termini (the central subway station) in Rome in 1992. He still lives near Washington DC. He still answers his phone. I report my intrepid endeavor. He congratulates me, wishes me well and says "enjoy, my friend".

And I think to my self, what a wonderful world.


Turnover



Editors note: Fugazi was an influential rock band from Washington, D.C., formed in 1987. Their evolution of the hardcore punk genre, combined with their dedication to touring earned them an international audience by the end of the 1980s, despite little recognition in mainstream circles.

The band name alludes to a Vietnam-era GI slang acronym for a particularly bad combat situation, which stands for "Fucked Up, Got Ambushed, Zipped In". In Our Band Could Be Your Life, the group reported that they chose the name because of its ambiguous and vaguely exotic qualities.

Perhaps just as well known as Fugazi's music is their ethical stance and manner of business practice. They stand as a rare example of a band that have achieved a level of mainstream success while remaining loyal to independent recording and distribution values, following through in the spirit of the original "DIY punk ethic". They have rarely charged more than $5–$10 admission to their live shows, insist that their performances be open to persons of all ages (MacKaye in particular remembers the sting of being kept out of clubs during his teen years, which is why he is now vicariously tied to the double-ex's put on the hands of those under 18 at venues that serve alcohol), have kept their album prices at about $10, and do not sell merchandise such as t-shirts or posters. In addition, the band has claimed that they will not conduct interviews with magazines featuring alcohol and nicotine advertisements.

All Fugazi's albums have been released by Dischord Records, co-owned by Ian MacKaye and former Minor Threat bandmate Jeff Nelson.

story of my life

Birth. School. Work. Death.

That's the short. I was born. Survived. Grew larger. Was sent to school. Did fairly well. Went to work. Haven't died yet, but I guess it's next.

In the meantime I smoked a lot of dope, drank booze, had carnal knowledge of some fine ladies and committed a few crimes (never more than a night in jail) and read some books. Bought a paperback copy of Dostoevsky's 'Brothers Karamasov' and checked out 'The idiot' from the library. Read Charles Bukowski and Alan Watts, Sun Tzu and Jack London. When I wasn't reading David Foster Wallace I was checking out Dickens and Twain or sneaking a peek at Cormac McCarthy.

That was school and I carry it forward but eventually, work beckoned. Even while I was in school. I took to work like a schizophrenic - love/hate. Raking and mowing, sweeping floors and cleaning bathrooms, cooking burgers. I was so good I was a supervisor at 17. Now I'm a manager and hire and fire. It's a ball and chain. A burning ring of fire.

But just last night my best friend stopped by and stayed in my home. All that went before put me in a position to offer my friend a comfortable place to stay. Of that I'm proud. I gave him a key to the castle should he pass through when I'm away. I know his family well and I know the door is always open at their ranch(es). They've done it for me several times before.
Just makes me realize that however hard it gets - what a pain it is to just get by in today's world, I'm one of the luckiest dudes alive to have friends like these. And just in case, I also gave my friend a key to my truck in case he needs to dip down to Nogales and get the truck while I sweat out a charge in a Mexican jail.

"I swear Mr. Officer Alejandro, sir, I didn't know 600 Oxycontin and six kilos of Mexican schwag was more than the Sonoran State limit regarding cross-border transport. Dude, really? Can I go?"

7.15.2007

it's over let's party

Just to get back on track here. Centennial nostalgia left behind. Here's some old rock and roll.
First up. Led Zepp's Immigrant Song. By the way, everyone in Wall is a decendant of an immigrant.



Online Videos by Veoh.com

How about some ZZ? La Grange. Isn't that what Scott Pippert called his outhouse?



Online Videos by Veoh.com

And finally, some Aerosmith gets by with some help from their friends. Train Kept A Rollin'.



Online Videos by Veoh.com

staring at the sun

South Dakota just executed a man.
Last Wednesday at 10:00 PM CDT.
Two drug 'cocktail'.
Dead.

Why?

The killer tortured this guy he knew from Spearfish in a cold-water creek for two hours and with assistance from two others beat him to death. Robbery was the ostensible motive. Who knows how the motive evolved. They crushed his skull with rocks. While the victim, according to the perpetrators, begged for his life. Begged for his life. Begged.

Judge Warren Johnson pronounced a sentence of death.

I spent two years working for Judge Johnson (my nickname was Seldom Seen Dean - guees I was off playing golf or something). If I was to be judged though, I would want Judge Johnson on the panel. He was fair and forgiving, a second chance kind of Judge. I know he knows he made the right decision but I also know that this decision is kicking his ass, personally and publicly.
Judge Johnson is a fair man, not a hard man. He is also a strong man who will live with his decision.

I stand with him, but whether it's wrong or right, killing man is like staring at the sun.

7.14.2007

wall south dakota



History of the Town of Wall

by Mrs. Leo Foster
Mrs. Chris Willuweit
Mr. Leonel Jensen

Beginning of the Town of Wall

In the spring of 1907 a town began to form at Wall, adjacent to
the nearly completed Chicago & Northwestern Railroad. The name of the
new town was taken because of an abrupt break from the flat prairie
land to the rough badlands formations just east of the Townsite. This
break forms an eight-mile barrier that had been known as the "Wall" by
the cattlemen for many years.

The first building there was a sod shanty, built by Harry Fuller.
Though not intended as a cafe, so many persons stopped there that the
men put up a table outside the building and served meals. On July 10,
1907, the Hendrickson Land Company opened the sale of town lots on the
homesteads of Gene and Bill Mackrill. This date was taken as the
birthday of the town and has been celebrated annually ever since. On
that day, the first lots sold were on the west side of Main Street in
Block 3. Lot No. 1 was sold to Walt Babcock who built a restaurant and
hotel, Lot 8 in the center of the block was sold to Charles M. Lewis
who built a store, and Lot 16 on the south end of the block was sold to
Bill Becker who built a store. The lumber for these buildings was
hauled from Wasta as the Railroad was built to there but there was no
bridge across the Cheyenne.

The Chicago and Northwestern Railroad was completed between
Pierre and Rapid City in 1907. Sometime in May, the two crews, one from
Pierre and one from Rapid City, joined the railroad grade. This
completed the roadbed work just west of Wall. Art Galbraith tells of
the excitement created by this event. Art says that quite a few people
were present when the roadbed was finished and that the workmen threw
away their shovels. A number of homesteaders picked them up and Art
says he still has his.

The rail-laying crews completed their work and the rails were
joined from east to west some distance west of Philip on July 10, 1907.
An item in the Rapid City Daily Journal describes the event by saying
that the last rail was laid at about 4:30 P.M. but that the traditional
golden spike was not driven until ten minutes after five. The first
through-train from Pierre to Rapid City was on July 14th when a train
load of railroad officials made the trip between the two points in
twelve hours.

Originally the Depot for the C&NW Railroad was planned on the
east side of the railroad tracks on Mackrill land, but a disagreement
between Mackrills and the Railroad Company ended in the depot being
placed west of the tracks on the Pogendorf homestead. Williams, the
first railroad agent, had his office in a box-car. He was succeeded by
Briggs, then by F. M. Noe, then by H. M. Hatton, and finally by K. A.
Broyles, the present agent. Joe Wall, the original section foreman,
gave way to Joe Herink in 1912, in 1941 he was followed by Severt
Hoveland, the present foreman.

Other businesses in Wall date back to the beginning of the town.
The first blacksmith, Harry Wiley, established himself in 1907, selling
that fall to Joe Lynn, who quickly disposed of the business to Herman
Schone. Except the four years spent farming his homestead, Schone
conducted the business until 1930.

The first Lumber Company was started by Peter Mintner in 1907.
This business was taken over by A. C. Kingsbury in 1911. J. H. LeCocq
came from Iowa in 1906 and homesteaded but he soon began working for
lumber companies, and for many years ran the Kingsbury Hardware and
Lumber Company. Ted Whaley also worked in the store for many years.
Fred Van Vleck started a second lumber yard in 1932. This business is
still active as the Van Vleck Lumber Company, and is operated by
Gilbert Van Vleck and son, Gene.

Baldwin and Fallon, were the first Drug Store owners in Wall. In
1907 a drug store was built and operated by Schulz who sold to Charles
Nippell. Vern Turner was the next proprietor, the Rovaart, Heine
Sebade, and finally T. E. Hustead, who, with his son, Bill, owns the
business at the present time.

The first medical man to practice in Wall was Dr. Hutter. Others
were Doctors Clark, Standeven, McLaurin, Meissrow, Toon, Adair, and
Jernstrom. Dr. G. W. Mills, the present practitioner, opened his office
in August of 1919.

The first garage was opened by Joe Knapp in 1915. L. J. (Lee)
Dixon, who had worked for Joe Knapp, opened a garage in 1920. Stanley
Beck opened a farm implement store on the east side of Main Street,
which he ran for many years moving to Rapid City when he was elected
Pennington County Clerk of Courts. The Chiak Brothers were also early
garage owners. Present garage owners are Szarkowski, Evenden and Stone.
Present filling stations are operated by Kennedy, Hoffman, Hustead and
Foster.

O. C. Marshall built and operated the first livery barn. Frank
Conway was the first Star-route mail carrier out of Wall. He carried
the mail from Wall to Pedro in 1907. He lived at Pedro. Other carriers
on this route were: Sam Jones, O. C. Marshall (who carried the mail for
a time between Wall and Pedro in a Model T. Ford). The low gear clutch
band burned out on the Ford one time while he was climbing up the Pedro
Hill so he stopped, took off the oil pan, cut a strip of leather from
the top of his boot, inserted it as a clutch band, replaced the oil pan
and came on into Wall without further trouble. Henry Heutzenroeder,
Martin Overholt, Himmelhaun, Frank Richards, Harry Johnson, Carl
Pritchard, Fred Lewis, Don Mendenhall, Nick Feller, and Otto
Eisenbraun, who is the present carrier. A new Star-route was
established between, Wall and Scenic in 1952 at which time it was taken
by Edward Hanewinckel who was succeeded by Bryce Kennedy in 1953.

The Wall Post Office was established in 1907 and Dock Shappell
appointed as first postmaster, opening up his first office in a small
tar papered shack on the west side of Main Street, which later burned
with all mail and equipment. Mr. Shappell immediately built a building
on the other side of the street for an office, and postmasters followed
in this order: J. W. Casselman in 1910, J. E. Witten in 1914, Chas. M.
Lewis in 1918, Paul Pulvany in 1920, Mrs. C. A. VanZant in 1921 (Mrs.
VanZant died while in the office and Mr. VanZant took over the duties
until 1922 when I. D. Winter was appointed. He held the position until
1935 when Lysle Dartt was appointed. He was given Military leave-of -
absence during World War II and Mrs. Anna Sebade was named acting-
Postmaster, with Marie Dartt as assistant, while he was gone. In 1947
Dayton Sebade was appointed Postmaster and is still serving in that
capacity.

In 1908, J. A. Galbraith, one of the 1906 homesteaders north of
Wall, petitioned the U.S. Postal Department for two rural mail routes,
the one north of town, was established in June 1909, and Mr. Galbraith
was appointed carrier. The other route was not established until 1921
and was operated by Herman Sebade, Jr. During World War II Herman took
War-leave to work in a Defense plant and John Bielmaier substituted. In
1943 the two routes were consolidated and Art Galbraith retired. Herman
Sebade took over both routes. Following Herman's death in 1960, Deane
Joyce was appointed and is serving the route now. The first mail
service in Wall was of a peculiar kind. When anyone from this section
was in Dakota City (the post office address of most of the people near
Wall) he would gather together all of the mail for this section and
bring it in a grain sack to Wall where it was dumped into a large box
in the grocery store and everybody looked through it, picking out his
own mail. Wall's mail route was the first in the Western half of South
Dakota.

In 1908, the first school, a frame building, was erected. Before
that time, school classes had been held in a personal dwelling. In
1928, there was a 3 story brick building erected a block east of
mainstreet with a wing added to the North side in 1959 and a south wing
added in 1963. There are over twenty-five people employed by the school
system at this time.

The first Church, a Methodist, was organized on July 11, 1907, on
a bowery floor where a dance had been held the night before. Rev. Ross,
a first Congregational Minister, who had a homestead near Conata,
walked more than 20 miles each Sunday to conduct services. He was
killed in a train accident near Conata and was one of the first people
buried in Wall Cemetery. Wall now has three churches Methodist,
Lutheran and Catholic.

In 1908 E. S. Johnston purchased a struggling newspaper, the Wall
Record, from an editor whose name has been forgotten. Successive
editors were Charlie Burnham, Joe Whitten, Paul Viney, Brenner, and
Gladwin Hansen. After some years Hansen allowed the paper to die. E. S.
Johnston again gave the town newspaper, moving his plant from Quinn and
publishing under the title "The Eastern Pennington County Courant".
Later the "Eastern" was dropped from the title. "Courant" is a Dutch
word meaning paper. The present owner, R. F. Lewis, purchased the paper
in 1930.

In 1909 the Cheyenne Valley Electric Company was organized with
C. E. Dowling of Sioux Falls, Elmer Hawks, and E. A. Brown, building
the original telephone line from Wall to Pedro. About 20 people
subscribed to this new telephone service. In 1917 the company was taken
over by Mrs. Ethel Herink. In 1918 the Lake Flat Mutual Telephone
Company that had been organized in 1908 was purchased by Mrs. Herink
and added to her line. In 1954 the Golden West Telephone Cooperative
bought the line and added it to an extensive telephone system covering
a large area.

In 1907 the Security State Bank was opened. In 1910 the First
State Bank was opened. In the fall of that year they united, continuing
as the First State Bank. This changed to the Farmers State Bank in
1926. This changed to the Underwood State Bank in 1940, and the First
Western Bank in 1962. Among those who have been in charge of the bank
have been Kneeland, Kiddoo, Green, Thompson, Witten, John Thoma, Gail
Lewis, A. S. Nystrom, Leonel Jensen, Warren Joyce, and Delbert Sebade
who is at present the President of the Bank. It is one of the three
banks in the county that kept their doors open throughout the banking
panic from 1924 to 1932.

An early landmark was the Babcock Hotel built in 1909 after fire
had destroyed a smaller hotel built in 1907. It included 40 guest
rooms, a barbershop, bowling room, pool room and general store in a
twostory frome building. This building was also destroyed by fire in
1918. After the Babcock Hotel burned, Mrs. Hulda Miller started a cafe
and ran a hotel in connection with her grocery and dry-goods store.

In 1930 the Gypsy Oil Company of Tulsa, Oklahoma, leased 115,000
acres of land north of Wall for oil-drilling purposes. On May 3, 1931,
a well was spudded in with quite a ceremony. Some 10,000 people
gathered to see the test well started. Governor Green gave the main
address and the Wall Commercial Club handed out barbecued-beef
sandwiches. Three steers had been barbecued the night before. During
the summer the well was drilled to nearly 6000 feet. A complete log of
their operations was kept and filed with the Geology Department of the
University of South Dakota. It was capped and abandoned.

The first elevator in Wall was built in 1910 by the Tri-State
Milling Company. It was operated for many years by John Harnden, later
by Joe Wilson, then Earl Johnson was manager, later on Lynden Bansey,
then Han Hamann took over, and still later Edward Hanewinckel. Its
present manager is Dwight Norman. In 1930 the farmers around Wall
organized a company and built an elevator. They sold this to E. C.
Smoot in 1931 and he in turn sold it to Ralph Ivins. In 1962 Ivins sold
his elevator to the Tri-State, so both elevators operate under one
management.

Other businesses of the early days were: A dray line operated by
R. A. Scheer, who had homesteaded earlier; a harness and repair shop
operated by homesteaders Frank Patterson and Eric Gorseth; later on
shoe shops were run by Mike Hawley, Frank Kruse and Joe Larson: Barber
shops were run by Safken, Shorty Wilmus, Bill Thompson, Sam Johnson,
Cotton Johnson, and Lynn Williams is the present barber.

Joe Bielmaier was the Fire Chief and handy man about town for
many years. He was manager of the town water-pumping station for many
years, walking each day to the old town-dam where the water pumps were
located and he never let the water supply tank get low. Howard Connolly
took over Joe's job as Fire Chief in 1932 and held it until 1964.
During Howard's last year as Fire Chief, a new Fire Hall was built and
dedicated "Howard Connolly Fire Hall", at which time Howard retired and
Max Hauk became present Chief.

Dave Whitwer and Gene Miller began short and long distance
trucking about 1930 and Dave is still trucking.

The town had some early attorneys. Both E. S. Johnston and Judge Thomas
Conniff were in Wall about 1908.

J. F. Street owned the Street Hardware on Main Street; Carl Lurz
owned a Hardware Store on Main Street. Jim LeCocq and Vern Kingsbury,
Lysle and Norris Dartt were some other hardware store owners and the
present day owners are Bud Estes and Dick Van Vleck.

The business name, W. H. and H. E. Miller was familiar to
everyone in the early history of Wall. W. H. Miller, a Civil War
Veteran sent his son, Frank, to the territory in 1903. Frank took a
Soldier's Declaration for his father, a procedure somewhat similar to
filing a claim, and in 1906 Mr. Miller came to the country and filed a
claim on a quarter section adjoining the town on the northeast. Mrs.
Miller joined him in 1907 and for a time they tried their hands at
farming. It was on this place that one of the first wells in town was
drilled. It was 110 foot bored well two and one-half feet in diameter
and dug with a horse drilling rig by Louis Jenson.

In 1909 Mrs. Miller opened a small millinery shop. In 1912 the
Millers leased their farm to R. A. Scheer and went into the store and
hotel business. They expanded this business into the well-known Miller
Hotel with accommodations for 43 guests. This building now houses
Beaches Cactus Cafe and Lounge.

For years Fred Lewis owned and operated the Minneapolis Moline
Farm Machinery business, selling to Martin and Erhard Eisenbraun. Some
of the early stores were owned by: C. M. Lewis, L. H. Hansen, Clayton
Babcock, Al Strandell, Mrs. Martinson, and Frank Martin, Butler, Lanam,
Mutchlers, Bradley, Galbraith, Long, La Roche, Fosness, Horst, and Fred
Lewis. The two grocery stores at the present time are Smith's Jack and
Jill Market and Clark's Wall Lockers. Galbraiths started a dry goods
and notions store and Minnie Dartt had a dry goods store called the
Style Shop.

Early in 1920 the Galbraiths opened a funeral establishment known
as the Galbraith Mortuary. They sold this business to Bill Walsh in
1952, and Bill still operates it. Having added a chapel in 1965.

In 1935 the Wall Commercial Club sponsored a number of free
movies to try and induce someone to come to town to build a theatre.
When it was determined that there was enough interest to justify a
business, the Raeburns built the present theatre which they sold to
Earl Neumister in 1937.

Since Wall has become a popular tourist town, many motel and
cabin courts have sprung up. Best, Buckstads, Harvey, Campbell, Dora
Welsh were some of the early owners. Followed by R. Paulsen, L. Dartt,
Werd, Knapp, J. Paulsen, Irene Schmidt, Estes, Jensen, Hauk, Geigle, H
& W Welsh & Mills. Also Crown and Paulsen's Red Arrow Camp.

Tourist trade also makes Cafe business good. Some owners were:
Millers, Johnsons, Connolly, Smoot, Schone, Briley, Wilkinson, Parr, B.
Babcock, Doyle, Peterson, Land, Todd, Fischer; with the present owners
of Wall Cafes being: Fosness, Beach, Pederson and Hustead.

There have been many pool halls, bars, and liquor stores in town
owned by Johnson, Parr, Babcock, Doyle, Wilsey, Crawford, Beach, Byerly
and Haefs.

Some other interesting dates in Wall's history: In 1922 the old
town dam was built. In 1923 the first water system was built. Pipe
lines were laid and a water tower erected. The water was not used for
drinking but it was good fire protection. The water filtration plant
was built in 1942, and a new town dam in 1947. In 1951 a sewer system
was installed. Two deep wells were dug in 1961 and 1962, giving the
town an ample supply of pure water. The Stone Community Hut was built
with W.P.A. labor and federal funds in 1936. The West River Electric
Association energized their lines in December of 1940, replacing the
old direct-current electric lighting system owned by Chiak Brothers. A
portion of the Badlands area south of Wall was designated a National
Monument in 1939.

On August 9, 1960, Wall became headquarters for a SAC Radio
Beacon Site. In 1961 Wall became one of the centers for a Minute-man
Complex which has 150 launching pads for intercontinental missiles.


The Committee realizes this history is far from complete and
regret any business or name we may have omitted.

minge at the celebration


Hey folks.
Seems Minge has witnessed first hand the incivility that is the trademark of a Wall, SD Centennial Celebration. He has phoned in one report since his initial post. He spoke of clan conflict; open and on the streets. Much like the soccer thugs of England, these Western reprobates seek any reason at hand for a fisticuff. Gnashing and pounding like crazed dung beetles, nothing but eyeballs, teeth and big flap-like ears swirling and spinning like whirling dervishes. Smack and splat. They all know the taste of tar macadam.
No report from Minge today. Expect he'll have full disclosure upon his return. We're placing a call now.

7.12.2007

two days and it's over

With a July 15 deadline, perfectspy sends a letter to his representative in congress:

July 13, 2007
The Honorable Jon L. Kyl
United States Senate
730 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510 0304
Re: I'm a listener/broadcaster who wants you to help save music diversity on the Internet
Dear Senator Kyl:
As a fan of Internet radio, I was alarmed to learn that the Copyright Royalty Board has decided to raise music royalty rates by 300 to 1200 percent. For most webcasters the new royalties exceed their revenue and they simply will go bankrupt and stop webcasting.
The silencing of Internet radio would be a blow to listeners like me who enjoy the wide variety of choices only available via Internet radio. This will kill the great diversity of music that I hear over the Internet and all the independent artists who have a difficult time breaking through on other forms of radio.
I respectfully request that Congress look into this matter and take action to prevent it. Please understand that time is of the essence since the new royalty rates are retroactive to January 1, 2006 so they will cause immediate bankruptcies if they become effective for even one day. Please don't let the music die.
Sincerely,

Take three minutes to support Internet Radio

celebrate good times - come on


thurs., july 12 2007
black hills hay camp
81 and clear



wellington minge here...
i have been assigned roving correspondence duties here in the eastern black hills piedmont. my journey coincides with a centennial shindig taking place in the badlands, seems the hamlet of Wall has hit the century mark in terms of existence...i plan to investigate if civility has accompanied that 100 yr achievement.

reports indicate the group 'eclipse' has canceled their sat. show at the celebration tent. reliable sources have told this reporter that the 'bay city rollers' are committed to standby.
these lads will not disappoint, extra ale and ones best kilt should be considered.

i like the night life. i like to boogie.

have experienced a clear starry night and cool breezy morning thus far...a morning stroll through a pasture of +knee high crested wheat grass has set the tone for the coming day.

cheerio...wm

7.11.2007

it's the chicken

that makes you high

7.08.2007

is that a ferret in your bathtub

They've reintroduced black-footed ferrets to the grasslands surrounding Wind Cave, SD. Ferrets were there before but left due to the inhospitality of the locals. Prejudice, misunderstanding and the weasel like nature of the locals clashed with the peaceful weasel that is the black-footed ferret. Ostracized and oppressed, many moved to Conata, SD, where ferrets have enjoyed a mostly peaceful existence with a minimum of weasel-ist prejudice. The suffered the occasional rogue buffalo, a rancher or two, a sporting sharp-shooter or a poison bearing Job Corp moron, but like Sheriff Seth Bullock did in Deadwood over 100 years ago, they tightened up the town and kept the hoople-headed prairie dogs in line.

The Wind Cave ferrets hail from breeding populations in Wyoming and Montana. Cage raised. Drug dependent. "Crack ferrets" in the lexicon of the breeders; an oily skinned bunch of thugs that failed at placer mining and took the only jobs left. Rabbit-skinners. They hunted muskrat, skunk and jackrabbit for the Park Service, eventually taking over the farming and raising of these "transitional" ferret populations in towns like Lusk, WY and Two Sleeps, MT. They blended in to the local populations just like they later knew their ferrets would, drinking beer and eating sloppy Joe's with American cheese and dill pickles. Some grew beards for the Fourth Of July. Every road forks though, and just before the Fourth Of July 2007, the fork in this road took a turn towards Wind Cave, SD.
TBC ...

7.05.2007

heaven is hotter than hell



HEAVEN IS HOTTER THAN HELL PARADOX

The Heaven is Hotter than Hell Paradox is a contradiction between stated temperatures in each location as noted in the Bible. By computing the temperatures of both Heaven and Hell using biblical information, we learn that Heaven is hotter than Hell.

Temperature of Heaven.
The temperature of heaven can be rather accurately computed. Our authority is the Bible. Isaiah 30:26 reads, "Moreover, the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold as the light of seven days."
Thus, heaven receives from the moon as much radiation as the earth does from the sun, and in addition seven times seven (49) times as much as the earth does from the sun, or fifty times in all. The light we receive from the moon is one ten-thousandth of the light we receive from the sun, so we can ignore that. With these data we can compute the temperature of heaven: The radiation falling on heaven will heat it to the point where the heat lost by radiation is just equal to the heat received by radiation. In other words, heaven loses fifty times as much heat as the earth by radiation. Using the Stefan-Boltzmann fourth power law for radiation: (H/E)4 = 50where E is the absolute temperature of the earth, 300°K (273+27). This gives H the absolute temperature of heaven, as 798°K (525°C or 977°F).

Temperature of Hell.
The exact temperature of hell cannot be computed but it must be less than 444.6°C, the temperature at which brimstone or sulfur changes from a liquid to a gas. As stated in Revelations 21:8: "But the fearful and unbelieving... shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone." A lake of molten brimstone [sulfur] means that its temperature must be at or below the boiling point, which is 444.6°C. (Above that point, it would be a vapor, not a lake.)
We have then, the temperature of heaven, 525°C (977°F) and the temperature of hell, less than or equal to (=>) 444.6°C (>=832.28°F). Therefore heaven is hotter than hell.

Neither is as hot as Phoenix.

7.03.2007

independence

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
No person shall be held to answer for any capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district where in the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.
In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.

Ask yourself, how many of these precepts, the basis of our freedom and prosperity, have been violated by a recent succession of executive. legislative and judicial administrations? Democrat and Republican. If you think it's one or the other, you're part of the problem. You are an American, you don't need a political party to speak for you. Or do you ...

7.01.2007

if you need a steed

Brian and Lisa Fulton train performance horses. Ropers and barrel racers. Their horses always provide a solid return on the investment.
Their contact info:

hot


Dang. It's hot. Like Africa hot. I didn't think it would be this hot. It's really hot. Charcoal lights itself at this temperature. Meat thaws in the freezer because it can't keep up. Only birds and lizards can stand this heat. I bought a dozen eggs and they all hatched before I could get them home. The ice cream blew up like a bad burp. Jeez it's hot. I can't wait for 117 on Wednesday.

elnora and oscar

My Aunt Elnora and Uncle Oscar lived but a stone's throw from the Post Office in Creighton. They had cattle and a chicken barn; selling eggs. Uncle Oscar could roll a cigarette with one hand.
Uncle Reinhold lived just east of the Lutheran Church. In a valley with a fruit tree orchard. He milked cows and planted wheat. He ran a small herd of range cows to give his boys, David and Norman, something to do after the milking was done.
The Denkes ran some territory around the fringes, same as the Geigles. They were like wild indians. Tough and hard working in rough conditions. It doesn't rain much. By June, the grass has cured for the season.
When I was 9 months old, my father died in a car crash. My mother was seriously injured. I was in the car as were my brothers and sister. We all survived. I was turned over to Aunt Elnora and Uncle Oscar. My brothers and sister were divided up elsewhere. The boys went to Uncle Reinhold. I don't know what happened to my sister.
After several months in the hospital, my mother was released and began to collect us. To bring us home; wherever that would be.
The older boys came first or maybe the sister. I was judged too young to be immediately returned.
Years later my Mom and I talked about it. I told her that Aunt Elnora was my favorite Aunt, but I didn't know why. She mentioned two things. That Aunt Elnora was my Dad's favorite sister and that I had spent almost two years in her home. Suddenly, like a bolt of lightning, I knew why I felt like I did about Aunt Elnora.
Uncle Oscar has passed. Aunt Elnora lives in Rapid City. I don't see her very often.
Before my mother passed, she gave me a box of letters. Most were from my father, but a few were from Aunt Elnora carrying on a correspondence with my mother before they were married. Christmas cards, birthday cards, advice regarding marriage and my father. They are priceless.
I'm in the process of scanning them. I have had several offers to do it for me, but I just can't let these letters out of my hands. I don't have permission.