It seems to be my week for things to burn down

I just learned that the house where I lived in 1975, when I was a freshman at the University, burned last Saturday.  Someone left a hot-glue gun on, and it overheated.  From the Texan’s story, it sounds as though the fire might have started in my old room, on the north side of the third floor.  (Ref:  The house faces east, so my room was high on the right side in the Texan photo, but not visible.)

In my time, the house was not a co-op but a privately-owned, old-fashioned boarding house for men, named Bellson Dormitory.  Residents got breakfast and dinner, five days a week, and there was a sort of common-area kitchenette on the first floor if you felt adventurous enough to try cooking anything using the odds and ends of pans and cutlery that had accumulated.  Your washing was your own responsibility, but the owner had a coin-operated washer and dryer in an alcove off the back porch.  A tiny kidney-shaped pool took up the section of the back that hadn’t been paved for parking, for those brave enough to try lying out or swimming.  (I can’t remember whether anyone ever did.)

All the rooms were double-occupancy but mine; I had an oddly-shaped, cut-off room and a walk-in closet that had been carved out of one corner of the attic.  It was strictly from low-rent, but it was low-rent, which was important for my parents’ budget.  The one clearest memory I have was of a resident who wasn’t a student—he was a deal older, and a little “slow,” and was apt to rifle through people’s mail and pilfer it.  The mailman dropped everyone’s mail at mid-morning on a table right next the front door, so anyone who wanted could nose through anyone else’s mail.  We were all pretty honorable about keeping our nosiness in check, except Edward.

The house faced into the side of Old Seton hospital, which had been abandoned earlier in the year when they moved to a new building on 38th Street.  Occasionally I’d wander through the grounds and into the heating plant, which was in an outbuilding, but not often ’cos I felt the old, dead boilers and pipes looked menacing.  (I’ve always had a minor phobia of derelict big machinery.)  The development company that bought the property finally leveled the building and scraped the lot, and now the site’s an ugly, hulking block of student condos—the second set of condos to be built on that site since I left the neighborhood, I might add.

At the end of my freshman year, the owner sold the boarding house to the Navy ROTC, which converted it to their fraternity house (for lack of a better term), the Crow’s Nest.  A few years later, the Navy got tired of it and sold it to the Inter-Campus Co-ops, who have owned it ever since.  All the residents were turned out, and I moved to a tiny apartment at the corner of 45th Street and Speedway, at the very edge of Old Hyde Park, and about five blocks from where I live today.

 

The acacias were loud at night.  Fnord.

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More on last night’s explosion

The explosion turned out to be caused by an unlicensed plumber working on a minor gas leak.  He uncapped the wrong line and turned a leak into a catastrophe.  Film at six.

I drove by the site this afternoon, and it was still all muddled up with the arson investigators, who’d parked a pump truck in an awkward place, and a gaggle of “live” reporters “reporting” on location (for no particular reason; all the fun was long over).  I did see that the roof and trusses had been blown completely off the main structure and were lying in the yard, and there wasn’t enough of the house left to make a good corncrib.

 

The fact is, the media never gets off the interstate unless there’s a major explosion.  Fnord.

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Well, THAT was a wake-up call . . .

SOMEthing just blew up down the block, a bang big enough to shake the house and rattle all the windows.  L thinks that a lot down the block where a new house is being built was responsible; she remarked that when she’d walked by it a couple of days ago, she’d noticed a natural-gas odor.

ETA:  And here come the fire engines, five minutes later.  I only hope it’s not something for which they have to evacuate the block.

ETA2:  The commotion turned out to be a little farther away, and down 47th rather than Avenue H.  However, there’s a parade of people in various states of dress and undress walking up 47th in the direction of Away from whatever’s going on, and toward us, so we could still have some excitement.

 

There was an explosion – everyone started to run.  Fnord.

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Tasks du jour, preparing for M’s birthday sleep-over tonight

  1. Replace the leaky toilet valve in M’s toilet.
  2. Mop up the water on the floor in M’s bathroom.
  3. Pull the leaky tank off our toilet, discover the bolt gaskets are (a) half-perished and (b) integrated with the tank washer, requiring a trip to Home Despot to look for a new washer set.
  4. Discover that the years of our leaky toilet tank have rotted out the sub-flooring to the point it’s not falling through into the undercroft mostly by the grace of God and that it really, REALLY needs to be replaced before I do ANYthing else about the toilet.
  5. Think about who I know that knows anything about subflooring, and realize there isn’t much of anyone and I’m probably on my own.
  6. Make a Waldorf Red Velvet cake while L creates handmade cloth goody bags for M’s sleepover guests.  Allow M to help with some of the things like sifting flour (successful) and cracking an egg (indifferent successful).  Stop in the middle for an impromptu lesson in improper fractions and how you can use them to dirty fewer dishes when you’re cooking.
  7. Stop in the middle of making the cake when I discover that my roll of kitchen parchment just ran out, and my backup roll is
    1. so brittle that I can’t unroll it without it flying into flinders,
    2. stuck together with what feels like old melted wax, all the way through to the core, and
    3. more than 25 years old, when I come to think about it, which might explain the other two phenomena.
  8. Go to the neighborhood grocery, pick up a roll of parchment, a bag of flour, a bottle of cornstarch (Argo’s gone and changed their packaging, and I do NOT like the new package, it has too big a footprint), and a box of salt.
  9. Finish the cake and get it into the oven.
  10. Scrub the kitchen floor on hands and knees, ’cos it badly needs scrubbing.
  11. Forget to set the oven timer but realize it in time to save the cake from burning.  It might be a bit dry, but it’s going to be served à la mode, which will help counteract the dryness.
  12. Finish re-editing the Grateful Dead’s Europe ’72 for rip to CD, since the copy I did have went walkabout.

L had previously suggested I go spend the night someplace else ’cos I probably didn’t want to try to sleep with five giggly eight-year-olds in the next room, and I agreed, so tonight I’m going to San Marcos to visit M’s godparents.

 

My aunt would bring newspapers up, which we used for toilet paper after looking at the pictures.  Fnord.

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Curses!  Foiled again!

For months I’ve been wanting to listen to my father’s and grandfather’s old 78s.  The chief hangup was that I didn’t have a stylus that’d play 78 RPM records without ruining record and stylus both.  Finally I found a source for styli that fit my cartridge and bought one ($30 plus shipping from Nevada).  Now just snap it into the cartridge, and I’m ready to go.

Except I forgot one thing.

My turntable doesn’t go as fast as 78 RPM.

Y’see, by the time my turntable was made (1989 to 1992) nobody but NOBODY thought ANYbody would need or want to play 78s any more, except perhaps for a few antiques junkies who’d be patching together their own Victrolas on their own workbenches, and they could be left to their own devices, so to speak.  So my turntable only has 33 and 45 RPM available.  No 78.

So now I have two choices:  try to find someone willing to recondition/service my old Bogen-Lenco L78 (forty years old if it’s a day, but still has a community of fans and enthusiasts even though the company went out of business in the ’80s) or try to scare up something on Craigslist.

 

Will it go round in circles?  Fnord.

Posted in Music | 11 Comments

Be friends with your chimney sweep. Give him a Christmas box.

Or you will wind up like my neighbors three doors up the street, who thought that burning Christmas present wrappings in the fireplace was a good idea—which it might have been, if they’d kept the chimney swept.  As it is, they had an exciting midnight fire and now have half the north wall of their house covered in blue tarp.

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New information

I now know more than I did about the cataloguing of corporate authors—specifically, about cataloguing high school and college yearbooks.  As a result of this new knowledge, my LibraryThing now contains entries for L’s high-school yearbooks, her late father’s high-school yearbooks, my HS yearbooks, my late brother’s HS yearbooks, my late aunt’s HS yearbook, and her college yearbook.  Still to go are my copies of the Cactus, on which I was about to begin when LT went down suddenly.

 

Video arama has morganatically blessed donkey in concentric redure.  Fnord.

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When the music stopped

It was time and past to cull my LP collection; I don’t have any shelf space for the new stuff I’ve brought home from Half Price recently.  To figure out what I might like to get rid of, I started pulling out some albums for audition that I’d never listened to before, mostly from Jaxon’s collection.  I got through two or three when the records suddenly began sounding fuzzy and muffled, then started skipping (which should NOT have been happening).  Finally it dawned on me that, after ten years, the diamond chip on the stylus (the needle, for you non-audiophiles) had finally worn out and broken off, and I needed to get a nerw one.

So all auditions are now on hold, while I wait for a new stylus to arrive from someplace in Nevada.  And while I was about it, I went on and ordered a 78 RPM stylus too, so I can try playing some of Dad’s and Grandfather’s old square-dance and round-dance 78s, and see which of them might be worth keeping or ripping to CD.

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That Norse Ragna-thingummy may be just around the corner

T called home this afternoon with the news that the Weather had Gone Officially Nuts because, when she came out of Sharpstown Mall mid-afternoon today, it was snowing.

In Houston.

On a Wednesday afternoon in December.

Snow.

In Houston.

 

Tell your troubles to the postman, he will weather or not.  Fnord.

Posted in Minutiae | 1 Comment

Can haz lite, 2

The lights are back on at The Old Gray House, after two weeks (largely) without.

The baleboosteh found out last Sunday that I was still completely stumped about What to Do and no closer to a solution than ever, so she called in a favor from a friend of hers who is a proper electrician and owed her a favor.  It took him two or three visits, but he got the ancient BC cable rounded up into a proper junction box where it won’t be disturbed further, and a good Romex drop where the kitchen light fixture goes, which is what started this whole affair.  He has to come back one more time, to install three additional breakers so I don’t have any breakers that are double-tapped.  While not immediately dangerous—after all, it’s worked for us these past eleven years—double-tapping breakers certainly isn’t best practice either, and I was all for sorting out that bit too, once I learned about it.

L chased off to a square dance in San Antonio this evening, so M and I went to the Capitol with Butterfly and Gryphon and a couple of their friends for the annual KUT-FM Christmas carol sing-along (AKA “Sing Along with John (Aielli)”) and official lighting of the Capitol Christmas tree and Congress Avenue decorations.  Afterward, the entire mass of people was invited to stroll down and up the Avenue, where there were buskers, dancers, bands, and DIY participatory thingies of one kind and another, but the crowd was pretty thick and M started complaining about her legs hurting (I swear, that girl complains more about her legs than I do about mine!), so we came home, made hot chocolate, and watched Endora’s weekly cartoon collection.

 

A leaf from the Georgian cassette is a particarrion of the architrave.  Fnord.

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