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Jeremy's journal

We say to the apathetic, Where there's a will, there's a way, as if the brute realities of the world did not amuse themselves each day by turning that phrase on its head.

José Saramago


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Thursday, January 27th, 2005

🦋 Nathan Zuckerman is a Better Writer than Philip Roth

Hey, anyone want to talk about Roth? I'm reading American Pastoral right now and really enjoying it.

posted afternoon of January 27th, 2005: Respond
➳ More posts about American Pastoral

Wednesday, January 26th, 2005

Woo-hoo! Today I finished and sent in my application to the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Columbia University. If I measure up to their standards, I will start work on my Master's degree in Computer Science this fall.

posted evening of January 26th, 2005: Respond

Friday, January 14th, 2005

I sent the following note to my senator today; I'd encourage you to do likewise:

Dear Senator Corzine:

Republicans have started to indicate the possibility of defaulting on the debt owed to Social Security -- we must nip this in the bud! The most recent indication was in Senator Wayne Allen's (R-CO) comment that he does not believe the money will ever be repaid to the fund.

The time is here for a resolution reaffirming the government's intention to repay fully all outstanding Treasury bills. Note that section 4 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution states,

"The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned."

Republican lawmakers who call into question the debt owed to Social Security, are violating their oath of office and should be repudiated.

Regards,
Jeremy Osner
South Orange

posted morning of January 14th, 2005: Respond
➳ More posts about Politics

Wednesday, January 12th, 2005

My last two posts don't really make sense together, I just realized, without a key bit of information which I omitted -- on Saturday I took the cracked violin to Millburn Music Center, where the repairman quoted me a considerably lower price, $75, for a simple glue-up -- Gagliardi's estimate was for a full repair which would involve taking the violin apart and putting a patch on the inside. So that is what I meant by "my fiddle is still in the shop"; I did not go crazy and send it out for the full repair.

posted morning of January 12th, 2005: Respond
➳ More posts about Fiddling

Sunday, January 9th, 2005

🦋 Psyched

Jammed with Bob today while a sick Janis moaned in the next room. My fiddle is still in the shop but I was playing Bob's violin on a lot of songs, and switching off with him between violin and guitar, a lot of fun -- I'm definitely picking it back up very quickly, I was getting how to do double-stops and open string drones, even very haltingly up in second position on the E string. This is going to be a great thing. I ordered Alan Kaufman's Beginning Old-Time Fiddle from ALibris for book-learning, and John Salyers' "Home Recordings 1941-42" from The Appalachian Center, for ear training.

posted evening of January 9th, 2005: Respond
➳ More posts about Music

Friday, January 7th, 2005

🦋 One step forward, two steps back, one step forward...

John finished repairing the bows and I picked them up from him at lunchtime. Very nice -- but unfortunately the man he works for, Yung Chin, took one look at the crack in the violin's body and said I should not be playing it -- that tension from being in tune will destroy the instrument. So... I gave a call to Richard Gagliardi to find out how much it would cost to fix such a crack. His low-end estimate was $2000, which is not going to happen.

A bit dejected, I surfed over to E-Bay to find out how much entry-level violins are running -- turns out they are quite cheap. So, I bought a new instrument for $51. This should keep me happy for a while.

posted afternoon of January 7th, 2005: Respond

Wednesday, January 5th, 2005

🦋 WWOZ

First post from my new laptop -- yay! I finally have a computer I can listen to music on! I was reading Dylan's Chronicles yesterday, the section where he is recording "Oh Mercy" in New Orleans and he talked about how New Orleans has the best radio stations in the world, specifically WWOZ. And I had the thought, why not see if they broadcast over the web these days? Lo and behold, they do! So now I'm sitting here listening to New Orleans radio and writing a blog post...

Update: D'oh! that's a Z, not an R. All fixed.

posted evening of January 5th, 2005: Respond

🦋 Violin

I am taking up the violin again, after about 20 years of not playing at all. I had been thinking about it for a while; while we were in California at Thanksgiving I asked my mother how much she thought a lower-end playable violin would cost. Turns out, free! Mom replied that my sister Blythe had my grandfather's violin (the one I played as a kid) but was not playing it; and Blythe agreed to pass it on to me. A few months gone by, and now I have it! (Miriam brought it with her when she came back from visiting the family for Christmas.) The bows need new hair -- I am giving them tonight to John Aniano (friend from CJWA and from the Woodcentral message boards) to be repaired. But even in the current state, I played it some last night and the tone was very nice indeed -- and my fingers seem to remember their positions pretty well, 20 years later.

(By a funny coincidence, Bob got loaned a violin a few weeks ago and he is trying to learn to play too. This should open up some nice new territory for jamming.)

posted afternoon of January 5th, 2005: 1 response

Thursday, December 30th, 2004

🦋 Dovetails cont.

This evening I glued up the frame for a section of the wall unit I am building -- I described cutting the dovetails in my previous post. The end result is pretty good (if slightly off square); but the glueing-up process can only be described as a failure.

The plan was as follows:

  1. Lay the right-hand side board on the bench top, outer face down.
  2. Put (Elmer's white) glue on the right-hand pins of the top and bottom boards, and join them to the side board.
  3. Slide the backing boards into the grooves cut in the top and bottom boards.
  4. Put glue on the left-hand pins of the top and bottom boards, and join the left-hand side board to them.

Straightforward enough -- what I didn't realize was I needed something to hold the top and bottom boards close to each other as I was sliding in the backing boards... I see now that what I should have done, after about the first three backing boards were in place, was fix a clamp to hold everything in place. (I think but am not sure, that my longest bar clamp would be just about long enough to do the job.) Instead, when the backing boards started falling out, I ran upstairs and started screaming bloody murder for Ellen to come help me hold boards in place. And she did, and everything came out all right in the end, except I wish I could keep my head on straight when a problem comes up.

posted evening of December 30th, 2004: Respond
➳ More posts about Sylvia's room

Wednesday, December 29th, 2004

🦋 Dovetails

I've been working for a while now on a wall unit/desk for Sylvia's room; making pretty good progress. I'd say I'm a little ways past the halfway point which means delivery around February. Right now I am framing the upper level of shelf units (the piece is made up of 2 lower units, 2 upper units, the desk, and some smaller "cubby" pieces), and using dovetails to join the frames together. This is about the 4th time I have cut dovetails, and the first I am using them somewhere they will not be visible. (Which is actually probably the better thing to do first -- but it did not work out that way.)

I cut all the pins yesterday and the day before, and last night did my first set of tails, second set this morning. It is going pretty quick and the results are noticeably better than any I have previously done (with one possible exception -- the cherry dovetails I did for a jewelry box came out pretty nice but those don't count because (a) they took me a really long time and (b) I never finished building the jewelry box). They fit, quite tight, with very little adjustment. ("Adjustment" = "messing around with a chisel, trying to make the dovetails fit even though the cuts were not in the proper place".) I'm a little surprised because the cuts are visibly not exactly straight nor square, and the marking imprecise; my conclusion is that dovetails (at least in softwood) are a forgiving joint.

Update: Finished the 3rd and 4th sets of tails, an hour and a half from marking to fitting. And very little messing around with a chisel.

posted morning of December 29th, 2004: Respond
➳ More posts about Home improvement

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