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CROSSING BALSAM
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 4
Chapter 6
Chapter 8

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© 2001-2009 Perish the Thought Associates. Contents are the property of contributors. If you steal anything, we WILL hunt you down and hurt you.

 
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Chapter 4

Cleve Combs entered Luke's office before eight o'clock the next morning with a host of new faces. "Most of my staff are back from summer conferences," he began. "I want you to meet the team you're going to be working with."

They introduced themselves: Herbert Weatherly, Assistant Superintendent; Robin Carlson, Vocational Director; Harriett Sparks, Director of Library Services and Dr. Angie Cash, Special Programs Coordinator.

"I've assigned Herb as your mentor, Dr. Allen. He'll set up some meetings I want you to attend. We need to be certain that everyone's on the same page. Get us some coffee and we'll talk awhile." Cleve Combs did not ask if Luke had other appointments.

"I'll assist with the coffee," volunteered Angie Cash. She followed Luke into the work room and began to prepare a tray of coffee and condiments. "I understand you bought the Smatherly's cabin."

"Yes, it was our first choice. We felt fortunate to get it."

"My husband and I live above you, up near Eastwind Pass. We'll call to invite you to dinner next week, if you think that will be convenient."

"I'll tell Ginny to expect your call. We'll be delighted to join you for dinner."

"I want you to understand something, Luke." Angie Cash's voice lowered as she glanced toward the door. "I did not want to attend this meeting."

Luke sensed that he had met his first professional ally in Balsam Valley. "Thanks."

••••

Cleve Combs tilted his chair away from the conference table and began to pick at a spot on the back of his head. "The people in this room are the main players on my team, Dr. Allen. I make very few decisions that they are not involved in. They're my direct link to what's going on in the schools." He dropped his chair to the floor and leaned across the table toward Luke. "I expect you to take them into your confidence, to trust them, to consult with them and to let them be your link to me. Not that I can't work with you directly, but I have to rely on those who can help you become a part of the team. Do you understand?"

"I understand."

"They know the philosophy with which our system is operated. They know the problems you'll encounter as you get to know your faculty. You must trust them and respect their opinions."

"I understand."

"I want you to be a member of this team. This team has the ability to assist you. We know that you are bringing in some new ideas, but it is important that my team have the opportunity to discuss your ideas before you put them into effect." He hesitated. "I don't want you talking to the Board about anything again, until you have first discussed it fully with this team. Do you understand, Dr. Allen?"

"I understand fully, Dr. Combs."

"To assist you, I am going to have at least one member of my staff in your school every day as soon as the faculty arrives and maybe for the first few weeks of school. I can arrange for an office to be set up for them here."

"I don't think that's necessary, Dr. Combs. You and your staff are always welcome here, but you have enough to do. I prefer that you let me work with my assistants and the faculty." Luke hesitated, attempting to assess the Superintendent's reaction. "I am concerned about what other principals might think. I'm willing to maintain daily telephone contact with Mr. Weatherly, but I don't think having a district administrator assigned here would be the best approach." The silence was broken by the drum-roll of Cleve Combs fingers on the edge of Luke's desk.

"Maybe not. We'll hold off on that idea, unless I see the need to assist you." Cleve Combs turned to his staff. "We best be on our way." The team stood in unison. "Herb and I are going to speak with your assistants. If your job had been based on looks, that cute little brunette assistant of yours would have gotten it hands down." The team laughed uncomfortably.

Luke swallowed his anger. "Are you referring to Darrell Thorton, Dr. Combs?" The Superintendent's eyes narrowed, then he smiled.

"You know good and well who I am referring to. Don't pretend you have not noticed her." Cleve Combs winked at him. "I can pick'um, can't I?"

"You certainly can, sir." Luke feigned a smile.

••••

"Need a refill?" Mrs. Workman stood in the doorway with a coffee pot.

"Thanks."

"Your appointment with Coach Starnes needs to be rescheduled. Mrs. Lynch, chair of the Leadership Team will be here at nine-fifteen, the fire marshal will be here at ten-thirty, you have lunch with your assistants and you meet with the counselors at two o'clock. Tonight you have the Parent Boosters' clubs. Oh yes, Wayne Bosman called to extend his regards. He and his wife returned yesterday."

"See if Coach Starnes can be here around three. I'll meet him in his office."

"Did Bosman leave a number?"

She handed him a note containing Wayne Bosman's unlisted telephone number.

"Thanks, and I remember your suggestion."

"Meet him out of town, Dr. Allen. I don't have good feelings about his returning so quickly from vacation."

"Vacations are often interrupted for good reasons."

"This is different, Dr. Allen."

He tried to humor her. "You think we have a dark moon rising?"

"I pray not."

•••

Declining coffee, Marti Lynch breezed through preliminary greetings with the grace of a woman who had done her homework. "I have a few questions, a couple of suggestions and I'll be on my way, Dr. Allen."

Marti Lynch was a dynamic three-time Teacher of the Year ("...They had to select someone so I volunteered...") who taught French and sponsored the debate team. A single mother of two elementary-age boys, she admitted that her after-school life was occupied with soccer, laundry, PTA meetings and a favorite soap opera that she had watched religiously for fourteen years. Mrs. Workman also identified her as Ken Holmes' "friend."

"Mark my word," MayEllen forecast, "there's going to be a wedding come summer...."

He had instinctively liked the young woman who chaired the faculty Leadership Team. "Fire away," Luke quipped.

"Don't use that expression." There was a twinkle in her eye. "You might jinx both of us."

Luke chuckled. "You have tenure and I have a contract, Mrs. Lynch. They can't touch us until the next elections." He sensed they would work well together.

Her questions concerned funding. She also suggested establishing a Finance committee to review department requests. Luke was impressed with her insight.

"There are two concerns you must deal with on your own, however."

"Only two?"

"Only two that relate to the Leadership Team right now. Two biggies: the guidance office and the library. No one from either area is on the Leadership Team."

"The Team is elected by the faculty. I can't appoint someone to an elected committee."

"No, but you can set up an advisory council of some type. Call it what you want, but get those two women -- I mean -- areas involved so they will not feel left out."

"You are asking me to be resourceful, eh?" He admired her directness.

"I'm asking you to get them off our backs. They are calling every member of the Leadership Team at ungodly hours of the day and night, asking questions and planting seeds of dissension. You need to know this so you can be pro-active rather than re-active, using your terms."

"So who are the 'them' you refer to, Mrs. Lynch?"

"Mrs. Switzer and Ms. Devron."

"I'll see what I can do. Why don't you be direct?" he chided. "I meet Mrs. Devron this afternoon, by the way."

"Innocent, desperate and well-meaning people tend to be direct. I am definitely not innocent, I am not yet desperate, but I am well-meaning. I take my responsibilities seriously."

"Me, too, Mrs. Lynch. I look forward to working with you."

•••

"I will have him call you, Dr. Allen. We both wish you well in your new position."

"Thank you, Mrs. Bosman. I look forward to meeting you and your husband."

"I hope that is possible." She hesitated. "In the near future, Dr. Allen."

•••

Wayne Bosman called shortly. "Dr. Allen?"

"I hope your vacation was enjoyable, Mr. Bosman."

Wayne Bosman chuckled. "What else do you say to a man who has been run out of the Valley on a proverbial rail?"

"I meant only to greet you ...."

"Quite all right. I apologize. It is just that I have never spoken with a replacement, at least under these circumstances."

"If you are not comfortable in talking with me, I understand. I am simply responding to your offer to assist, and ....."

"No, no, no. I'm just pre-occupied right now. And I do want to assist you. You should know that talking with me is not what the Superintendent or the Board would want. Particularly under the current circumstances."

"I don't know how to respond, Mr. Bosman."

"Nor does anyone. Many assumed that I left willingly. That's far from the truth. The Board somehow buried the fact that I refused to resign. They placed me on administrative leave with pay until our lawyers could work out some type of settlement. There were so many rumors that most believe I either resigned or retired."

Luke made a mental note to review the newspaper records.

"I don't want to involve you or the school, Dr. Allen, but I have no choice. I'll be filing a law suit within a few weeks. I'd like to meet with you privately before a formal filing. It's urgent, Dr. Allen. You are responsible for all school records right now and I need to talk with you."

Luke did not respond.

"I will meet with you alone, with you and my attorney, or with you and your attorney."

"I don't have an attorney."

"Get one. Get one from out-of-town, far away from any contacts with Balsam Valley. Wait. I have a suggestion. Meet me privately. You can record our conversation."

"I'll have to get back to you, Mr. Bosman."

"I beg you to keep this in utmost confidence. My life and the security of your school are at risk."

"I'll keep this in confidence and will get back in touch with you."

••••

Luke asked Mrs. Workman to send letters to Ray Starnes, Lucinda Switzer, Hazel Devron, Holli Henderson, Dawn Murphy, Greg West and the presidents of each parent boosters group -- inviting them to join the Foresight Committee. The purpose of the committee was to coordinate long-range planning and funding for curricular and extra-curricular programs at the high school.

••••

Rusty continued to bark and growl as he ran from the front door to the window facing the garage. "Settle down, Rusty," Ginny called from the loft. "What you hear, fella?" Ginny saw a shadow at the window as she descended the stairs. Startled, she rushed to the switch for the outside lights.

Luke would have turned on these lights from the garage. She heard heavy footsteps on the porch. Latching the chain lock, she peered through the view-sight. Without unlatching the chain, she opened the door.

"I know it's late, Mrs. Allen, but I was in the neighborhood." Cleve Combs had his hand on the screen door as if to enter.

"I saw you at the window, Dr. Combs. Luke had a boosters' club meeting tonight." She made no effort to unlatch the door.

"I didn't mean to frighten you. You've got a built-in alarm system in that dog there." Rusty continued to growl at the voice beyond the door.

"Luke will be late and I am actually very busy, Dr. Combs."

"I was just in the neighborhood, Mrs. Allen. I'll stop by again sometime."

"It will be best if you call first, Dr. Combs."

"I'll do that, Mrs. Allen. I just wanted to meet you is all. We've never had the chance to talk."

"I'm sure Luke and I will have the opportunity to visit with you and your wife soon, Dr. Combs."

"Call me Cleve, Mrs. Allen."

"Good night, Dr. Combs. It would be best if you call before visiting again." She closed the door. It was several minutes before she saw his car lights pull out of the driveway. He had known that Luke was in a meeting....


Posted at 10:50 pm by Gull
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A Scrappleface Holidaze Video

Funny.  Absolutely -- one of the funniest ... uhhhhh ... holidaze spiffs I've seen ....  the ending is hilarious.

 


Posted at 09:46 pm by Gull
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Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Chapter 1

Luke Allen's jeep shifted into overdrive as the ascent to Balsam Peak steepened. Wrapped in a gray mist of light rain and fog, the Peak towered above the winding highway. "We'll see better days, m'lady," he promised, laughing aloud at his reference to the peak as female. "It must have something to do with conquest," he mused to himself. "Or the association with Mother Earth." And a vision of Ginny flashed through his mind. "Ginny would know the answer," he concluded. He made a mental note to ask her.

The six-hour drive had been uneventful. Traffic had been light; there had been time to reflect on his career move, what he knew about the school he would be leading, what he and Ginny anticipated in their new community. Rusty-dog had made two requests to stop. Ginny called it S & S -- stretch and sustenance. He often wondered if she created those phrases spontaneously or if she retrieved them from some secret anthology. "Her mind," he reflected. Thirty years ago, he had fallen in love with a voice from the back of the classroom. Falling in love with the rest of her had been easy. He wanted her with him now as he approached their new home. He would sleep restlessly tonight, awaiting her arrival with the moving van tomorrow.

Rusty-dog stirred fitfully in the back, disturbed by the subtle change in elevation and the rays of sunlight that flashed through breaking fog . "We'll stop here," Luke assured him, pulling into the overlook. An emerald valley of pastures and farmland lay below, a respite beneath towering, craggy peaks. He closed his eyes to savor the image, wondering how this terrain could possibly harbor the dissension he had been hired to dispel.

He remembered another Valley.... He saw again the empty eyes and sensed again the delusion that such beauty could manifest the terror they lived night after night after night .... The rockets and mortars that pierced the darkness .... The silent shadows that stalked their mountain fortress, crawling through the claymores to sacrifice themselves in the name of what? If he could think rationally about that era of agony, cleansing it of all political wrappings, he knew the answer.... Regardless of the ideological trappings, it was their home. What claim had we made to it? In whose name had he and thousands been sacrificed and at what price? Rusty's tug at the leash pulled him back to reality....

••••

The rustic, split-log cabin lay nestled in a wooded cove on the eastern slope beneath Balsam Peak. It had been their only choice -- secluded, yet only ten-minutes from town. Ginny had wanted space for flowers and a small garden. He had wanted acreage for horses. The open loft above the living quarters would become a study... An open deck, situated to capture the fleeting spectrum of sunlight against craggy peaks, would be added to the back.....

"Home," Luke proclaimed as Rusty-dog bounded from the jeep. The damp, sweet aroma of green firewood filled his nostrils. Luke stepped to the porch, caressing the weathered logs that supported the shed roof, absorbing the panorama of green earth framed in gray stone and glistening clouds. He watched as Rusty scampered helter-skelter among patches of shrubs, sniffing for intruders and performing the instinctive ritual of marking his new domain.

From the beginning of their intimacy, Ginny had theorized that the historic battle-of-the-raised-toilet-seat evolved from a domestication of the male ritual to mark his territory. Whether or not her theory had merit, she had long ago conditioned him to lower the seat.... She never asked him to do it; rather, she impressed upon him the image of the male dog, lifting his leg .... "Even a dog puts his leg down when he finishes," she had said.

Luke chuckled aloud, stepped to the edge of the porch and exercised his own ritual on the land.

Inside the cabin, new lodge pole furniture stood stiffly in the living room and bedroom. A basket of fruit sat on the kitchen counter; a crock pot simmered on the stove. In a handwritten note, Realtor Dawn Murphy apologized for the plastic utensils and dishes. He and Ginny had liked her, agreeing that she would be one of their first dinner guests. He called Ginny. She recognized his loneliness. "Hon," she reminded him, "I will be there tomorrow afternoon." "Hurry safely," he responded. "The furniture needs to be arranged."

••••

Members of the Board rose from a conference table to greet him. "Dr. Allen, welcome." Board Chairman Dell Groce, owner of the local granary, extended a firm, calloused hand. Luke had admired the chairman's skill in conducting his preliminary interview. " Welcome to the Valley."

"Great to be here," Luke responded. The refrain from an Ahe Shon Valley epitaph flickered through his mind."...I shall fear no evil, for I am the meanest...."

Luke Allen exchanged pleasantries with each Board member. He and Ginny had met them informally in breakfast, lunch and dinner meetings two weeks ago. "I arranged a schedule," the Superintendent had informed him. "No more than two Board members can meet at one time," he explained. "We're sticklers for doing things right." Tonight was Luke's second official meeting with the full Board. The philosophical discourse had been concluded two weeks earlier when he had signed a contract as principal of the largest high school in the district.

Leonard Vernon, a middle-aged "local" who had never left the valley, was loan officer at the community bank. Bob Lyles, former investment broker and self-described "tree hugger," had returned to the valley to convert his family's farmhouse into an inn. Emily West, vice-chairman of the Board, was a housewife and mother of three young children. Her husband was director of extension services for the regional community college. Elsie Mooney introduced herself for the third time as a widow and retired teacher who had loved children all her life.

Social pleasantries continued until the arrival of Superintendent Cleveland Combs. He apologized, citing a resignation at the elementary school which he had to handle. "But no problem," he assured the Board. "We have three prime applicants, one I know personally. We can discuss it later."

"Let's get started." Dell Groce assumed his role as Board Chairman with confidence. "This is a planning session to discuss issues and expectations. We need to be on the same page, Dr. Allen, so that you know where we stand and what we expect. Simply stated, you have the credentials and the reputation for solving problems. We have problems for you to solve."

"I am not a miracle worker, but I'm a hard worker," Luke Allen acknowledged. "Thank you for your confidence."

"But if I can pull the school together," Luke had rationalized with Ginny, "we can retire there. We both love the mountains...." Although she had reservations about this job, she was tired of the violence in the inner-city schools where he had worked for twenty-eight years. "We need a break, Sweets," he pleaded. "Kids who go to Sunday School don't make pipe bombs." She had conceded. The cabin and leather lodge pole furniture had been his concession.

"We need to bridge some troubled waters." The Superintendent stared out a window behind Luke as he spoke. His eyes drifted slowly to Luke's. "There are folks here who are angry and hurt. There is a small group who will try to deepen the rifts we have. You will have to work carefully with these folks. You're described as a 'people person.' We expect you to use that skill. You bring us fresh blood, fresh ideas and new beginnings. That is why you were chosen by this Board."

There was something in the Superintendent's voice, something about his mannerisms that Luke had not previously noted. Was he angry with me? With the Board?

Ginny's assessment of Cleve Combs flashed through Luke's mind: "...He reminds me of an amoeba," she assessed. From his elongated face, small lashless eyes protruded above his bulbous nose, his mouth too small and his recessive chin. "Unsavory, unkempt," she added. Luke had chided his wife. "Not to worry, Sweets. I promise never to leave you alone with him... " Their discussion of Cleve Combs had then digressed to assumptions about "mountain mentality" and the new lifestyle they were about to experience.....

"Will you enlighten me about these groups?" Luke asked, anticipating a description of traditional conflicts between academics and athletics, soccer parents versus football parents, departmental budgets, fundraising, traditional programming versus innovations, and of course, the law suit being resolved out of court.

"You'll recognize them, in time." There was an edge of curtness in the Superintendent's voice. "I want you to find out for yourself." Luke was aware of shuffling papers and nervous coughs.

"Can we discuss my staff? Are there pending personnel actions?" All eyes turned to Cleve Combs.

Combs hesitated, staring again out the window behind Luke. "Your staff is pretty good. You may have to weed some of them out. The troublemakers, that is. I'll tell you about them as you go along. Your guidance department needs help. Your coaching staff is solid. You have one assistant who applied for your job, you know. All your assistants are young and have made some mistakes with kids and parents and such, but you can bring them along."

Luke's attention was drawn to Combs' hands. His left hand intermittently clinched into a fist while the fingers of his right hand drum-rolled on the table. Cleve Combs was an angry man, impatient and accustomed to being in control......

"I want to talk about the children," Elsie Mooney interjected. She had been appointed to the Board after the death of a former member. "They are important to me. Our achievement scores have dropped, our dropout rate is up, and I am concerned about the vandalism." Mr. Lyles, Mrs. West and Mr. Vernon nodded in agreement.

"Those are also my primary concerns, Mrs. Mooney," he reassured her. "I have suggestions that I will present for your consideration--"

"There are boundaries we need to discuss, Dr. Allen. I don't want you to get involved in the other law suits." The Superintendent's face reddened.. "Stay away from those issues, no matter what you hear."

"Other law suits?" Luke knew of only one law suit involving the removal of a coach. He had been assured that it was being resolved out of court.

"The public knows about one law suit, Dr. Allen. The Board's directed me to resolve the others before they become public." Cleveland Combs' mounting rage caught Luke off-guard.

It was the Chairman of the Board who softened the anger that had filled the air."You'll have our full support in bringing the school and the community together, Dr. Allen. Our full support. You have my word on that." For the first time in his administrative career, Luke Allen was unable to assess the emotional scenario he was witnessing.

Dell Groce's eyes narrowed as he turned to his Superintendent. "Can we return to our agenda?" It was not a request.

The Superintendent nodded abruptly, rocked back in his chair and began to scratch at a spot on the back of his head. The muscles in his jaws flexed, as if chewing unspoken words. His demeanor did not change as each Board member summarized sections of a prepared report. One hour and twenty-three minutes later, Combs addressed Luke Allen without eye contact.

"Dr. Allen, I'll meet with you to discuss any questions you may have. If the Board has nothing else, I'll see you at the press conference in the morning." Luke left the room, relieved that he had a written report to peruse.

Behind him, walls and doors could not contain the shouts of angry men and the hysterical voice of a former elementary teacher who loved children.

"Kids who go to Sunday School don't make pipe bombs....."

Luke Allen felt as if he had been handed a pipe bomb.

••••

Luke folded his tie and jacket on the seat of the jeep and turned toward the din of voices behind the fence. "Dr. Allen? Hi." A woman had stepped from behind the garage, holding a soda in one hand and a beer in the other. "Take one and I'll give you a welcoming hand." He took the soda from her right hand. "Luke Allen," he offered. Her hand, though firm and steady, had retained the coolness of the can. "I'm Celia Norman. Welcome to Balsam Valley." Luke followed her through a gated path to the pool behind her home.

Fortunately, a soft breeze dissipated Celia Norman's heavy cologne. Luke sniffed to hold back a sneeze. "Summer cold?" she asked. "Must be something in the air." Only Ginny knew of his allergies to all things Avon.

"Breeze is blowing through the north pass. That means rain this time of year. It won't take you long to learn to read the winds." She turned to walk backwards as she shared this tidbit of lore. He watched the shimmer of light off her copper brown hair. (She's a bottle brunette, Ginny would clarify.) Luke sneezed. Celia stopped suddenly, stooped to gently pull a leaf off a plant beside the walkway and handed it to Luke. "Break this and sniff it." He did as he was instructed. His sinuses cleared immediately. "Phew -- what is it?" She smiled. "Just a medicinal herb. I'll give you a cutting later." She had moved closer to him. He stepped back to sniff the leaf again. "My wife's the gardener, best that you give it to her when she arrives."

The Principal and Assistant Principal Association met monthly at locations hosted alternately by administrators in the six Balsam Valley schools. Meetings normally focused on current problems, funding and team-building. It was the Association president's responsibility to submit concerns and reports to the Superintendent. Conduct and decorum varied with the location of meetings. The meeting that Luke Allen entered was a private, informal gathering of local school administrators, half of whom were noticeably drunk.

"Folks, meet Dr. Luke Allen." Her shrill voice silenced the guffaws of joke-tellers and the mutterings of a small group that huddled around a table. A muscular young man in his mid-thirties hoisted himself from the pool. "We've heard a lot about you, Dr. Allen. I'm Ken Holmes, one of your assistants."

The evening passed quickly and congenially. As each administrator introduced himself, Luke registered a mental association. Celia Norman was the only female. Ken Holmes, former baseball coach and had been recently appointed assistant principal. His third assistant, Darrell Thorton, rose unsteadily from a lounge by the pool and introduced himself as the curriculum director at the high school. "Pardon my impediment," he slurred. "My tongue becomes disabled when I drink."

Only one principal was under the age of fifty and each was a native of Balsam Valley. "You are the first outsider in four years," noted Layell Moses, principal of the smallest elementary school in the Valley. "Who was the other?" Luke asked. "Your predecessor. He left for the Bahamas last month." Luke made a mental note to contact him.

"Steaks are ready!" Celia Norman announced. They ate at clustered tables, discussing the budget freeze that the Board had imposed, subject to receipt of state allocations. "Is that a normal practice?" Luke asked. "It is for this district," he was advised. "Seems as if we have a habit of overspending to ensure that we lose nothing," contributed Manny Billings, the middle school principal. "Smaller school districts have to be resourceful," he added.

Luke was tired and wanted to talk with Ginny. "Early morning for me, folks," using the colloquial expression he had heard others use. "Let's have lunch soon," Stan Logan, the PAPA president suggested. "Sure," Luke responded. Celia Norman rose to escort him to his car. "Not necessary," he told her. "I remember the way. Good night to everyone. Celia, Darrell and Ken --- see you in the morning."

••••

Rusty was standing in the drive as the jeep approached. "Missed me, huh." Rusty jumped to Luke's chest and delivered sloppy dog-kisses to his face. "I missed you, too." Luke embraced the dog. "Let's call our best friend. You need to tell her you miss her."

Ginny answered on the first ring. "So how's it going?" she asked.

"Would you accept a collect obscene telephone call, ma'am?"

"No, but my husband will. Just a minute."

"Stop it. I'm too tired to laugh."

"So who's laughing?"

"It was a long day. I need you with me."

"I'll be there tomorrow afternoon, Hon."

"Not soon enough. You're missing the first rain on our new roof."

"There'll be others to share. Get that bottle of wine from the cooler in back of the jeep. You may have two glasses after you take a hot shower."

"Thanks. I'll chill the wine until you're here."

"Tomorrow afternoon, Hon. I'll call you as soon as I arrive."

"I love you."

"Ditto."

••••

Although she was no longer a member of the School Leadership Team, media director Lucinda Switzer was determined to attend the breakfast meeting with the new principal. To wit, she had suggested that faculty members provide and serve breakfast in the school cafeteria. As self-appointed breakfast coordinator, she planned to arrive early. "You have only one chance for a first impression," she had reminded herself. She wanted to be the first to greet Luke Allen. It was Lucinda Switzer's nature to be first -- first to know, first to protest, first to complain, first to criticize, first to alibi. Failure to be reelected to the Leadership Team had been a first for her, as well. Those who engineered her defeat would pay, she had vowed to herself. They would pay as dearly as had the former principal who challenged her.

••••

After meeting with the Superintendent to submit his resignation, Clay Wellington had spent the rest of the night packing. He had buckled, he knew. He wanted to fight the allegations, but the Superintendent had convinced him that, win or lose, his career would be finished. "No one will hire you with this in your background," Combs had suggested. "Resign and put this behind you. I'll help you find another job. If you stay, they'll either drag you to court or word will get out and you'll be ruined."

He had written his resignation by hand. He was tired of meeting with Combs, having to recount again and again his denials. "Resign," Combs had offered, "and I'll do everything in my power to convince her parents to drop their threat to sue."

In the early morning hours, Clay Wellington, former science teacher at Balsam Valley Elementary School, sat down to compose a letter to his parents and sister. He wrote of his love for them and stated his solemn dying oath that, no matter what they may ever hear about him, he had never harmed or taken advantage of a child. Clay Wellington then removed a .357 handgun from his backpack and placed its barrel in his mouth.

••••

School secretary MayEllen Workman awakened twelve minutes before the alarm clock was to have sounded. Hearing no other sounds in the house, she moved quietly from her bed to a locked cupboard across the room. She did not want to waken her mother who slept down the hall. She removed a key from the chain around her neck and unlocked the cupboard.

In the faint dawn of morning, she carried her talisman, candles and potions to the window that faced the rising sun. This was her private altar before the Goddess. She cast her circle, banishing from it all negatives, allowing only love to remain within. She called the Quarters, began her ritual, and focused on the poppet in her hand.

She had fashioned the poppet in his likeness, made of cloth and cotton, attaching herbs for wisdom and guidance, including a handwritten note he had left in her office. She called upon her personal deities to give him strength in restoring peace and harmony to the school. Finishing her ritual and closing the circle, she left the poppet on the altar next to the burning candle.

Calmly energized, MayEllen Workman left her Sacred Space to prepare for the new day. Eighteen miles away, Luke Allen awakened, refreshed and eager to begin his first day as Principal of Balsam High School.

 


Posted at 07:50 am by Gull
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Monday, December 18, 2006
Time to 'Lax ....

Unless something earth-shattering (God forbid) happens, I'm gonna spend the next few weeks, days or so jabbering about personal stuff.  Not that anyone may notice, mind you.

Never done much personal stuff online ..... Stalkers who get toooo up-close and personal make you think twice about telling too much .... Maybe I'll give 3rd person narrative a whirl -- mix and match some family stuff with the personal.

Who's to know, eh?  Better still -- who's to tell?  But me, that is ....

 


Posted at 06:45 pm by Gull
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Sunday, December 17, 2006
ROMNEY WATCH

I've just started an unofficial Romney Watch blog roll, featuring blogs and articles that refer to Mitt Romney's run for the Presidency in 2008.

Naturally -- most of the links will be supportive of his candidacy.  Included, however, will be any reputable commentaries which relate to Romney's qualifications and electability.

If interested in being added to the roll, send me an email.   You're welcome to simply add the script to your site, if you prefer. 

Here's the script:  delete the [brackets]

[<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript" src="http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display.php?r=7ee704348d75bf62f4ec33f601a29450"></script>]

You're most welcome to suggest relative links!

 


Posted at 08:21 pm by Gull
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Saturday, December 16, 2006
(My) Person of the Year

  I just saw a preview of tonight's pending announcement of CNN-Time's Person of the Year at 8:00 pm EST on CNN.

If I had a vote (or were a panalist or even subscribed to either Time or CNN), I humbly suggest that Barbaro should be named "person of the year."

I can't think of a public figure  who more appropriately profiles  Barbaro's winning spirit, his  unfathomed determination, his response to an amazingly successful combination of science and technology, and the universal support which he has garnered.

Not a slack in his profession, either.

Go, Barbaro, Go! 

You're a winner, Barbaro -- a brave creature who has won the hearts of everyone who has prayed for your continuing recovery.

Note:  since I'm boycotting CNN, I'll catch the results on the net.

UPDATE:  Dear Times/CNN:  Thanks for selecting ME as person of the year.  Even though selected, I graciously decline this dubious honor and suggest you seriously reconsider Barbaro as a worthy recipient of this :::coughcough:::: esteemed award. 

Sincerely,

Me (or You or whoever)

 


Posted at 03:24 pm by Gull
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Drawing Lines in the Sand

I'm with Diane West and Powerline

I've said for weeks that it's time for the US to draw a few lines in the sand (including political regions or states) in Iraq.  It's now time for a new coalition.  Call it Enjoined Parties

Set timelines to either join the new coalition or get your butt blasted militarily.  Pave a few sand dunes (the way we should have done in the jungles of Nam) and the infidels will get the message.

Let this new coalition of Enjoined Parties consist of current coalition troops, government military forces and regional/tribal militias (bribed and freely enjoined) who agree to stop the madness.

Let the centuries-old religious war-mongers have at it (in designated areas) while  Enjoined Parties weed out terrorist groups AND give the Iraqi government (politically, geographically, tribally and militarily) a timeline to get on the road toward a peaceful and prosperous coexistence.

Forget those Rules of Engagement (ROE's) which restrict the US from using full-military force to protect our troops and Enjoined Parties

Draw lines in the sand.  Use a bulldozer for those visually challenged. 

Draw these lines regionally AND intra-cities (including Baghdad and all those other alphabet names).

Let the Sunni/Shiite go at it in designated areas while our troops focus on destroying terrorist enclaves, protecting and expanding the Iraqi economic infrastructure and defending Enjoined Parties.

If Iran or Syria or the Saudis want to intervene on behalf of either Sunnis or Shiites -- let them bring it on.  Let them fight to their hearts content.  But in designated areas EXCLUDING "the green zone," the airport region, oil fields and transportation conduits, "Enjoined Party" regions or areas of Kurdish control.

As long as they don't cross lines in the sand. 

And for every assault, every bomb that is ignited in an Enjoined region --- the line in the sand will be become a noose around the necks of the un-enjoined.

Only the tribes and regions of Enjoined Parties, however, will receive economic benefits from Iraqi resources.  And if the Saudis or the Iranians feel they can continue to support the un-enjoined in non-productive religious wars, let them drain their national coffers to do it.   

 


Posted at 09:06 am by Gull
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Enter Pelosi's Liberal Gestapo

Subtitled:  Big Brother from the OTHER side of the aisle?

 to StopTheACLU

Soooooo ... it's ok for corporations and unions to lobby for/against issues and candidates, but not grassroots groups?  Wait a minute --

What does Pelosi have against grassroots groups and especially Freedom of Speech?  HA!  So this is how Pelosi plans to slow down the Swift Boats, eh? 

Pelosi Targets Grassroots Freedom of Speech

House Speaker-to-be Nancy Pelosi (D.-Calif.) has pledged to take up a lobbying reform proposal that would impose new regulations on speech by grassroots organizations, while providing a loophole in the rules for large corporations and labor unions.

The legislation would make changes to the legal definition of “grassroots lobbying” and require any organization that encourages 500 or more members of the general public to contact their elected representatives to file a report with detailed information about their organization to the government on a quarterly basis.

The report would include identifying the organization’s expenditures, the issues focused on and the members of Congress and other federal officials who are the subject of the advocacy efforts. A separate report would be required for each policy issue the group is active on.

“Right now, grassroots groups don’t have to report at all if they are communicating with the public,” said Dick Dingman of the Free Speech Coalition, Inc. “This is an effort that would become a major attack on the 1st Amendment.”

Under the bill, communications aimed at an organization’s members, employees, officers or shareholders would be exempt from the reporting requirement. That would effectively exempt most corporations, trade associations and unions from the reporting requirements—but not most conservative grassroots groups, which frequently are less formally organized.

Larger, well-funded organizations are also currently eligible for a “low-dollar lobbyist exemption” that Pelosi’s bill does not give to grassroots organizations. If an organization retains a lobbyist to contact lawmakers directly at a cost of $2,500 per quarter or less, or employs a full-time lobbyist at a cost of $10,000 per quarter or less, the organization does not have to report to the government.

Public Citizen, a liberal “government watchdog,” is taking credit for helping Pelosi craft the legislation and expects the final draft of the bill to closely resemble Pelosi’s Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2006, which contains these provisions.

Craig Holman, a lobbyist for Public Citizen, said the changes would help “streamline” how grassroots organizations are regulated by the IRS and other laws. Public Citizen would like Congress to adopt the IRS’s definition of “lobbying,” which includes communication that encourages the general public to contact a member of Congress on pending legislation or public policy.

“The IRS has a definition that requires all organizations, including non-profits, to file as a part of our tax returns,” Holman said. “When it comes to the election code and the lobbying disclosure act, they have no definition of grassroots lobbying. It’s excluded from everything. The IRS has a definition of grassroots lobbying, but their information is not publicly reported. It’s just our tax returns to the IRS.”

Suzanne Coffman, director of communication for Guidestar.org, which makes IRS 990 forms available on the Internet, said any secular, non-profit organization that has more than $25,000 in income per year is required by law to make the last three years worth of tax forms available upon request. “We get them directly from the IRS, and we have more than two million 990s online” said Coffman. “For non-charitable organizations, like private charities or private foundations, we have fewer because the IRS began scanning those only in April 2005. They focused on charitable organizations, which make up the bulk of exempt organizations, because those are the ones that accept tax-deductible contributions. The need for accountability is much higher with them than with other types of organizations which are sort of subsidized by the taxpayer because they federally are tax exempt, but not like a charity is.”

Public Citizen’s public IRS 990 disclosure forms show that it raised more than $3 million in 2005. That year, the group spent $297, 431 on mail and $178,182 on consulting and professional fees.

A coalition of grassroots organizers, including David Keene of the American Conservative Union, Larry Pratt of Gun Owners of America and Terrence Scanlon of the Capitol Research Center, have written an open letter calling on Public Citizen to renounce its efforts, which they called “flawed to the point of hypocrisy.”

“This bill would apply to those who have no Washington-based lobbyists, who provide no money or gifts to members of Congress, and who merely seek to speak, associate and petition the government,” it said. “Regulating the speech, publishing, association and petitioning rights of citizens is not targeted at corruption in Washington, as Public Citizen and its supporters would believe. Instead, it is targeted directly at the 1st-Amendment rights of citizens and their voluntary associations.”

The Lobbying Transparency and Accountability Act, which made some of these changes, was actually approved by both the House and the Senate in the 109th Congress, but failed to make it through a conference committee.

To help dramatize the bill this time around, Pelosi is planning to assign sponsorship of various amendments to incoming freshman, which they will promote in their maiden House floor speeches.

Current law prevents former members of Congress and senior staff as well as senior executive staff from lobbying for one year. Pelosi’s proposal would extend that to two years and completely ban members and staff from accepting gifts, meals and privately sponsored travel.

Don't expect the full Lobbying Transparency and Accountability Act to pass as currently written, however. 

Members are Congress aren't going to give up those freebie gifts, meals and junkets.  You can expect grassroots groups to stay on the chopping block, however .....

Middle America doesn't need a Congressional ACT to see how "transparent" this  one is going to be!

 


Posted at 07:48 am by Gull
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Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Rising Above Blue-Head Buccaneers

It's only an opinion, and basically unsubstantiated, but since reading an old article that stated elder-Bush was allegedly more concerned about Jeb losing an election than about GW winning the Presidency -- I've long had my suspicions about the father-son dynamics between GHWB and GWB.

Elder-Bush's tears at a recent event honoring Jeb re-kindled this allegation.

When the Iraqi Study Group was instituted in March, I wondered if GWB would seriously consider adopting solutions compiled by a gathering of his father's contemporaries. 

Would  Bush stand Lincoln-esque (as described by a recent article) "a man alone" to declare, not only personal validation, but a proactive path toward resolution to the Iraqi quagmire?   

I prefer to think that Bush has begun to stand alone -- to seek a workable resolution -- in spite of ideas rehashed for a problem (-- make that problems) that members of the ISG were unable to resolve 25-30 years ago. 

Much greater minds than mine have questioned -- not only the composition and backgrounds of the study group, but the support-scenario in which they have studied. 
 
And no -- I don't expect GWB to do much cherry-picking from the 79 study recommendations.
 
Why?
 
It was not GWB, but elder-Congressman Frank Wolf (R-VA) lead organizer and chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee that funds the United States Institute of Peace (USIP), who asked USIP to facilitate the ISG -- with the support of the Center for the Study of the Presidency, the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy.  Congress kicked in one million dollars to foot the bill. 
 
The USIP? 
 
Since when has this group or any of its supporting agencies every done anything comparable to salvaging a military quagmire?  They're fundamentally flag-waving dove-havens.  Their forte is diplomacy.  That's about all they have ever promoted.
 
But diplomacy as a means to resolve centuries-old Muslim and Arabic tribal conflict?  I don't think so. 
 
Maybe diplomacy in conjunction with military strategy and political maneuvering?  That could work.  But diplomacy as a cure-all for Iraq and the Middle East?  I don't think so.  My assessment is that the ISG has encouraged diplomacy as a back-room tactic to enable a front door exit. 
 
That is not what is wanted (by a majority of Americans and Iraqis) or needed in Iraq. 
 
We need action that moves us toward a productive resolution --- not a time out to determine who to invite to the talking table.  Diplomacy as a resolution to the contemporary Iraq quagmire? 
 
My God -- have we learned nothing from history?  Switching from a military effort to diplomacy is a sign of retreat in itself.  Remember the meaning of Arabic "truce," i.e., the time taken for talking while re-arming ..... 
 
Diplomacy as a change in strategy is not a viable option for the US, for Iraq or for peace in the Middle East.  
 
But wait.  Baker et al didn't stop with the Iraqi scenario.  They proceeded to lay blame on Israel (i.e., the Israeli-Palestinian conflict) as the source of all Middle East evil.
 
I don't think so.  And nor do many others -- including Mark Steyn.
 
Why would anyone -- even a short-sighted incompetent political fixer whose brilliant advice includes telling the first Bush that no one would care if he abandoned the "Read my lips" pledge -- why would even he think it a smart move to mortgage Iraq's future to anything as intractable as the Palestinian "right of return"? And, incidentally, how did that phrase -- "the right of return" -- get so carelessly inserted into a document signed by two former secretaries of state, two former senators, a former attorney general, Supreme Court judge, defense secretary, congressman, etc. These are by far the most prominent Americans ever to legitimize a concept whose very purpose is to render any Zionist entity impossible. I'm not one of those who assumes that just because much of James Baker's post-government career has been so lavishly endowed by the Saudis that he must necessarily be a wholly owned subsidiary of King Abdullah, but it's striking how this document frames all the issues within the pathologies of the enemy.
 
But back to this father-son analogy, specifically -- 10 elder-statesmen, contemporaries of GWB's father, assembled to identify a bipartisan plan for alleviating the Iraqi quagmire ....  
 
Their suggestions certainly incorporate ideas that democrats (who had no plan of their own) can hang their collective hats on.  The recommendations are also fodder for conservatives to enjoin their own splintered and self-serving visions.  It would have been easy for GWB to accept the suggestions of his elders  ....
 
But the past two weeks have also provided incentive for GWB to stand as a man alone -- in spite of all odds -- to stand against the whims of politicos who failed to bring about peace when they had their chance.  Including the President's father. 
 
Fortunately, GWB is making his own headway. 
 
Respectful of the ISG's recommendations, he has met this week with his political advisors, with the military he commands, with Middle East leaders and with representatives of the Iraqi government who must, in essence, employ his suggestions to bring the US and the Middle East out of this quagmire.
 
Will it happen?  
 
This elder-person bets her lap-shawl that we are about to see a transformed and re-directed GWB.  Watch for him to employ suggestions from ME leaders, the military and his former Secretary of Defense.  Watch for us to bribe (yeah, bribe) local militias to take control in areas where the Iraqi army can't .... Watch for the Kurds and other sectarian leaders to start their own negotiations ....  Watch for less subtle involvement by concerned ME leaders. 
 
And if we don't see GWB taking a proactive stance -- pass out those nuclear blankets, nurse -- the world will soon learn what fission does to sand. 
 
 

Posted at 03:30 pm by Gull
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Friday, December 08, 2006
Attack of the Blue-Head Buccaneers

How did so many blue-head good ole' boyz (and girls) get involved in resolving everything from head lice to terrorism to peace in the Middle East? 

I have my theories. 

And I am one, by the way.  A blue-head, that is.  Still naturally brunette, though.  With only a hint of gray.  Still got my own teef, too.  But I digress.

More to come .....

 


Posted at 01:55 pm by Gull
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