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Thursday, June 11, 2009
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Sunday, February 22, 2009
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Category: Life
It's screeching toward the end of February and it's one month closer to the end of Winter. I hate this season for many reasons, but mostly because I hate cold weather with a passion. I could live in Summer temps all year round and never see one snowflake. My pipe-dream is to live on a beach where the temps don't fall below eighty degrees. The only thing that stops me from really pursuing that is my love for the Jersey Shore. I'm proud to live near the best strip of coastline on the eastern seaboard, and I would miss it terribly if I left. What's the point of moving somewhere else if you'll be miserable? Right? You can say what you want about New Jersey. Most people make fun of the turnpike, the traffic, and the power plants. I think that people are focusing on the one unpleasant part of our state. People forget about the beautiful farmland, the gorgeous oceanfront, the awesome forests and parkland, and the rich history that our state has to offer. I've grown up here, and I'm not embarrassed to call this state home. I'm sure that many people feel that way about their hometown/state. If the temperatures didn't fall below freezing every winter, it would be absolutely perfect. I can handle it for three months I guess. *sigh* Here are some cool pics that make me think of Summertime Island Beach Cape May Allaire State Park See.. New Jersey's not just a screaming piece of asphalt with cars and factories. 
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Monday, January 26, 2009
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Category: Life
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Wednesday, January 14, 2009
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I've known Donald for sixteen years of my life, and I am very lucky to have had the privilege of calling him my father in law. During those years I got to know a very complex and wonderful person who enjoyed life the way he wanted it. He was a caring and devoted husband and father who always made sure that his family came first. Donald made sure that his wife and children were taken care of, and always made sure that there were no worries. He appreciated and was grateful for everything in his life, no matter how small. Don was even touched to tears when he received a tree pruner for his birthday. I can even remember when Don Jr. and I gave him his last birthday card. We picked out the card, because it had a cool cowboy movie song that played when you open it. We didn't know the name of the song, and I remember when we were trying to guess the title. Don piped up and said, "It's the Good, The Bad, and The Ugly." The card moved him much like the tree pruner. It was always the simple pleasures that my father in law enjoyed the most. Donald was a tough and hardworking man who relished work as more than a mere necessity. He went to work at a job he loved at Hub Dental. It made him very happy to be able to repair things, and he shared that same enthusiasm when he was at home. My father in law always kept our cars, appliances, and other gadgets running. He shared that same technical, hands on, know how with my husband as he grew up. When Don wasn't working, he always made sure that he enjoyed his hobbies and interests. He enjoyed gardening, even though some of the vegetables weren't something that he would take the time to eat. Don always made sure that he gave us tomatoes and jalapeno peppers. He always enjoyed working outside and you could see him on Summer days riding around the yard on his tractor mower. My father in law's love of wrestling, game shows, and classic cowboy movies was unending, and most days you could catch him watching a Clint Eastwood movie or a Bonanza rerun on his television in the garage. Don knew every wrestler and he even knew what they did before they became wrestlers. It was really amazing and my husband and I enjoyed watching the matches with him. Don was a man of few words at times, but the ones he said, he'd always meant. He never sugarcoated his feelings and he was always someone for whom you could count on for an honest opinion. He always took the time to treat me like his daughter, and I will never forget that. Donald is like a second father to me, and I will always be grateful that he was a part of my life. Joan Baez said, "You don't get to choose how you're going to die. Or when. You can only decide how you're going to live. Now." Don always lived for every day like it was his last and enjoyed every minute of it.
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Monday, January 12, 2009
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74HhnjxBJ1g
Who needs a paper shredder when you have a bunny to do it? Kola loves paper.
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Thursday, December 25, 2008
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Saturday, December 20, 2008
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Category: News and Politics
Pastor Rick Warren is a staunch supporter of the Proposition 8 bill which will eliminate the chance for Gay and Lesbian couples to marry. His belief is that the bible felt that this is sinful, and should be abolished. This person obviously lives under the ignorant delusion that humanity is not equal. (If you do believe that his thoughts and theories are right, then please refrain from reading further. This is really a personal opinion about an issue that I feel very strongly about.) Sign this petition, and say no to Rick Warren's benediction at President Obama's Inauguration: http://www.thepetitionsite...com/takeaction/107914679I wrote this letter when I signed the petition: Please take the time to consider the disappointing motivations of Pastor Rick Warren. He is someone who chooses to prevent and speak out against equal rights for gay and lesbian couples. Gays and lesbians should have the exact same rights to marry and raise happy families as any other couple. Please do not let someone who lives and breathes ignorance speak a benediction for a new President who seeks to promote Change as the leader of the United States of America. In short, I believe that love is love and shouldn't be classified by gender. If this is any notion of change, then it's one step toward the regression of humanity. Let's really exercise Change in our country, and find someone who cares about the whole of humanity instead of a person who only thinks that his ignorant version of life is the right one. Just a thought. I think that Proposition 8 should be thrown in the toilet and so should the bad ethics and values of Mr. Warren.
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Saturday, December 06, 2008
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Category: Writing and Poetry
by Denise Frame-Leitch
Camp Evans, originally considered as a part of Belmar Station, has been a site that has gone through many changes and incarnations since its first construction in 1912. The plot of land, which is based in Wall Township, is sometimes mistakenly considered part of Belmar. The land property, including the main operating house, is located on the banks of the Shark River in the Eastern region of Monmouth County. Camp Evans has approximately 500 acres of land, and is currently owned as a branch of Fort Monmouth, an Army military installation based in the Shrewsbury, Monmouth County area. The camp was utilized for everything from the fruition of radio communication to United States Army research.
Belmar Station came about in what is often coined as the Marconi Years. The American Marconi Company, after contractual obligations created with the J.G. White Engineering Corporation, built its first structures on the Monmouth County property in the year 1912 with its full completion in the year 1914. The main operating house on the property was supposedly built to be water impermeable, but when it was being constructed that was a tedious undertaking with underground streams running through and around the building. To this day, the basement still remains flooded.
Belmar Station was an establishment that Marconi used as part of, "…his wireless girdle." Radio transmissions were meant to be broadcasted to destinations such as Hawaii and the Panama Canal. During this period in the Station's history, the staff was so immense that The Marconi Hotel needed to be constructed on the property to accommodate the necessity of twenty-four hour maintenance for the operations at the Belmar Station. The crimson brick structure had contained forty-five rooms along with a lounge, smoking room, and an in-house diner. There were also some cottages for married operators that worked at the Station.
Information technology is the research, conception, creation, and utilization of information communication networks. The expanse of information technology today is furthered by the usage of computers and technology to retrieve data and communicate. In the early1900's by Guglielmo Marconi, an innovator originally from Italy, created radio telegraphy or more commonly known as just radio. The invention of radio eventually led him to the coveted Nobel Prize. Marconi was a true pioneer for information technology and communication. To further his work with this technology, Marconi created Belmar Station to work with a New Brunswick Station transmitter as a branch of wireless support.
The technology created at the Station was a real breakthrough for twentieth century communication. Along with Guglielmo Marconi, many notable professionals and inventors lent their knowledge and expertise to the projects created at the Belmar Station. Dr. Ernst Alexanderson, the technologist who invented the high frequency generator, and Dr. A. Hoyt Taylor from Wall Township, the founder of Naval radar, contributed their work to the wireless communication project. Edwin Armstrong, an electrical engineer who invented frequency modulation or FM radio, along with David Sarnoff, the founder of NBC (The National Broadcasting Company), completed the process called regenerative circuitry at the Belmar Station in 1914. Regenerative circuitry is the process by which an electronically charged signal is increased or amplified by the same vacuum tube or relative active component. An example of this is a unipolar transistor, which depends on an electric field in order to manage the shape of and the conductivity of a particular channel.
After the Marconi Years, this section of Belmar Station was taken over by the Naval operations during World War I within the year 1917 through the year 1919. This included not only the Belmar and New Brunswick Stations, but the Stations located in Tuckerton, New Jersey and out of state in Massachusetts and Maine. Out of all the stations, Dr. Taylor stated that he, "…never did get the one in Tuckerton running satisfactorily." The Navy gave the aforementioned Dr. A. Hoyt Taylor control of communication overseas. Dr. Taylor, a soldier in the Navy, became the Trans-Atlantic Communications Officer.
The Navy installed broadcasting lines that connected to Washington D.C., and could be utilized for Trans-Atlantic radio communication. The most notable Trans-Atlantic communication came about when President Woodrow Wilson was able to converse through an overseas connection with the Italian Minister of Communications in Rome. Around this same time, they placed more wiring underneath the Shark River in order to improve connectivity and reception for transmission.
When World War I concluded the American Marconi Company or the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America, as it became known, was sold to a company called RCA. RCA is a media giant today, but the company's current owner is the General Electric Corporation. Its most popular notoriety today is their media electronics and recording labels. When the company sold to RCA, they meshed all the station's transmissions and receptions into one station in New York. This eliminated the need for any type of radio or communication work at the Belmar Station and for a time quieted the work at the site. Even though New Brunswick, however useful it was for transmitting communication to the United Kingdom in the World Wars, fell silent as well.
The Station went through different changes during the times between 1925 and 1941. During a minor era in the history of the Belmar Station, a group called the Pleasure Seekers Club occupied the camp's premises between the years 1925 and 1935. The group's records are very vague and not much information is prevalent. Within the year 1936 a Christian group, called the Young People's Association for the Propagation of the Gospel, purchased the land that formerly belonged to Marconi along the Shark River. Following in the year 1938, Dr. Percy B. Crawford created King's College in Belmar, New Jersey. This was a four-year Christian college that taught Biblical doctrine to their higher education students, but was not exclusively of a religious nature. The school did not teach broader subjects of an artistic or scientific basis. The college eventually moved to the Briarcliff Manor in New York. The King's College remains in existence, and still functions with offices that remain at the Empire State Building in New York City. They offer courses in Business Management, Philosophy, Economics, and many other degree programs, but they still maintain a theology institution within the college's curriculum.
The US Army then commissioned the camp for use in World War II. The radar laboratory was used for research and proved invaluable during that time. Companies such as AT&T and General Electric funded the research on the camp, along with using radar to detect enemy aircraft during the war. The radar work performed at Camp Evans was considered the redeeming quality of democracy and the tool of victory during the World War II effort. Other researches, such Project Diana, were performed on the camp. Project Diana aimed to send radar signals toward the moon to see what the reflecting signals consisted of. This project is considered the precursor to interest for space exploration and was hailed as the fruition of the U.S. Space Program.
On March 31, 1942 the Belmar Station, then called the Signal Corps Radar Laboratory, named its radar lab and property Camp Evans after the deceased Lieutenant Colonel Paul W. Evans. Evans originally hailed from Ohio and served in the Coast Artillery of the Army. Today the surrounding area near and around the camp retains the name Evans Area. The camp remained a top-secret research and development facility from 1941 to as recently as 1998. Camp Evans is considered to be a landmark of historical significance by the National Registry of Historic Places. Today Camp Evans is the Infoage Science and Learning Center. This Center is a non-profit organization that provides education about information technology and remembers the pioneers that contributed toward the progressions and innovations of communications. The Center is working to restore some of the structures and buildings that remain on the camp. This historical landmark gave birth to the most poignant and important scientific breakthroughs during the information age. This expanse of land needs preservation so that future generations can learn about the evolution of technology and the roots of the information era in America.
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Wednesday, October 29, 2008
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Sick today... Been resting and hoping that I feel better before school tomorrow. I have so much coming up right now. I need to just calm down and take it easy for a bit.
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Wednesday, October 29, 2008
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Current mood:  sick
Category: News and Politics
I was watching this Sarah Palin interview on Entertainment Tonight and Mary Hart asked if Sarah Palin would like to host her own talk show. I thought about it for a while, and realized that's closer to her acumen than politics. She might as well be Mary Hart, with the way she reads off the teleprompter. She could be the next Dr. Laura. LOL.... Dr. Laura's a bigot, and so is Sarah Palin. It sort of works. You know if they put her on a talk show and out of politics, we'd be saved from the dreaded threat of her as president. Let's face it... How old is McCain?
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