Monday, January 16, 2006


Chaos in Queens as Fuel Truck Flips Over and Explodes : New York Times



A tanker truck carrying 8,000 gallons of gasoline overturned on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway yesterday at midday and burst into flames, shooting a geyser of fire over a bustling Queens thoroughfare, sending screaming pedestrians fleeing, and closing the expressway in both directions, the authorities and witnesses said.


Nearby stores, houses and other buildings were evacuated as more than 100 firefighters fought the two-alarm blaze, which burned for two and a half hours and weakened the steel beams on an unfinished temporary bridge over the highway, causing part of it to collapse onto the burning tanker and the charred expressway.


There were no serious injuries. The driver of the tanker escaped the fire and was treated for minor injuries by paramedics.


The accident, which occurred just before noon as the eastbound tanker was crossing under Roosevelt Avenue in Woodside, caused major traffic disruptions. Besides closing the expressway throughout most of Queens, officials shut down service on the No. 7 train, which runs on elevated tracks above Roosevelt Avenue.


Near enough to hear but not near enough to shake the house. This puts Woodside on the map.


With multiple explosions happening, people were running towards the scene rather than away from it.


As of the time of this posting, there were no injuries.


Today I was home for the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday.


One young person when asked what Dr. King did, answer "He did what he had to do."
I don't know if that is just a cliche or there's insight in that response.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

A movie about me?


I've watched and admired
Harrison Ford since
American Grafitti in 1973.


In Firewall
he plays someone around my age (although in real life he's 12 years older than me):
a computer consultant working for a bank.


Harrison Ford is not a geek. That's all I can say for now.

CatholicBlogWatch Dept.: Bravo for Brownback


Fellow blogger Oswald Sobrino noticed Senator Sam Brownback (KS-R) had made excellent
points during the Alito confirmation hearings:


Brownback completely devastated the outrageously false contention that Roe v. Wade is some sort of "super-duper" precedent--an absurd phrase with no legal basis whatsoever that has been bandied about in both the Roberts and Alito confirmation hearings.

I had the pleasure of meeting Senator Brownback at a press event at the National Republican Convention in New York in 2004 to which bloggers were invited.


He's not high on the list of possible candidates for the Republican presidential nomination. He might be a balancing pick for the Vice President in the event that a pro-choice Republican is the presidential nominee.


See more at Catholic Analysis