Gourmet Club – February 2007

We had our second gourmet club meal of the season last Sunday. Normally it would have been on Saturday night but we were in the middle of a severe ice storm with a threat of up to 8 inches of snow (which never happened). We decided to postpone the meal till the next evening. Our hosts this time were Doug Beach and Lynne Carlson. Here is their menu…

Menu and Wine

Menu-and-Wine.jpg

Doug made a small alteration in the “Deconstructed Guacamole” for Karen and me, we being onion sensitive. He substituted sliced yellow pepper for the onion.

The Presentation

Beach-Courses.jpg

I apologize for the picture of the entré. I had to use a flash and the light falloff was severe. Believe me, the Pork Medallions were a perfect uniform golden brown and not overcooked as the photo may lead you to think.

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Teddy – My Oldest Friend

Teddy is my oldest friend, except Mom of course. The earliest known picture of him is in the family photo album on the same page as my first birthday. So I assume he was a birthday present. He was a gift from my Uncle John in England and was of war time manufacture. The picture below shows him as I got him; all fuzzy, with eyes and nose intact and velvet palms and soles just aching to be rubbed against your nose. It is the only picture I have of him from my childhood. I don’t remember him this way. As far back as I can recall he has been bald. I remember Mom fixing him up at one time. I guess his eyes had fallen off and the string of his nose and mouth had fallen off too. Mom sewed on two buttons to replace his missing eyes and replaced his nose and mouth too. Her nose and mouth repair has gone by the wayside too, but the buttons remain to this day. I assume his stuffing was excelsior which powdered and sifted out through the course-woven fabric. It had to be replaced at the same time as the other repairs. Mom used old nylon stockings. In the picture I also appear to be holding some kind of a doll. I think it may have been a Cupie doll. Does anyone recognise if that’s right?

I have had Teddy within easy reach all these years.

ThorpePaddyRobertTeddy-1949

Butch and Paddy Thorpe with Teddy – Sept 12,1949

In the early 1970’s he was on temporary loan to my kids. I found this photo of Lance asleep with Teddy and his own bear, Floyd.

Lance Thorpe with Teddy and Floyd – 1972

Here is how he looks today. When Wendy was a teenager, I asked her to make him a little vest because he was getting so threadbare that even Mom’s nylons were trying to escape his innards. She tells me she whined about it then flat out refused. So Karen made him the natty little vest and bow tie for my Christmas present that year, hence the red and green motif. Wendy tells me she feels really bad about the whole deal now and would gladly do it today.

DSCN0151

Teddy – Feb 21,2007

I suppose I ought to refurbish him again. If I do, that will be the subject of another blog entry.

Posted in Autobiography | 7 Comments

Christmas 1958

Word has gotten back to me that someone who isn’t even remotely the focus of this blog, thinks that indiscriminate cropping of the banner photos to feature the person who IS the focus of this blog, just stinks. So perhaps we ought to remedy the situation and show one of the pictures that did get cropped and featured recently.

I think this photo was taken at Christmas in 1958. Lisa looks about a year and a half old. The boys have their cowboy outfits on, complete with firearms. Lisa has a new doll and Judy has a music box with a twirling ballerina. Poor old Mom and Dad aren’t showing any gifts. I don’t remember any of this, maybe Judy’s jewelry box.

Thorpe Family - Christmas 1958.jpg
Raymond, Bunny, Paddy, Lisa, Butch, and Judy Thorpe – Christmas 1958

Like Grandfather, Like Father, Like Son

While rooting around in the old pictures today, I found one of me and (I think) a better one of Lance for the “Like Father, Like Son” entry I did the other day. Here is the amended version.

Butch, Lance and Ben Thorpe
Butch, Lance, and Ben Thorpe

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A Fun New Book – Old Blues, Jazz, and Country Music

Hardly has a book had such an immediate impact on me. For Christmas 2006 Wendy and Zach bought me a copy of “R. Crumb’s Heroes of Blues, Jazz & Country”. [keep scrolling down]

Heroes of Blues, Jazz & Country

Sometime in the 1980’s the underground cartoonist R. Crumb, famous for his characters Fritz the Cat and Mr Natural decided to draw 3 series of trading cards. This picture will give you an idea of what they looked like:

Sample Trading Cards

The cards were to be distributed in albums of reissued early blues, jazz, and country music. One card was intended for each album, requiring purchasing all the albums to get all the cards. Not a bad promotional thing for the record label. That never happened but the cards were sold, 3 series of 36 each, at local retail outlets in the West Village area of New York. Crumb also designed point-of-purchase displays for the sets. Pictures of those cards and a bio for each musician are the content of this book.

You can get your own copy of the book from Amazon.com.

R. Crumb’s Heroes of Blues, Jazz & Country

Along with the book came a 21 song CD by the artists illustrated on the cards. You will have to contact Yazoo Records to get more of the music.

www.yazoorecords.com

This type of music requires an acquired taste for many people, but if you are one of them the album is a delight. All the cuts were recorded between 1927 and 1931 and to the modern ear seem a little primative. But Yazoo has done such a superb job of remastering the music that there is practically none the scratching so common in old 78’s. The musicians are brilliant. At this early date the three types of music; blues, jazz, and country, weren’t as far apart as they are today and if you like one of those genres, you will probably like all three.

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Like Father Like Son

I was all ready to publish another entry in this blog when I came across an old picture. I have been digitally copying my old negatives and the one I found was from 1971. You have to admit that things don’t change all that much in 35 years.

Lance 1971 - Ben 2006

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Movie Reviews – January 2007

Here are the movies we saw this month:

Title Made Saw Rating
Enigma  2001  01/03/07 3
Children of Men  2006  01/06/07 4
Too Late the Hero  1970  01/10/07 3
Brassed Off  1996  01/11/07 3
Apocolypto  2006  01/12/07 4
Charlotte’s Web  2006  01/14/07 3
Taking Lives  2004  01/16/07 3
The Iron Giant: Special Edition  1999  01/19/07 3
The Governess  1998  01/23/07 3
Star Trek: Enterprise: Season 1: Disc 1  2001  01/26/07 3
Loch Ness Incident  2004  01/30/07 3
Boys of Baraka  2005  01/31/07 3

Most of them were Netflix rentals, one was on the Turner Classic Movies channel on television and we saw three in the theater. Also this month we got a DVD burner so we can record TV shows if we want to. We had a VCR before and we still have it hooked up to the DVD burner in case we want to copy an old tape we have, but we use the DVD to record anything new.

Here are my reviews:

Enigma

This was a costume drama set in World War II England. A disgraced cryptographer races against time to break the German code before a doomed convoy falls into the clutches of the German Wolfpack. Kate Winslet plays the brilliant, but ignored code worker who realizes the key to solving the code is already in their hands, but no one knows it. With a stolen enigma machine they travel across countryside to the place where the key is hidden. They are pursued by the security squad who thinks our heroes might be up to no good. Kate’s character provides the best dialogue in the movie. When the lecherous head of section corners her in the file room he says, “You know, without your glasses you don’t look half bad.” She replies, “You know, without my glasses nor do you.”
Netflix – three stars

Children of Men

The movie is set about 20 or 25 years in the future. The human race has become infertile and there hasn’t been a new child born in about 15 years. A man is contacted by a former lover who wants him to help her get passage for a young woman. The society is bleak. Martial law has been declared. The entire world except England is in anarchy. Our hero agrees to help when he discovers that the young woman is pregnant. Their plan is to get her to the coast where they can meet with an oceangoing aid society. When they get to the port, the people who are chasing them set an ambush. The Army is called in and the young woman gives birth in the midst of a firefight. This is a gripping movie.
Theater – four stars

Too Late the Hero

Set in the South Pacific in World War II, a lazy American Navy Lt., due to go on leave, is pressed into service to help the British Army take out a key Japanese radio installation at the north end of the island. At the decisive moment he refuses to do the noble thing and several of his comrades get killed. But on the journey home he finds his true heroic nature and saves the day. An acceptable action adventure
Turner Classic Movies – three stars

Brassed Off

British coal miners are facing the closing of their mine. Throughout the history of their mine the miners have had a brass band. A retired miner runs the band and it is practically his entire life. With the hardships facing them, the miners decide to disband the band. The old band leader has a physical collapse from black lung and the band gathers to play him a few tunes. They decide not to break up just yet and compete in the all England brass band contest. Of course they win, but the band breaks up anyway. Both feel good and sad
Netflix – three stars

Apocolypto

Mel Gibson’s newest movie is set among the Maya just before the Spanish takeover of Mexico. The movie is just great for costume and setting and I have never seen anything like it. The movie opens in a small, rural, Mayan village. The village gets raided by warriors from the big ceremonial center. They kill many of the people and take the rest away to be sacrificed. Just before he is captured, our hero hides his pregnant wife and son in a well. Through a series of unbelievable circumstances, he escapes. He is driven to make his way back to the village to free his wife. Pursued by the warriors he uses all his wily forest tricks to even the odds. He saves his wife and they make their way deeper into the forest realizing the Spaniards are going to change everything. I was really impressed by the look and feel of this movie. I thought the villagers were portrayed as a little primitive, however. The village is only one day’s march from the capital and I can hardly believe that being so close, the aristocracy could have enough peasants to sacrifice at the rate they seem to be doing it. The scenes in the city were out of this world.
Theater – four stars

Charlotte’s Web

Some pig! This was a live action version of the classic children’s story. We took Rachel to see it. Wilbur the pig is saved by the little girl but is destined to be Christmas dinner. Charlotte the spider figures out a way to save him by weaving words into her webs over Wilbur’s home. Very sweet.
Theater – three stars

Taking Lives

Angelina Jolie portrays a serial murderer profiler. She is on loan to a French Canadian police force on the track of the killer. When she becomes involved with one of the suspects things get complicated. There is a clever ending in this movie. Some of the French speakers can barely be understood. Average thriller
Netflix – three stars

The Iron Giant: Special Edition

I don’t know what was so special about this edition. Traditional animation was used in this movie rather than the CGI which is more common these days. A boy discovers a giant robot that appears to be a menace to the countryside. This is set in the 50s and a government agent is dispatched to get to the bottom of the Giant problem. The giant appears to have amnesia but seems to be gentle at heart. When the government people surround him and attack him he shows that he is nothing to be messed with. This makes things worse of course and the boy persuades him that he is really good at heart. The giant destroys himself in a last effort to save the city from harm. But in the last scene we see his blown up parts making their way north to eventually be reassembled into the giant once again. An OK way to spend some time
Netflix – three stars

The Governess

A young Jewish woman is hired by a reclusive inventor and travels to his Scottish estate. She is to teach the inventor’s daughter, but in the meantime is seduced by the inventor and has an ongoing affair. The movie is set in the 1840s and the inventor is experimenting in the newly discovered field of photography. The governess is clever and she helps the inventor solve a number of riddles which enables him to “fix” his photographic prints. When he scorns her, she presents his wife with some erotic pictures she has taken, packs her bags, and returns to London to become the star photographer of the Jewish sector. I liked depiction of the problems of early photography that this movie showed.
Netflix – three stars

Star Trek: Enterprise: Season 1: Disc 1

I had been intrigued by the premise of this TV series when it came out a few years ago. I saw a few episodes but really did not pay much attention since it did not seem to fit in our viewing schedule very well. The series is about Earth’s first ventures into space and how the Vulcans seem to be hampering them. The production values are very good but the story lines are hardly any better then any of the earlier Star Trek series. We had hoped that being able to see three or four straight seasons of shows would be as fun as seeing Firefly or Deadwood. While we may choose to revisit this series from time to time it was not as compelling as the other two just mentioned.
Netflix – three stars

Loch Ness Incident

This was a dramatic movie of a documentary of the making of a documentary. Whew! The main action follows a famed director, a conniving producer, and a suspect cast of actors and production crew. They go to Loch Ness to document the impact that the monster has on the local people and tourists of the area. All the while, another documentary crew is filming the goings on of the first documentary team and that is how the movie is presented, through their (the first team’s) eye. The producer (of the second team) intends to take advantage of the famed director’s name, but has no intention of producing a documentary the director expects. Things get out of hand when the barely-glimpsed real monster starts ramming the boat. This was a strange movie and was kind of fun to watch. It reminded me a little the Life Aquatic.
Netflix – 3 stars

Boys of Baraka

As opposed to the Loch Ness Incident, the Boys of Baraka was a real documentary and a grim one at that. Baraka is an American school in Kenya that takes at-risk, middle school black youths and gives them two years of education away from the ghetto. The story shows the boy’s selection, travel to Africa, adapting to the new environment, and their summer’s holiday after a year’s study. The heartbreak is that because of heightened security threats in Kenya at the time, the boys are unable to return to Africa for their second year. They find themselves once again in the defeating environment of the projects. Several of the boys appear to be making a success of themselves, but since this movie was only made a couple of years ago we don’t know that everything has turned out for the best. Their situation is heartbreaking and the movie reminded me a great deal of the children in Born into Brothels.
Netflix – 3 stars

This is my first attempt at movie reviews. Most of the reviews I’ve seen by the pros have a brief rundown of the plot and some analysis of what they saw. It’s hard for me to know that I am doing these reviews the right way or even the same way as the other reviewers. I invite your comments and suggestions I would be happy to answer any other questions about the specific movies that we saw.

Posted in Movies | 2 Comments

Gourmet Club – January 2007

This is the 16th year of our Gourmet Club. There are 4 couples in the club and once a month one couple hosts the gourmet dinner. We do it the first four months of the year. When we first started, we tried to do it a total of 8 times a year, two for every couple, but that proved unworkable, so early on, we settled on 4 times. The hosting couple stands the cost of the meal and does all the preparation. Pot luck type meals didn’t work out. With one couple in control, the whole dinner was more appropriately planned. Shortly before the night of the meal, the hosts submit their menu to Doug, our resident sommelier. He matches the appropriate wines to the various courses. The host never pays for the wine. The other three couples split the cost and pay Doug, who brings the wine the night of the meal.

We have had the same couples the entire time we have been doing this. We, the gourmets are; Robert and Karen Thorpe, Doug Beach and Lynne Carlson, John and Sue Hawn, and our hosts this meal, Steve and Terri Howes.

The Gourmets

Lynne Carlson, Doug Beach, Karen Thorpe, John Hawn, Sue Hawn,
Steve Howes, Terri Howes, and Butchie Boy (Robert Thorpe)

The Menu

The Menu

The Winelist

The winelist

Here is how the meal turned out. I got pictures of all the courses except dessert. We had a short break between the entré and dessert and by then the winelist was asserting itself, so, no dessert picture. It was very nice though. It was served in pear shaped glasses with the strawberries floating on top of the Vanilla Crème.

The Presentation

The actual food

The Future

We have 3 more meals planned this year. Keep a watch and I will feature each one if I can.

Posted in Gourmet Club | 5 Comments

An Evening with the Grandkids

Lance and Cherise got free passes to the Collins Road Theatre here in Cedar Rapids. So Friday night was a chance for them to see a movie and for us to have the kids for a while. Rachel stayed with us while they were at the movie, but then she went home with them. Ben stayed with us all night. I took him back to Iowa City Saturday afternoon. It’s quite a feat to watch both of them at once. We need to have our eye on Ben every minute because he is into everything constantly. Rachel wants our attention too. She likes to play a game with Karen where she is a cheetah and Karen poses various scenarios for the cheetah to react in. For instance, the mother cheetah is in her cage with her baby. A cute little brown haired girl with glasses comes by with her camera. If she stands still long enough, the mother cheetah may begin to trust her and bring her baby out so the little girl can get a picture. Or, the mean boys walk up to the cage. They are pushing each other and generally goofing around. They might use the cattle prod they have with them to harass the mother cheetah. Then it’s Rachel’s job to flesh out the scenario.

Wary mother cheetah
Wary mother cheetah

Ben has some cute shoes but they cause him no end of trouble with our carpet. The poor little fellow is always catching the souls or the toes of the shoes in the carpet and tumbling onto his face. He likes to have his shoes off as you can guess and we are delighted to accommodate him. It’s fun to give the little darling a buzzer on the sole of his foot.

Get these shoes off
Get these shoes off

Grandma Karen and Ben
Grandma Karen and Ben

When my dad was a baby my grandma had an aluminum colander. My dad used to wear it as a hat. Grandma gave it to my mom and I wore it as an army helmet too. And for a little bit it was Lance’s turn. Rachel wore it a time or two and here below is that generation’ s latest participant.

A Family Tradition
A Family Tradition

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Blue Eyed Sweet Face Thorpe

Fall 1953 – 3117 Merle Hay Road, Des Moines, Iowa

I was looking through our old photos to find some pictures to use in this blog. Mostly I wanted to incorporate them in the header of these pages, so keep a lookout for them because they will change from time to time. But some of them were so interesting that I decided they were good topics to talk about all by themselves.

Today’s entry features one of those photographs, two in fact. In the Fall of 1953 I was five years old and just starting kindergarten. While playing in the backyard Mom called to me to show me something interesting. She had discovered that a local feral cat had had its babies in our garage. The garage was a ramshackle affair, quite dilapidated and it’s a wonder they even let me play in it at all. The actual garage was filled with old lumber and almost impassable. But the back of the garage had kind of a lean-to shed built onto it. At some point in the past, a previous owner had converted part of the lean to shack into a doghouse. It was filled with straw and this is the place where mother Kitty chose to have her kittens. I seem to recall there were several of them but I can’t recall what happened to the rest.

Butchie Boy with  Blue Eyed Sweet Face Thorpe

The one you see in this picture with me I decided to call Blue Eyed Sweet Face Thorpe. I know, pretty dorky, but it did have blue eyes and it was cute as can be. Like its mother it was also a feral cat and so for the next several days my hands were red with scratches.

 Butchie Boy and his Kitty

While we are at it, how about that outfit? Right out of “A Christmas Story”! The plaid buckled jacket and the hat with earflaps. Great! The movie was supposed to be set in the 40s but Scutt Farkas had a coon skin cap on. I don’t know of anything from the 40s that featured coon skin caps. It was not until the 50s that kids started sporting them after seeing Davy Crockett. The rest of the movie was just like my life; the clothes, the neighborhood, seeing Santa, the scary octopus furnace in the basement, and of course, the neighborhood bullies.

In the first picture you will notice that the Kitty is sitting on a box. It is the packing box from our brand-new television. Like most kids I had more fun playing in that box than I did watching the TV itself. We weren’t the first ones in the neighborhood to get a television. The McCoys had one and we would go down to their house and watch cartoons right after school. There weren’t as many cartoons then is there are these days. I remember it was a big deal though.

Mom said that there is another, grimmer, part of this story. In those days we had milk delivered. The milkman would leave it outside the door in an insulated box that kept the milk cold. Apparently, Judy thought that this would make a nice little house for the Kitty. She put it in the milk box but forgot about it. Mom said she never had the heart to tell Judy.

In the future as I come across other pictures that remind me of things, I will write an entry in this blog like today’s.

Posted in Genealogy | 4 Comments

Digital Stereoview Exchange Club (DSEC)

You all know that I am interested in stereophotography. Most of you have had to endure looking at my views at one time or another. Several years ago I joined a group of other stereo photographers and once every three months we exchange stereo cards. From that group of collectors, another group emerged. The new group was based on a redesigned 3-D format that I specified the standard for. Basically, it is just two pictures on 4 x 6 inch photo print.

This was our 20th exchange so it is been going on for five years now. The participants in the group send me a stack of stereo photos once every three months. They send me the same number of views as the number of people who are participating, plus a couple of extras. As the view redistributor, it is my job to put the exchange together and return the views to the participants. I thought it might be interesting to let people know how I go about this.

After the deadline for the exchange, I receive the prints from the participants over a period of time. They are supposed to send them right in, but often it take couple of weeks for all of them to get here. Once they have all arrived I start putting the flip books together. The first step is to run out a list of everyone who has sent in views. Then I check off the names of the people that actually did send their views in. I also record whether or how much money they sent me towards mailing the views back.

Sorting-Views

I take each person’s views and put them in a stack on my dining room table, arranging them in alphabetical order. Then I take one person’s views, the one whose name comes last in the alphabet, and start making new piles with just their view in it. I take the next-to-last pile of views and stack those on top of the first ones. I do this with everyone’s views until I have stacks with one view each from everyone.

Sorting-Views 2

At the first part of each year I have enough cardboard covers made so I can use them for a whole year. I have the art store cut them to size, 4 1/2 x 7 inches. Then I punch holes for the spiral binding and round the outside corners. Then I have these whenever I need them. But the number of participants changes from exchange to exchange, so the number of sleeves to insert the views in can change dramatically. I wait till the time of the actual exchange to punch the sleeves. I do them three or four at a time for the 250 or so sleeves that I will need all told.

Punching Sleeves

When I have enough punched and ready to go I put one of the covers on a little jig that I built, then count out the correct number of sleeves and insert them on the alignment pins too. Then last comes the back cover.

Assembling Flipbooks

I run a plastic spiral through the holes that I punched for the spine. Then I clip off the excess binding.

Adding Spirals

Once the blank flip books have been assembled, I take a stack of the views and insert them into the sleeves. I put the first view in the first sleeve, flip it over, and put the second view in the second sleeve, and so forth until I arrive at the back cover. Then I flip the book over, and insert the rest of the views from the back to the front. That way when a person looks at the views in their stereoscope, they put the back cover into the viewing stage and flip through the views. Turn the book around, and flip all the way back.

The books are almost complete now. I have several sheets of sticky back labels. One with the cover title for that exchange’s stereo views. One with instructions on how to use the flip books. And one with the names of the participants for that exchange.

I have other sheets of sticky back mailing labels with the names and addresses of the participants on them and return address labels too. I fold up a Priority Mail box, stuff the flipbook and any extra views the participant may have sent into a baggy and put the whole works into the Priority Mail package. I seal them up and apply the labels and take the whole mess down to the post office. I have been doing this long enough now that when I come in with my garbage sack of boxes, the postman laughs and says, “oh, it’s that time again.”

In case you are interested in the standard that I specified or how to make these types of stereo views, I will save those topics for future entries in this blog.

Posted in Hobbies | 4 Comments