
and then yesterday felt like the first really autumny day
-looking over the local carpark(!) towards the hills.
Disorganization personified, music, and faith and computing - but zero attention spa..

-looking over the local carpark(!) towards the hills.


I was using 2007 with which ndiswrapper worked well for my home wireless connection on a HP nx6325 however with 2007.1
I initially tried using the builtin driver, couldn't get that to work - getting messages something like 'unable to find bcm43xx driver' so I went back to using ndiswrapper, the instance with 2007.1 didn't seem to work so - after a bit of googling and seeing comments on the
ndiswrapper with 2007.1 - I've installed 1.47 from the tar download (getting rid of the rpm first).
If I'm very careful this - the wireless connection - works for me (having blacklisted bcm43xx) however it appears that if anything is attempting to use a network connection when the wireless is in - I think - an unconnected or initialising state the machine locks up and
the only way out is the power button :-(
Typically I'll see this by doing
modprobe ndiswrapper
... for the moment I've commented out the reference to ndiswrapper in
modprobe.conf ... and the system immediately locks.
I'm using 2.6.17-15mdv and have installed bcmwl5 for ndiswrapper to use.
Nowadays it's enough for Henze when he sits there like that to direct his gaze to the five telegraph wires behind the old wall in order to imagine twelve-tone series in these airy staves. "More and more I would see an E-flat, an F, a C-sharp…" And certain complex polyphonic passages, he says, "I didn't need to check on the piano, they were simply right.I spent some of yesterday listening to Henze's oratio 'The Raft of the Medusa...
Hans Werner Henze, whose second symphony was first performed in the same concert, recalls that Nono's Variations hit their first audience "hard, so hard that they whistled as if in pain". The evocation of Schoenberg may have been part of the problem. Schoenberg's Op 41 is a setting of Byron's "Ode to Napoleon", and when Schoenberg wrote the piece in 1944, he conceived it as a protest against totalitarian tyranny. Nono wanted to align his own work with both the atonal modernism pioneered by Schoenberg and the political sentiments of the ode, but his music has none of Schoenberg's romantic rhetoric. To an audience for whom Schoenberg's music - banned in Germany throughout the second world war - was difficult enough, the generation gap between old and new modernists must have appeared painfully wide.I don't know that work and am not sure whether the BBC is broadcasting any of the current Nono festival - I hope it's going to be recorded for a future broadcast but I won't hold my breath!
The context of that early-1970s article is of ordinands in the US, many of whom had to work out their vocation when the choice was between ordination and going to Vietnam. If you have never been faced with such a choice, you do well to reflect on what kind of understanding of truth and of the justice of God such a context will engender. I do not notice many in my church understanding this aspect of the American inheritance, let alone giving credit to those who have resisted a culture dominated by religiously motivated and justified war-making. We may discuss whether calling an openly gay person as a bishop was right or wrong; but we should not do so without noticing that history and that context, and certainly not without thinking twice before the language of exclusion and ultimatum becomes our chosen vocabulary; right or wrong, the most controversial decisions of the Episcopal Church are part of a resistance to a culture that has taken us over too.
The iconic performer Engelbert Humperdinck has defined romance for countless generations and this year he celebrates a milestone with the 40th anniversary of his first international hit, Release Me.
I have a very progressive young outlook on life
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Nicholas Winterton MP has told us not to deliver any messages from the constituents of Macclesfield. Instead you can try contacting them via the Parliament website. There you will get a phone number, a postal address, and for some MPs a way to contact them by email.
music [and poetry] gives a voice that maybe can push the boundaries a little bitI think the sermon tonight was on poetry and dissent!
Can nothing be done in the present stupid deadlock with regard to the tram service between Ashton and Stalybridge? Twice to-day have I been unfortunate enough to be turned out of the “ha’penny” trams at the park gates in the pouring rain and compelled to tramp to my destination, with the chagrin of seeing the Stalybridge tramlines outside my house in full working order and no trams running.
Stalybridge people are compelled to go to Ashton for business purposes, and whilst recognising the clever move of the Ashton committee in inconveniencing the public in the hope of bringing the joint committee to their knees, I must emphatically protest against the stupid policy of “grab” which is being shown in this unreasonable dispute. If the two bodies cannot agree, why on earth cannot they go to arbitration?
We all know that railway passengers exist for the convenience of the railway officials and railway shareholders, but it is a pity to find the notion creeping into tramway management also, and that such a splendid service of trams should be disorganised and so much money wasted (Ashton cannot work its ha’penny trams at a profit) on account of the fads of our “men of light and leading” on the Town Councils is disgusting indeed.
Let some of these clever gentlemen wait until next November, and they will hear a few things.
Yours, &c, THOMPSON CROSS, 13th June, 1904
The New Testament contains even more violent language about God than the Old
She only wants to play valses!
"She hardly sounds to be ambitious"
"It depends; measured by Scriabin's Quasi-Valse, or the Valse in A flat major, she may have quite intricate idylls..."
Mrs. Thoroughfare simmered. "I do so love his Étrangeté"
Some years later, when Siegfried Sassoon pressed him for his views on literature and art, the only thing Firbank could find to say was, “I adore italics, don’t you?”.
The blessed St Bathilde who by dint of skipping changed sex and became a man



You’re St. Melito of Sardis! You have a great love of history and liturgy. You’re attached to the traditions of the ancients, yet you recognize that the old world — great as it was — is passing away. You are loyal to the customs of your family, though you do not hesitate to call family members to account for their sins. Find out which Church Father you are at The Way of the Fathers! |
Via Inferno XV, if - like me - you're not sure who St Melito was then a trip to Wikipedia may help! I see that his feast day is April 1st - hmmmmm
Invalid user blowjob from 85.185.250.18


There was the same icky expectation of seeing a former child actor in a sex scene, but Radcliffe pulled it off, as does Bell in Hallam Foe







A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, O bleu : voyelles,
Je dirai quelque jour vos naissances latentes :
A, noir corset velu des mouches éclatantes
Qui bombinent autour des puanteurs cruelles,
Golfes d'ombre ; E, candeur des vapeurs et des tentes,
Lances des glaciers fiers, rois blancs, frissons d'ombelles ;
I, pourpres, sang craché, rire des lèvres belles
Dans la colère ou les ivresses pénitentes ;
U, cycles, vibrements divins des mers virides,
Paix des pâtis semés d'animaux, paix des rides
Que l'alchimie imprime aux grands fronts studieux ;
O, suprême Clairon plein des strideurs étranges,
Silence traversés des Mondes et des Anges :
- O l'Oméga, rayon violet de Ses Yeux ! -

- you probably need to click on the image to get the full effect. crudités = crudenesses - 'nice of pig forest' is also attractive etc.. It doesn't appear to be Babelfish's responsibility. but I'd guess that this can be pinned on a computer! Unfortunately we didn't get around to eating there, but we did try! Though we skipped the pizza restaurant in the same town that was offering pizza aux escargots (or something)


(I hope this is her - I wasn't intending to take her photo!) She spoke movingly on friendship in the face of death both taking the Last Supper narrative and speaking about her husband David's (bishop of Liverpool for many years) death in the evening after her 70th birthday party surrounded by friends and relations.


I smoke 100 to 120 cigs a day. The ban will kill us.
Lovely menu but I'm not sure that my choices were wise for getting a good sleep!
A moving but scandalous story. Black Gold has extraordinary power. Guardin blog is here and a collection of film reviews.
Any Anglican Episcopal church with an image of The Transfiguration is asked to send a photo (scan) ASAP to the Editor, for use in our magazine.clearly Russell T Davies needs to work something into tonight's programme...
It's really mean when people say that Kats isn't an opera singer, She's made lots of opera albums. I think people ought to get their facts right before making baseless allegations motivated only by jealousy., I didn't spot this, but Kenneth Wood did! The Guardian obviously needs Italian lessons as to the significance of the blog writer - Mrs Senzatalento. If you go to WLKJ you'll see there's a petition for a damehood for KJ - sign now before it is too late!
And, suddenly, David knew that it was his destiny to do this forever: to check the faces of all he came across sprawled along benches, in doorways, on pavements, in gutters, just in case, just on the off-chance that one of them was Merlyn.Heady stuff in that context.
It was not Merlyn Orb.
But David got the money out anyway and placed it in the mittened palm, and closed the fist around it.
Because it was someone.
The early heretics were generally neither knaves nor fools but pious and passionate men, zealous for God, morally serious, scrupulously scriptural. They were very clever, but conventional, fetchers and carriers for the zeitgeist. Heretics like a “wrap”, and heresies are fastidiously neat and tidy, the product of minds stuck inside the box of common sense. “Consistency,” said Oscar Wilde, “is the last refuge of the unimaginative.” Unsurprisingly, then, heresy is aesthetically unattractive, even ugly.I never like my theology neat and tidy <grin>
.. 'many waters cannot quench love' together with 'My Song is Love Unknown' and on the other side of his writing there's the occult reach of Scarlet Ceremonies and Sarnia. Below are pictures of Shipley church and the churchyard looking towards the windmill

Yesterday evening's walk was around the grounds of Peover Hall - my updated album is on the home webserver
Hasty trip up to Newcastle today and that's (the picture) all the Tyne I saw. Train was 30 mins late into York (and then didn't gain any) - I was going to our head office to sort out some computer issues. Turned off Norton (grr) which solved one problem of Vista being unable to see network drives, added 1gig of memory to another machine, fiddled with some printers and then back on the train. Spent most of the time on the train developing software whilst luxuriating in a cd of Joseph Kosma and then in part of Chabrier's L'Etoile - an opera that is not suitable for children, both those links are in French so you'll need to educate yourselves!
with mist and a shaky hand - we risked a walk after a very wet day and were rewarded with wonderful evening lights on this walk - spot Astra Zeneca... Another picture is here maybe some more to come when I chose the least worst ones. I'm putting all the Summer walks photos here on my home webserver.
A recognizably modern Baptist movement developed in the 16th century and was split into two groups. One, the General Baptits, believed that the atonement of Jesus was general for all believers.probably something to do with feeding bread to every bird.
Christianity underpinned so much about his prime ministership, from his 1997 identification of the act of voting Labour with spiritual redemption - "one cross on the ballot paper, one nation was reborn" - to his attempts to persuade the public of absolute truths. The effect could be brilliant. But it produced a strange sort of defiance, especially after Iraq and in the response to terrorism, a leader who came to believe, like Peter Grimes, that he could see the shoals to which the rest of Britain was blind.