"Civil Defense is defined as 'plans or activities organized by civilians and civilian authorities for the protection of civilian population and property in times of such disasters or emergencies as war or floods.' The United States has had some form of a Civil Defense program since the formation of the Office of Civilian Defense in 1941. Since then, the focus, size, scope, and visibility of the program has ebbed and flowed with the changing geopolitical tides. Tied to developments in strategic nuclear weapons, missiles, and even spy satellites — it endured name changes to 'Civil Preparedness' and later 'Emergency Management.' Throughout this time, thousands of men and women (both paid employees and volunteers) at the federal, state, and local government dedicated themselves to the goal of protecting the public against catastrophe."Today, Civil Defense is often seen in the public eye as a curiosity — generally associated with the early Cold War. Too often, the prevailing historical perspective on Civil Defense is less than a superficial footnote. It is the utmost goal of our organization to preserve this history in a way that reflects the dignity and urgency of the program, and the people who created and dedicated their lives to it. The Museum believes that there are many stories remaining to be told."
Saturday, August 9, 2025
"That belongs in a museum"
Sunday, August 3, 2025
1924 advertisement: "Heaney's Great Milk Can Escape"
Saturday, August 2, 2025
Cathy's Little Free Libraries in Globe, Arizona
Last week, we were in Globe, Arizona, and the surrounding area and found two delightful Little Free Libraries, both of which were dedicated to the life and memory of Cathy Sanchez-Cañez (also listed as Catherine "Cathy" Eileen Cañez). She died at age 52 on July 22, 2019, during a flash flood in Globe.
Cathy was a special education teacher who spent most of her career working with students in the Globe/Miami area. There is now a Cathy Sanchez-Cañez Foundation and other regular community efforts in her memory. This past April saw the publication of Teacher from Heaven. Its description states: "Aubrey is a kind and thoughtful girl who loves her hometown of Globe, Arizona. From learning to read with her teacher to spending time with the people she loves, Aubrey knows that in her small town, little moments matter. Teacher from Heaven is a warm and loving story about family, friends, and loss. ... This story shows how one person’s kindness can live on, even after they are gone."Friday, August 1, 2025
Book cover: "The Roadside Wildlife Book" ... plus skunks
- Title: The Roadside Wildlife Book
- Author: Richard Mabey (1941-present). He also wrote The Unofficial Countryside, which I blogged about in 2021.
- Publisher: Sphere Books Limited, London
- Year: 1978 (first published 1974)
- Pages: 141
- Format: Trade paperback
- Price: 95p in the United Kingdom, £1.04½p in Ireland
- Back cover blurb: "From high-speed motorways to meandering country lanes, roads are an integral part of our modern countryside, and Britain's road verges total half a million acres of land. Now Richard Mabey, top-selling author of FOOD FOR FREE, has compiled a fascinating and informative guide to our roadside wildlife. This book not only give an introduction to the natural history you may encounter on the roads (which could range from migrating toads to gale-blown sea ducks), but also shows how wildlife is adapting to the influence of the dominant mammal, travelling Man."
- Acknowledgments: Mabey notes that Nan Fairbrother's writings, including the 1970 book New Lives, New Landscapes was a key influence. That book is about "planning a humane landscape for a technological society."
- First sentence: The first country road I remember was one my father wheeled me along in a push-chair most Sunday mornings during the last year of the war.
- Last sentences: But as I hope I have shown, leaving your car is not only better for the land. It also gives you a chance to meet the natural world face to face.
- Random excerpt from middle #1: Breckland has a unique collection of plants, some of which grow nowhere else in the British Isles and belong really to the Russian steppes.
- Random excerpt from middle #2: There was a remarkable Noah's Ark operation done on a family of Hertfordshire badgers at Bishop's Stortford on the route of the new M11. They were successfully transplated 50 miles away, in a disused sett.
- Random excerpt from middle #3 (this was written in 1974, remember): An ecologically acceptable vehicle would not just be a "safety" car but an "organic" one, fitting in as far as possible with the needs of all the creatures it has to share space with. Space is a key notion; the ecological car would occupy less than a third of the road space of the modern saloon — 9,000 square inches has been recommended as the maximum. It would be powered by electricity, or some other non-polluting energy source, and would be restricted in its power (and therefore energy consumption), its top speed, and the amount of noise it could make. Ideally it would be automated on trunk roads and only be put back into a human's unsteady hands when it was on a side road and unlikely to meet much other traffic. It is surely not beyond the wit and our car manufacturers — always paraded as the spearhead of British technology — to mass-produce a car of this sort.
- Rating on Goodreads: 3.67 stars (out of 5)
- Contemporary review: In the November 28, 1974, edition of The Guardian, Richard Boston wrote: "Mr Mabey is scrupulously fair in presenting the arguments in favour of the motor car. For people who live in towns the car is a liberator, and the country could for them almost be defined as what can be seen from a car. But there are limits to fairness, and the general tone of the book is polemical. The car is also a great destroyer, both through pollution and means of a more brutally fatal impact. Mabey reckons that two and half million birds are killed on British roads every year, and 1,000 badgers in Somerset alone. As destructive as the car is thoughtless hedge-cutting, especially by means of the flail-type cutter. Ruthless hedge control is not only brutal in the short run but is eventually going to bring about major changes in the look of our landscape."
- Related thoughts: I don't go out on roads too much, and there's not much to stop and see (other than Little Free Libraries) in the middle of the 110-degree desert. But our backyard wildlife here in Florence is interesting. Earlier this year I did my best to assist a pair of hummingbird chicks that left their tiny nest just a little too early. And this morning I was greeted by a green hummingbird that hovered right near my head, reminding me to fill its hanging feeder. But the big thing lately is skunks. This is our second summer of skunks. We had a few babies last summer and I kind of pampered them, because the reality is that skunks in residential areas don't live very long lives. Then, in the late spring of this year, a lone pudgy skunk that I assumed was pregnant started returning regularly to feed. And, hey presto, now we have three or four tiny toddlers that come regularly, including one that isn't at all scared of me. The skunks make it a little trickier to feed the feral cats (Mamacita, Creamsicle, Splash, Meowmix and Gumball), who keep their distance and wait their turn. So I work a little extra in the evenings to make sure they all have enough water and food. Because, like I said, it's 110. In fact, we're entering a stretch of a week or more where it's going to be 112 to 115 daily. Poor critters.
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Snapshot & memories: Well-dressed for first day of nursery school
- Adorable little me on Mulberry Street
- Kitchen at Willow Street house in Montoursville
- Me and Pop-Pop in the kitchen
- Commodore 64 corner
- (Missing) snapshot & memories: Thanksgiving
- Me & Cyrano
- Me in a Star Trek shirt
- All kids do these days is play video games
- Posing with a Saturn V in 1982
- The Phillies are hot, and so was I
- Relocated fire engine in Montoursville
- Family outfits of 1972
- Our little bookstore
Friday, July 25, 2025
"Stress the help. Not detention — help."
I began reading more closely, considering parallels with our current moment.
Here are some passages from the opening chapters:
- "They count upon your sufferance," said the man. "They are refugees."
- "An invasion, you might call it. but not a warlike invasion. They are coming emptyhanded. They are quiet and peaceable."
- [U.S. president speaking to Secretary of Defense] "Use every resource at your command. You have inflatable shelters. How about transportation and food. ... You'll have to handle it on an emergency basis until we can settle on some plan. Don't worry too much about procedures. If you have to bend a few them, we'll take care of that."
- [U.S. president speaking to White House press secretary about informing the press] "Tell them we're trying to find out. The situation is under study. You can tell them the armed services are moving rapidly to help these people. Stress the help. Not detention — help. The guard may have to be called out to do the job."
- "Children of our children," said the President, "many times removed. If they're truly from the future, they are our descendants. We can't turn our backs on them."
- "Just ordinary people, sir. Far as I can see. No different from us, except that they got a sort of funny accent. They dress funny. ... But they are polite and cooperative. They don't give us no trouble."
So we'll see where the tale goes from here...
I did peek ahead to some of the comments and reviews on Goodreads, and this excerpt from Cheryl in July 2020 stuck out: "I love stories with 'no bad guys' ... I mean, yeah, there is a threat, but all the people from both eras are just doing the best they can. I'm glad Simak didn't live to see our divisiveness that enabled the election of Trump. I do note that southern Wisconsin, Simak's home, voted for him, but they were desperate for jobs iirc and believed the charm of the businessman. I wonder if we'll ever have the kind of world, or even country, that Simak saw as a possibility."
50 years ago today: Crazy curl perms & "Crazy Mama"
- Main story on A1: Yellow gas knocked out astronaut
- House rejects lifting ban on sale of arms to Turkey
- Voting rights act extension passes; Ford plans to sign
- Americans pay more than ever for beef
- CIA reveals how it monitored U.S. mail
- Dairy, swine judging held at Osceola County Fair
- Ford presented Mayaguez wheel
- Accused rapist will press charges against avenging feminists
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Strath Haven's David Letterman Club
- Each Wednesday afternoon, about 20 Strath Haven High School students gather around a TV set in science room 211. But instead of of watching the usual educational-television fare, they watch stupid pet tricks.2 Did someone sabotage the videotape? Nope. It's Late Night with David Letterman, and it's no mistake.
- Armed with a fast-forward control button, the club members search past the commercials3 for the meat of the programs. They say their favorites are the animal acts and the sports foul-ups.
- Rick Kosel, a Strath Haven science teacher and the club's adviser, said that "about three or four years ago" Jamie Hooper, a resident of Swarthmore who is now attending Dartmouth, asked if we could have a club to watch taped videos of David Letterman because the show comes on at 12:30 p.m., and he didn't want to stay up that late. "We have a school policy that if a student comes up with a club idea, has 10 interested students and an adviser, then it can be considered an after-school club," Kosel said.
- "When I heard about the David Letterman Club, I thought it was a good idea because there are many students from one-parent homes or from homes where both parents are working, and this was a place they could go while waiting for their bus," [Activities Director Charlotte] Higler said.
- [Higler] said the David Letterman Club costs the district about $200 a year — the cost of Kosel's adviser's salary of $11 per hour. Kosel pays for the tapes, and the school already owned the videotape player.
- "I think it is a good thing because this way the kids who love David Letterman don't stay up until 1 a.m. watching, and it keeps their minds on their homework rather than on TV," Higler said.
QUESTION: Speaking of the current administration, late-night seems to have become mostly Trump jokes and tirades. Do you miss not being part of that?LETTERMAN: "Here's what I keep saying: We know there's something wrong, but what I'm tired of is people, daily, nightly, on all the cable news shows telling us there's something wrong. I just think we ought to direct our resources and our energies to doing something about it. And other people have made this point: If the guy was running Dairy Queen, he'd be gone. This guy couldn't work at The Gap. So why do we have to be victimized by his fecklessness, his ignorance? But it's just the behavior is insulting to Americans, whether you voted for him or not — and I feel bad for people who did vote for him because he promised them things that they really needed and one wonders if he's really going to come through. I know there's trouble in this country, and we need a guy who can fix that trouble. I wish it was Trump, but it's not, so let's just stop whining about what a goon he is and figure out a way to take him aside and put him in a home."
Thursday, July 17, 2025
Sunday, July 13, 2025
1979 middle school book: "The Mysterious Ghosts of Flight 401"
- Title: The Mysterious Ghosts of Flight 401
- Author: Burnham Holmes. He also authored the Contemporary Perspectives book about Nefertiti, plus books about the Third Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, Edward Hopper, Paul Robeson, Cesar Chavez and George Eastman. In May of this year, he retired from Castleton University in Vermont. As Emily Ely wrote for the student newspaper, the Castleton Spartan: "After nearly three decades of teaching, mentoring, and storytelling, English professor Burnham Holmes is retiring, leaving behind a legacy that’s impossible to summarize with a single title. 'Oh, a man of all the wonders. He is insane. He’s one of the most interesting people I’ve ever met,' said junior Nickels Thomas. That sentiment echoes across generations of students and colleagues who have learned from Holmes, not just about writing or speaking, but about life itself." Holmes is also on Instagram. His most recent post calls poet Frank O'Hara his "Lodestone."
- Cover and interior illustrator: Abel Navarro
- Publisher: Contemporary Perspectives Inc.
- Year: 1979
- Pages: 48
- Format: Hardcover
- Topic: On December 29, 1972, Eastern Air Lines Flight 401, traveling from New York to Miami, crashed into the Florida Everglades.1 There were 101 fatalities, including the three cockpit crew members, and 75 survivors. Then came the ghost stories. As Wikipedia explains, "In the months and years following the crash, stories began circulating that numerous employees and passengers of Eastern had reported sightings of deceased crew members ... sitting aboard other [Lockheed] L-1011s. ... These stories speculated that the sightings were connected to the fact that parts of the crashed aircraft were salvaged after the investigation and refitted into other L-1011s. The reported hauntings were said to be seen only on the planes that used the spare parts." There was a 1976 book, The Ghost of Flight 401, by John G. Fuller, and a TV movie in 1978 (starring Ernest Borgnine and Kim Basinger) that helped the ghost stories become even more widespread in the late 1970s, perhaps leading to the publication of this middle-grade book, which I remember reading at the wonderful C.E. McCall Middle School library in Montoursville in the early 1980s.
- Excerpt #1: The heavy clouds and cold air were only the first of many strange incidents aboard the Eastern plane. A stewardess on plane 318 saw something that looked like a cloud. It formed near where she was standing. At first, she thought it was only water vapor condensing. It could have been caused by a change in temperature. But the cloud wasn't like anything she had ever seen before. Little by little, the features of a human face took shape in the cloud.
- Excerpt #2: In none of the stories about the ghost captain and second officer was anyone hurt — in fact, quite the opposite. Some airline people even wanted to work on planes where Loft and Repo had appeared. They felt safe. They felt that the ghosts would protect them from harm.
- Excerpt #3: Very few people today have ever really seen ghosts, but there have been many legends and stories throughout history of people who have. Until Flight 401, never had so many different people — at different times — actually witnessed the appearances of the same ghosts.
- Reviews and memories: I couldn't find any reviews of this book on Goodreads, Amazon, Kirkus, Newspapers.com or Google search. And that's weird, because I know of lot of kids from my generation read this book, and used copies now sell for a pretty penny. I did find a 2022 Facebook post in the Vintage Airliners group. One commenter states, "I was a young guy when I read the book and it totally gave me the creeps." But it's not 100% clear whether he's talking about Fuller's book or Holmes' book. Maybe this post can become the go-to site for folks who want to remember and comment upon Holmes' book. Please comment!
- This House is Haunted!
- The Case of the Ancient Astronauts
- Visions of the Future: Magic Boards
- The Abominable Snowman
Saturday, July 12, 2025
George B. Leiter's Ring-A-Peg
Friday, July 11, 2025
Thoughts from American historian Frederic L. Paxson 99 years ago
Monday, July 7, 2025
Little Free Library in the Catalina Foothills
Saturday, July 5, 2025
Ephemera I wish I still had
- The psychedelic posters that Mom had on her bedroom walls in Rose Valley as a young woman. I wrote in 2023 about my quest to rediscover that vibe.
- Circa 1981, my Pappy took me for a walk one afternoon and bought me a digest-size Richie Rich comic book at a corner family store. I wish I still had it.
- I also wish I still had the comic books my parents bought me during a multifamily trip to the Jersey shore in the late 1970s. I was never much of a comic book kid growing up, but I have fond memories of that trip and those comics, which included Star Wars, the Sub-Mariner and Doctor Doom.
- A "newspaper" I wrote in third grade on an 8½-by-11 sheet of paper. The lead story was Buddy the cat upsetting a tray of cooling cookies in our kitchen. Dad made photocopies of it at work, and I mailed some of them out.
- Also in third grade, I wrote a short sequel to Watership Down for an assignment in class.
- And my third-grade class group photo with Mrs. Winston, taken on a sunny day outside my Clayton, New Jersey, elementary school. (I really need to do a post on that school. I can't believe I haven't yet.)
- A short horror story I wrote while in fourth grade. I don't think it was for an assignment.
- A blue-cover notebook that I filled with the details of a D&D world I created circa 1982, complete with maps and details about the inhabitants.
- My college newspaper clippings from The Daily Collegian, most of which were sportwriting. I kept them for the longest time, in case I needed them for job applications. But eventually, along came a move or pruning — I can't even remember which one — that they didn't survive. It's not like they took up much space.
- One of those Scholastic Books or Weekly Reader order catalogs that we happily anticipated each month during elementary and middle schools.
- Monster finger puppets I made circa 1979.
- In the late 1970s in Clayton, my friend Mike and I would use color markers to draw pictures of the Phillies and list out their starting lineups.
- In the early 1980s, I had a small metal box full of Phillies newspaper clippings and other Phillies-related ephemera.
- Some of the elaborate spaceship, tank and airplane drawings I made as a kid in the early 1980s. I spent a lot of time drawing through middle school.
- Infocom game boxes and also the box for Ultima IV that had the cloth map and other trinkets inside.
- Booklets I created on my Commodore Plus/4 and printed out on its dot-matrix printer.
- Early 1980s copies of Sunday Grit featuring full coverage of the previous day's Little League World Series championship game in Williamsport.
- A cookbook that my first-grade class (Mrs. Miller) in Montoursville compiled, featuring family recipes from all of the students. Mom contributed "Mommy's Favorite Hamburger Hash," which, to the best of my recollection, was ground beef, cream of mushroom soup and chopped-up hard-boiled eggs poured over toast.
- School yearbooks! I only have my 12th-, 11th- and eighth-grade yearbooks. I wish I had others. I know I had fifth- and sixth-grade yearbooks from C.E. McCall Middle School, but can't fathom why they were tossed.
Wednesday, July 2, 2025
John Bressler Otto, plasterer
- 1837: Born in Hegins, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, of which his grandfather (William B. Otto, 1761-1841) was one of the early pioneers.
- 1863: Was a private in the volunteer 173rd Pennsylvania Regiment, Company F, during the Civil War. The regiment participated in the pursuit of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, from July 12-24, following the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863.
- 1869: Living in Hazleton when my great-grandfather, John Algernon Otto (1869-1963), is born.
- 1887: Living and working as a plasterer in Hazleton
- Sometime in the 1890s: Family moved to Allentown
- Late 1901: Family moved to Easton, where he was buried in 1906
Monday, June 30, 2025
Oddball movie connections
Saturday, June 28, 2025
"Famous Chicken Inn" menu from 1939 New York World's Fair
- Renault champagne cocktail, 35 cents
- Individual bottle of Renault sauterne or brandy, 50 cents
- Chicken soup with noodles, 15 cents
- Chicken liver with onions (or mushrooms), 50 cents
- Tomato juice, 15 cents
- Ham sandwich, 20 cents
- French fries, 15 cents
- Chicken platter (cold), 75 cents
- Plain cake, 10 cents
- Ice cream, 15 cents
- Coffee with cream, 10 cents (though a red stamp in the margins indicates "iced tea or coffee, 15 cents")
- Edelbrau & Goldenrod beer on draught, 10 cents
- Fried filet of sole, tartar sauce, carrots and peas, mashed potatoes
- Beef paprika goulash, spaghetti
- Macaroni and ham au gratin, string beans
- Creamed chicken and mushrooms, string beans, mashed potatos
- Chopped tenderloin steak, smothered with onions, carrots and peas, mashed pot.
- Chicken chow mein, rice and noodles
- Chicken giblets, mashed potatos, carrots and peas
- Spaghetti and meat balls
- Vegetable dinner
- Famous chicken salad
- Ham and potatoe salad
- Old postcard: "The World's Most Famous Chicken Dish"
- Swift's Premium, Meat power and two fried chicken recipes
- Celebrate Papergreat's 400th post with a gallery of chickens
- Celebrating Papergreat's 600th post with chickens, past and present
- Mystery RPPC: Feeding chickens
- Mystery RPPC: Feeding chickens (Chapter 2)
Thursday, June 26, 2025
Excommunicated! A family story (maybe) about Communion cups
Me: 1970-present
Dad: John Alan Otto, 1947-present
Dad's father (my Pappy): John Alexander Otto (1911-1991)
Dad's grandfather: John Algernon Otto (1869-1963)
Dad's great-grandfather: John Bressler Otto (1837-1906)
It's John Bressler Otto we're going to discuss today. He's my great-great-grandfather and Ashar's great-great-great-grandfather. He's pictured at right in a photo that was posted on Find A Grave by Jim Neely. He was married to Margaret Alice English Otto (1839-1925), and, based on what I pieced together from multiple sources, they had at least seven children, though I'm not fully confident in the accuracy of this list: Charles Percy Otto; John Algernon Otto (1869-1963); Amy E. Otto (1874-1946); Florence Emily Otto (1864-1934); Alice May Otto (1877-1902, died of consumption); Horace Otto; and William Warren Otto (1879-1922).We know that John Bressler Otto was a plasterer by trade, according to his death certificate. And we know that he was a private in the volunteer 173rd Pennsylvania Regiment, Company F, during the Civil War. The regiment participated in the pursuit of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, from July 12-24, following the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863.
Many decades later, John Bressler Otto was excommunicated from his church.
Maybe!
This is where it becomes a mystery.
When I started this tangled thread of research more than a year ago, I discovered this short article about "John B. Otto" on Page 8 of the February 16, 1903, edition of the Allentown (Pennsylvania) Daily Leader.