Sunday, August 19, 2012

Citizens for a Better Wyoming: "Time to vote no on Bob Brechtel"

Citizens for a Better Wyoming has been running radio spots during morning air time on KTWO and KWYY in Natrona County. They oppose Rep. Bob Brechtel, a Republican legislator who tends to end up on the right-wing fringes of his party's votes. "Too extreme for Wyoming" -- as the radio ad says. Listen for the spots between 6-10 a.m. on "My Country 95.5" FM (KWYY) and KTWO, 1030 AM, which broadcasts country music and talk shows such as Rush Limbaugh throughout the state.

Here's the text for one of the short but pithy spots:
Bob Brechtel likes to vote no.
He voted no on kindergarten readiness.
He voted no on dyslexia and literacy screening.
He voted no on stronger punishments for domestic violence.
He voted no on open public records.
Bob Brechtel is too extreme for Wyoming.
It's time to vote no on Bob Brechtel.

Tom Morello wonders what Rage Against the Machine song goes best with regressive Paul Ryan policies

Republicans try to be hip, but they just can't seem to find the right soundtrack to go with their regressive policies.

In Rolling Stone, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine writes about Republican Veep candidate Paul Ryan's supposed Rage fandom, something that Ryan has bragged about in the past.

Rage Against the Machine writes songs that ferociously advocate unions, fair wages, immigrants and social justice. In other words, what Rage is for, Ryan is clearly against. And lest you think that Rage is only angry at Republicans, remember that the band put on a huge concert at the Denver Coliseum during the 2008 Democratic National Convention, and then -- with Iraq Veterans Against the War -- staged an antiwar march to the convention center. I hope that Morello and the band plans similar events in Charlotte and Tampa this year.

A few thoughts by Morello from Rolling Stone:
"He [Ryan] can like whatever bands he wants, but his guiding vision of shifting revenue more radically to one percent is antithetical to the message of Rage.

"I wonder what Ryan's favorite Rage song is? Is it the one where we condemn the genocide of Native Americans? The one lambasting American imperialism? Our cover of 'F--- the Police?' Or is it the one where we call on the people to seize the means of production? So many excellent choices to jam out to at Young Republican meetings."

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Meet the Democratic Party candidates Aug. 25 in Cheyenne

The Laramie County Democrats will hold its annual Meet
the Candidates Picnic on Saturday, Aug. 25, 1-4 p.m.,
at 2218 Champion Drive, Cheyenne. Meet and hear from 
our candidates. Get fired up for November.
 
Hamburgers, hot dogs, beer, sodas and water will be provided. 
 
Please bring the following
Last name A-I: Dessert
J-Q: Salad
R-Z: Covered dish
 
Donations will be accepted.
 
AND DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THE PRIMARY ELECTIONS ON TUESDAY,
AUG. 21! 

It's a date -- see you for lunch at Cheyenne's Ruby Juice on Aug. 22

Wyoming Equality sends out this Facebook invitation:
We don't feel like the recent events at Chick-fil-A are representative of how a majority of Americans feel today.

Let's show the world how many people stand for love and equality, and against hate, bigotry, and homophobia! I'll bet we can pack Cheyenne's Ruby Juice with people who feel like you and I do. I want to see lines out the door and around the block!

So here's what we're going to do; on Wednesday, August 22, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., we are holding a "Take a Stand for Love and Equality Day" at Ruby Juice [in downtown Cheyenne]. Let your voice
and dollar speak out for equality! Make a statement that you'll also stand in line for an hour to support what you believe in.

Cheyenne business man Jay Harnish runs Ruby Juice. He is staunch ally in the war on equality! In fact, he used to invite Chick-fil-A into his restaurant once a week to supplement his menu, but when he found out about their anti-gay stance and support of hate groups, he parted ways with the franchise.

Help us put Wyoming back on the map as the "Equality State!" This is going to be a huge event with media coverage. Bring your friends, share this event, and help us show the world that standing up for equality is ALWAYS the right thing to do!!

Jay has agreed to donate a portion of the day's profits to Wyoming Equality.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

What is your favorite Wyoming arts town?

NPR has put out an open call for nominations, asking North Americans to describe their favorite arts town:
This summer, NPR’s Destination Art series is going off the beaten path to visit small to mid-sized North American cities that have cultivated lively arts scenes. And we want to hear from you! Where’s your favorite art hot spot? What makes it unique?
NPR’s form is simple and easy to fill out, and this is a great opportunity to get one of Wyoming’s great art towns on the national map!

For some background on the series, the first town to be featured was Marfa, Texas (population: 1,966), which rocketed onto the art world’s radar with the arrival of sculptor Donald Judd in the 1970s. Also featured: Columbus, Indiana and Stratford, Ontario. Go to http://www.npr.org/2012/08/01/156306412/whats-your-favorite-arts-town

What is my favorite Wyoming arts town? 

I love Jackson for all of the obvious reasons. The Center for the Arts for its downtown location and for housing an eclectic mix of Teton County arts orgs. The National Museum of Wildlife Art for its eco-friendly design and for its new sculpture walk. The Jackson Hole Writers Conference, one of the best of its kind in the U.S., all organized by a coterie of Jackson writers, led by Tim Sandlin. The conference would have disappeared long ago without the thousands of hours put in by Teton County and Wyoming-based writers.

I like Sheridan for its public art on almost every downtown corner, for its commitment to homegrown art forms such as the saddle makers showcased at Kings Ropes and Saddlery. There is a ton of great artists and writers in Sheridan County, as well as two of the country's foremost artists' residencies: Ucross and Jentel. And one of my favorite mystery writers, Craig Johnson, actually lives in the tiny town of Ucross.

I like Casper because the Casper College English Department and the CC Foundation had the moxie to step up and sponsor the state's first statewide book festival in 2006. We hold our fourth bookfest Sept. 14-15 with a great line-up of writers, both domestic and out-of-state. I love the Nicolaysen Art Museum, housed in a former power plant, for its dazzling array of contemporary art exhibits and for having the vision to make downtown a regional arts destination with its new public art exhibit and its NIC Fest and its outreach to all sorts of entities in Natrona County. BTW, Casper College now has its own on-campus arts district. How many community colleges anywhere can say that?

I like Laramie for Works of Wyoming and the Laramie Plains Civic Center Theatre and its cool downtown and the dedicated arts faculty at the University of Wyoming, the state's only four-year public university. So many fantastic writers teach at UW (Brad Watson, Alyson Hagy, Jeff Lockwood) and have been visiting writers -- a great new crew will be there during the fall semester. Two indie bookstores liven up downtown, which has plenty of good restaurants with great beer. And did I mention -- the trains run through it! 

I like Lander for the Lander Art Center. I like Rock Springs for its renovated downtown theatre. I like Gillette for its public art program and its engaged citizenry. I like my city of Cheyenne for our great library with its many programs, and for its community theatre, one of the few in the region to actually own two performance venues.  

What is your favorite Wyoming arts town? Don't be shy -- speak up!

Bob Lynch of Americans for the Arts: Mitt Romney has a "misunderstanding" of how arts funding works

Mitt Romney wants to defund the National Endowment for the Arts. Once again, he's pandering to his supporters on the Far Right. And he doesn't understand how arts funding works. 

Robert Lynch, president and CEO of Americans for the Arts, said Romney has a 'misunderstanding' of how NEA funding works, in that the funding helps stimulate state and local arts councils as well as seed the growth of small businesses. Read Lynch's entire response at Americans for the Arts News

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

17th Street Arts Festival features 30 local and regional artists

Cheyenne artist Georgia Rowswell is one of the 30 artists exhibiting at the first-ever 17th Street  Arts Festival . The title of this piece by Georgia is "Rock Fragment Landscape #1." It is 10" x 20" and is made of compressed strips of cast-off clothing and is contained in an old oak desk drawer. 

The inaugural 17th Street Art Festival is this Friday and Saturday, Aug. 17-18, in the Downtown Dineen Building's 17th Street parking area.

Friday kicks off with an artists' reception from 5-9 p.m. It is open to the public and will be catered by the Plains Hotel. There will be live music throughout the evening and a chance to talk with and purchase original art from over 30 regional artists. 

Saturday's show opens at 10 a.m. and goes till 8 p.m. All day music, arts activities and more are planned for Cheyenne's first 17th Street Art Festival.  

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Aug. 18 Cheyenne NAACP banquet features chautauqua performance, "Manservant York"

From http://www.lewisandclarktrail.com: Explorer William Clark inherited York from his father and York accompanied Clark on the Lewis and Clark Trail journey.

Time to retire the old refrain: "There's nothing to do in Cheyenne"

When I left the Wyoming Arts Council building after work on Friday, I did what I often do -- attend an arts event. Because I work in the arts, you might say that I left work to go to work. And on a Friday!

The event was an artist's reception at the Cheyenne Family YMCA. YMCA stands for Young Men's Christian Association. In the old days, young men of the Christian faith used to live and exercise at the local YMCA. It was a safe -- and inexpensive -- place to do both.

Now YMCAs are exercise meccas for men and women and children. The Cheyenne Y has some 7,000 members. My wife and daughter both work at the YMCA, and I work out at the Y. Some may be surprised to learn that the Y has an active arts program that includes exhibits, workshops and performances. It has a gallery adjacent to the front desk that features a new local artist each month.

The gallery was my destination on Friday. Tony James is August's featured artist. He's a fantastic photographer who specializes in landscapes. He has a knack for capturing the inner life of High Plains clouds, exposing them as they get ready to spew rain or snow or hail. He has an entire series of photos of aspen leaves, portraying them in different settings and different colorations. Tony had two pieces in this summer's Governor's Capitol Art Exhibition. One of them received a purchase award and now is part of the state's permanent collection.

Tony's wife Dee is also an artist. She's the power behind the recent renovation of the Cheyenne Artists Guild building in Holliday Park. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places and had fallen on hard times. Using her considerable skills of persuasion, Dee talked Lowe's into donating $50,000 work of material and labor to completely redo the building. Artist Guild members wielded paint brushes and hammers, too. Go see the results and be impressed. Membership is up from about 50 to 200. New art is on the walls and the place now has a new furnace and space for year-round workshops. The city, which owns the building, will soon install a new roof. The Guild is one of the stops on the monthly Art Design & Dine Artwalk.

Tony and Dee James are forces of nature. They are both retired but are not retiring folks. Tony is a Cheyenne native and Dee is almost a Wyoming native, her family arriving in Wyoming from Kentucky when she was two. They are practicing artists and community organizers. Every day, they leave behind their work and go to work promoting the arts in the town that they love. People love to talk about Cheyenne as a place where volunteerism means something. Our largest annual event, Cheyenne Frontier Days, is volunteer-driven. My friend John Coe, a retired arts administrator an music composer, tells the story of moving from Cheyenne to Winchester, Kentucky, to take care of his aging mother. At his first Kiwanis meeting, John said he has just moved from Cheyenne. The Winchester Kiwanians besieged him with questions about the CFD pancake breakfast which, apparently, is known throughout the land.

Which just goes to show how important is it to give back to your community. And to make sure that your community has a solid arts infrastructure.

Since we moved to Cheyenne in 1991, my wife and children and I have played a role in the arts. So many others have done the same. So it's no accident that every night there are multiple offerings. No longer can my children say, "There's nothing to do in Cheyenne," although I still hear it occasionally. When I leave work every day, I can go home or I can attend an exhibit, a concert, a play. The summer schedule has been filled with events, and that continues as I look at the fall events listed on the Arts Cheyenne calendar. Go see for yourself at artscheyenne.com.

Friday, August 10, 2012

An Art Design & Dine Date Night in Cheyenne



“Wanna dance?” Chris asked.

“I looked at her. “I haven’t had a beer yet.”

“It’s a slow song, one that you like.”

She had me there. It was “Masquerade” by Leon Russell. Keith “Boxcar” Blaney was doing a great job with it on the stage inside the Hynds Building.

“And we’re the only ones here.” Chris gestured around the room. We were the only audience members at the moment on this Art Design and Dine Artwalk Thursday. So nobody would be watching my geeky dance floor moves.

But while I was pondering the dance, a trio of young women wandered in and, while they helped themselves to some lemonade and cookies, Keith wrapped up the song.

“Darn,” I said.

“Procrastinator.” Chris gave me the evil eye. She stood. “Time to move on.”

She was right. I’d enjoyed Keith’s repertoire of Beatles, Keb Mo and Leon Russell. But we had other stops to make. It was date night and there was no time to waste. We were prowling around downtown, hitting those ADD venues we hadn’t seen before. We’d been to the Hynds for art shows but had never seen Keith perform.

Earlier, our first stop had been The Ancient Sage on the corner of 18th and Capitol. It features handmade products by local artists and Fair Trade artisans. There are books on natural healing and racks filled with herbal remedies. Proprietors Lisa Marie and Jody had filled a table with veggies and fruit and boxes of wine. I snacked and talked to Lisa Marie about her role as a medium/clairvoyant. She spoke of “cleaning” homes of unwanted spirits, about how she can sense their presence. An odd sort of gift to have. 

Out front, BeatGrass, an up-and-coming Cheyenne bluegrass band, warmed up. Some police cruisers appeared on Capitol Avenue, the advance guard for a parade of Senior Olympians in Cheyenne to compete for the gold. A group of 100 or so senior athletes were led by the Cheyenne Pipe Band. Parade Marshal Kenny Sailors cruised down the street in the back of an old convertible. Kenny is credited with bringing the jump shot to college basketball when he played for UW in the 1940s and led his team to the NCAA tournament.

When the sounds of pipes and drums faded into the distance, BeatGrass performed some bluegrass standards and a few unexpected tunes, such as “The Breeze” by Lynyrd Skynyrd and “Beat It” by Michael Jackson. I hadn’t seen BeatGrass perform, although they’ve had a busy summer playing at bars, the Atlas Theatre and the American Legion. They are good musicians and a lot of fun to watch.

Chris and I had no preconceived notions for the evening. We like doing things together. We had been pleasantly surprised by the music and the parade. In the distance, we could hear the strains of “Ghost Riders in the Sky” coming from a band playing for the senior athletes at the Depot. Here on the corner, while BeatGrass played, a girl twirled her hula-hoop and a skateboarder rolled up on a long board. The Cheyenne Trolley rolled up and the people gazed out the window at the street spectacle, as if it were an everyday occurrence here in the Capital City.

Our next stop was Studio 17. We looked at photography by proprietor Dana Gage and talented local Briana Barber. Dana showed off one of Briana’s framed portraits, a larger than life image of a local street person. The man’s face bore the marks of a hard-knock life. Briana’s specialty is street scenes of Cheyenne, but she also shoots flowers and Wyoming’s big sky. Dana has some incredible landscapes in the studio. He let me have two hand-painted tiles left behind several months ago by a street artist who never returned for them. Very odd and colorful pieces.

"The Tivolism," photo by Briana Barber at Studio 17. The Tivoli
is the home of Freedom's Edge Brewing Company.
Our next stop was Freedom’s Edge Brewing Company at the Tivoli. It was not a part of the ADD Artwalk but its beers are a work of art. Freedom’s Edge opened in March but I’d never been inside to quaff a pint. But that was remedied when I sat down with a pint of Frontier Daze IPA and Chris ordered up a Strawberry Blonde Ale. The interior is a combination of Old West and 2012 craft brewery. There’s an outdoor beer garden that opened for Frontier Days and looks like a great way to while away a summer evening. Freedom’s Edge is bottling their beers. You can take home a monster of its limited edition stout or a growler of any of its other beers. But Chris and I halted at one. It was getting late and we needed to eat.

Our last stop was the Morris House Bistro patio on Warren Avenue. No tables were available so we hung out and talked to some old friends as they wrapped up their dinner. Morris House is friendly that way – we always see someone we know. It was bustling on this August Thursday night. Chris and I split an order of crab cakes. She ate marlin and black rice while I had shrimp and grits and collard greens. Some friends wandered in and joined us for dessert. When I went inside to use the facilities, I saw that all the tables were filled. I heard some southern drawls and a foreign accent that I couldn’t place. We later heard from the manager that there were lots of out-of-town visitors who are referred to the bistro by TripAdvisor.com. I don’t know the site but our friends use it when they travel. Apparently it’s a great way to find good food and cool places to stay. It’s terrific to see that MHB, open only a year, is becoming the place to eat in Cheyenne. (I checked out TripAdvisor and Morris House is the top-rated Cheyenne restaurant out of 86 choices.)

We closed down Morris House and headed home. Chris wanted to keep the night alive so we sat out on our back porch and watched the lightning light up the eastern sky. The night’s breeze carried a promise of rain but it fell only on our friends in Burns and Pine Bluffs or maybe nowhere at all. Teased again. But we went to bed with the promise of rain in our heads. That’s about all that we’ve had this summer – teased by rain but delivered once again into the dry hands of drought. But on this night, I didn’t care.

The Art Design & Dine Intown Art Tour takes place the second Thursday of the month, 5-8 p.m., April through December, at various Cheyenne venues. Get more info at artdesigndine.org.

Thursday, August 09, 2012

Tim O'Brien writing workshop: "The Things We Carry"

One of America's best writers will be in Cheyenne Oct. 5-6. 

Tim O'Brien, author of "The Things They Carried" and "Going After Cacciato," will be at the Literary Connection at Laramie County Community College on Friday and Saturday, Oct. 5-6. On Friday, between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m., he will join two other award-winning writers -- John Calderazzo and Cat Valente -- who will each conduct a free workshop. Tim is a Vietnam veteran whose work continues to explore the legacy of that conflict on the American psyche. Here are the workshop details:

Tim O'Brien: The Things We Carry

Tim O'Brien"In this workshop I'll be discussing my approach to writing fiction and will touch on such topics as the use of autobiographical materials in fiction, the principle of simultaneity, animating a story, thematic gravitas, etc."
Tim O’Brien received the National Book Award in Fiction in 1979 for his novel Going After Cacciato. In 2005 The Things They Carried was named by the New York Times as one of the twenty best books of the last quarter century.

Wednesday, August 08, 2012

Beatgrass at The Ancient Sage for Art Design & Dine Aug., 9

You might have seen Georgia Rowswell Monday morning on Channel 5 promoting the Art Design & Dine Art Tour. Georgia launched ADD three years ago. She's an artist and proprietor of The Artful Hand Gallery. 
Beatgrass will perform at The Ancient Sage during Thursday's Art Design & Dine


Monday, August 06, 2012

17th Street Arts Festival set for Cheyenne's Dinneen Downtown Plaza


We'll breathe life into this old downtown yet.

The inaugural 17th Street Arts Festival, located at the new Dinneen Downtown Plaza in Cheyenne, will feature dozens of visual and performance artists, children’s activities, food and fun. The festival begins Friday night, August 17, with an Artist Preview Reception, including performances by local artists and a wine tasting bar. The Reception is from 5-9 p.m. Then all day Saturday, August 18, from 10 a.m.–8 p.m., enjoy visual and performance art, a children’s area complete with bounce house, all day family arts and crafts, and local art exhibits. The Performance Stage will showcase continuous local music and theatre acts through the day. There is no charge to attend the Festival.

The 17th Street Arts Festival is hosted by Arts Cheyenne and the Cheyenne Downtown Development Authority.

Saturday, August 04, 2012

Munis memorial concert tonight at Depot Plaza will benefit Safehouse

From the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle:
Singer Robin Munis died five years ago when her estranged husband fired a bullet from a high-powered rifle as she was performing inside Old Chicago.

But her death did not silence her wonderful voice. Friends and fans are continuing a tradition to keep her memory alive.

Area musicians will pay tribute to Munis at the fifth annual benefit concert from 4-10 p.m. Saturday [tonight] at Cheyenne Depot Plaza, 121 W. 15th St.

Four bands whose styles range from jazz to blues rock to variety will perform. They are Avenue, Jazztet, Second Opinion and Beatgrass. The musicians will donate their time.
The concert is free but donations will be accepted for Safehouse Services. Safehouse provides shelter for those people fleeing abusive situations. 

Read more here: Munis memorial concert to benefit Safehouse

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

"Muslim Self Portraits" exhibit at Heart Mountain Interpretive Center comes under fire

From the Heart Mountain Foundation web site:
The Heart Mountain Interpretive Center at the site of a World War II Japanese-American internment camp outside of Cody, Wyo. will present a new exhibit featuring self-portraits that reveal Muslim Americans in everyday life. The exhibit is intended to counteract stereotypes and preconceived notions about Muslims in America at this time in history. Esse Quam Videri: Muslim Self-Portraits will be exhibited in the Ford Foundation Special Exhibition Area through Sept. 18, 2012.
"This exhibit is the first in a series of exhibits at the Interpretive Center that will encourage visitors to think about prejudice, stereotyping and religious, racial and ethnic profiling," said Stevan Leger executive director.
"Esse Quam Videri" means "to be rather than to seem." The exhibit includes photographs, collaged images and self-drawn portraits of and by Muslim Americans are presented with short essays to add context.
For more information, please contact Steve Leger at 307-754-8000 or by email at sleger@heartmountain.org.
Interesting to note that the exhibit has drawn a fair number of critics. This was in an excellent July 30 editorial in the Casper Star-Tribune:
Leslie Maslak of Cody recently questioned the new exhibit in a letter published in The Billings Gazette. “What in the world does a Muslim exhibit have to do with the Japanese-Americans’ internment?” she asked.

Maslak added, “Is this a ‘comparison’ to how we mistreat the ‘peace-loving’ Muslims? Whatever the reason, this exhibit does not belong at the Heart Mountain Relocation Camp.”

Many other area residents apparently agree. An online poll by The Powell Tribune showed that through July 27, 55.9 percent of 1,101 respondents agreed with the center’s decision to host the exhibit, while 44.1 percent disagreed.
--clip--

Shirley Ann Higuchi, chairwoman of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation’s board of directors and the daughter of Heart Mountain internees, explained why the exhibit is perfectly in keeping with the story told by the center.

Higuchi said even 70 years after the internment camps were opened, “We are still sometimes misled by the power of false stereotypes to express mistrust and intolerance toward fellow Americans simply because they resemble an enemy.”

“This exhibit takes a thoughtful look at the diversity and challenges of real Muslim-Americans today, and we hope it will prompt visitors to reflect on possible parallels between perceptions of Japanese-Americans after the attack on Pearl Harbor then and Muslim-Americans now,” Higuchi said.
It's tempting to label the exhibit's critics as narrow-minded rubes. We are at war (and have been for more than ten years) with people who resemble those in the exhibit. Stereotypes are hard to counter, especially when they are reinforced so readily and so often.

But look at the mission of the Heart Mountain Interpretive Center and tell me that this exhibit doesn't belong there or somehow defames the place. Thanks to the Casper Star-Trib for standing up for something that is so obviously righteous and, judging by the criticism, so necessary.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

University of Wyoming officials destroy artwork to placate energy industry funders

Chris Drury's art installation "Carbon Sink: What Goes Around Comes Around" as it was seen last spring on the UW campus (top photo) and the site as it looks now, the artwork dismantled in the dead of night by university officials and the location covered with neat new sod. Read the whole sordid tale, as told by writer and UW prof Jeffrey Lockwood on wyofile, at http://wyofile.com/2012/07/behind-the-carbon-curtain-art-and-freedom-in-wyoming/. Photos by Chris Drury and Jeff Lockwood (from wyofile).

Monday, July 30, 2012

Dear Gov. Matt Mead: Expand Medicaid to cover Wyoming's uninsured

From the Rev. Rodger McDaniel and friends:
A group of us are putting together a letter to Governor Matt Mead to urge him to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. If you would like your name to appear on the letter, please respond and let me know exactly how you'd like it to appear. If you have friends who will sign, please let me know. I will need their e-mail authorization. A copy of the draft letter is attached. The more the better...by the end of this week. The letter will be hand-delivered to the Govenor by former State Rep. Pete Jorgensen.
I've added my name to the letter. You can too. Rodger's e-mail is rodger.mcdaniel@bresnan.net
 
Read the details in Rodger's Saturday column at http://blowinginthewyomingwind.blogspot.com/2012/07/mead-thinks-insuring-uninsured-is-not.html




Monday, July 23, 2012

Cheyenne's Yellowstone super-computer will bring new precision to climate research

This L.A. Times article on Cheyenne's new super-computer has so many cool, mind-blowing facts in it, and it's so well-written by Scott Gold, that I hate to point out one annoying oddity.

So I won't do that right now. Instead, read these opening paragraphs and feel proud about Laramie County's new claim to fame:
Out on the shortgrass prairie, where being stuck in the ways of the Old West is a point of civic pride, scientists are building a machine that will, in effect, look into the future. 
This month, on a barren Wyoming landscape dotted with gopher holes and hay bales, the federal government is assembling a supercomputer 10 years in the making, one of the fastest computers ever built and the largest ever devoted to the study of atmospheric science. 
The National Center for Atmospheric Research's supercomputer has been dubbed Yellowstone, after the nearby national park, but it could have been named Nerdvana. The machine will have 100 racks of servers and 72,000 core processors, so many parts that they must be delivered in the back of a 747. Yellowstone will be capable of performing 1.5 quadrillion calculations — a quadrillion is a 1 followed by 15 zeros — every second. 
That's nearly a quarter of a million calculations, each second, for every person on Earth. In a little more than an hour, Yellowstone can do as many calculations as there are grains of sand on every beach in the world.
Our new computer, Yellowstone, is amazing. One of the goals of all that wizardry, according to the article, is to replace the guesswork of climate sience with precision. It is, after all, a project of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, or NCAR. The National Science Foundation paid $50 million of the $70 facility. The rest was paid by the University of Wyoming. UW aims to plumb the mysteries of carbon sequestration, which makes sense for a university that gets giant coal shovels full of money from the energy industry. Wonder what will happen if long-term, safe carbon sequestration turns out to be as viable as spinning straw into gold?

But we're getting ahead of ourselves. Those quarter of a million calculations per second will solve the riddle in due time. Meanwhile, climate scientists all over the globe will be crunching numbers and analyzing data about global warming, polar ice melt, super hurricanes, prolonged droughts, weather effects of solar flares, etc.

NCAR hopes to bring "regional accuracy" to forecasting. As NCAR's Richard Loft says: "The disaster of climate change happens on a regional scale. Everything is connected.""  

Everything is connected. What I like is that Cheyenne will be connected to the super-computer because it is right next door, or nearby. Whatever insights are gained about climate in the next decade, the data will come from Yellowstone. The computer, not the national park.

Which brings me to the one strange fact in the story. Yellowstone is a "nearby national park?" Well, Rocky Mountain National Park is two hours and about 120 miles from Cheyenne. That's nearby. But Yellowstone? That's 450 miles and a good eight hours from Cheyenne. O.K., maybe that's nearby if you live in Wyoming. But I wonder if Yellowstone (the super-computer) would think so? How would a super-computer quantify "nearby?"

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Wanted: Wyoming scenic vistas to showcase at Democratic National Convention

Imagine if there were as many active Democrats in Wyoming as there are scenic vistas. This request for Wyoming photos comes from Ricky Kirshner, Executive Producer for the 2012 Democratic National Convention (via Wyoming Democratic Party web site):

On behalf of the Democratic National Convention Committee, the Wyoming Democratic Party has been asked to contact you to secure photographic imagery showcasing Wyoming. This photography will be incorporated into the large video screens used during the upcoming convention. The producers of the screen content have requested the following type and format of photography:
"State photography should include wide landscapes, iconic locations and scenic panoramas. The state should provide imagery as high resolution still photography in one of the following format options: JPEG, PSD, TIFF”

We want to provide the producers with "approved" photography void of rights issues and licensing costs. By submitting said photography you acknowledge that you have the authority to do so and indemnify the DNCC and RK Corporate Productions for its use of the photos as indicated herein.

Photos can be uploaded to the following ftp site:
www.mightydotsclient.com
username – stateimagery
password – dnc (all lowercase)
*Click on the name of the folder that represents your state or territory, then use the File Upload protocol on the left side of the page to upload up to 10 files at a time.  For best results when uploading several photos, compress the photos into one zip file and upload the one zipped file


Please contact Juli Pritchard at 323-219-9974 or pritchard.juli@gmail.com to coordinate this effort or to answer any questions you may have. The deadline for receipt of your state's photography is Tuesday, July 31, 2012.  We want to make sure each state is represented visually at the upcoming convention so please make this request a priority. We look forward to receiving your imagery and to helping you coordinate this effort.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Aurora connections bring tragedy closer to home

My 19-year-old daughter was at the midnight showing in Cheyenne of "The Dark Knight Rises" on Thursday night. When I awoke Friday morning, I had no idea about the shootings in Aurora. I skipped the news and watched the Weather Channel to see how hot it was going to get in Cheyenne. Very hot, as it turns out in this normally temperate place. It wasn't until I got to work and fired up the computer that I understood the scope of the tragedy. Sick at heart -- that would be a good way to describe it. I was sad for my home state of Colorado, site of so much tragedy with this summer's fires. I was sad for Aurora, too, the now-huge Denver suburb that was the site of my parents' first house, one that was a block away from the old Fitzsimons Army Medical Center where, as fate would have it, was the place where my paternal grandparents met after World War I. He was a soldier recuperating from gas attacks and she was a nurse. Fitzsimons closed in 1999 and that now houses the sprawling hospital campus where many of the shooting wounded were taken. When we moved from Florida to Denver 30-plus years ago, my wife and I lived in an apartment in Aurora. It all hits close to home. But you don't have to have any connection to Colorado at all to be affected by this. Any of us could have been in that movie theater. One of the wounded was on a cross-country jaunt and decided, on a whim, to go to a movie Thursday night. A young female sports reporter had to talk her boyfriend into going to the film in Aurora that night. She didn't make it. While I can only imagine the loss that her family feels, I have enough empathy to do so. It is a tragedy and our prayers are with you all.