November 25, 2005
"Rogers Pass is a modern representation of Canadian Pacific Railway's Mountain Subdivision from Field, BC to Revelstoke, BC. It is a continuation of the transcontinental route through Canada's Western Mountain region that started with Kicking Horse Pass.
The route starts at the crew change point in Field at the end of the Laggan Sub. Drops down the Kicking Horse Canyon to Golden, BC. At Golden, the Windermere Sub connects, including the giant coal train servicing yard. From there, the route heads up the Rocky Mountain Trench to the mouth of the Beaver River. It then starts up the grades of Rogers Pass to the tunnels under the summit. From the summit, the route drops down the Illecillewaet River to Revelstoke, BC. "
It's affordably priced at $24.99, and is probably worth the money. Once I get the proper funds shifted, I will be giving myself this, eh. Read all about the route here.
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It appears that this route is the next step to the west from MLT's Kicking Horse Pass v2.0, which simulates the CPR's Laggan Subdivision. I could be wrong, and if I am, correct me.
MLT has been making add-ons for MSTS for quite some time; I personally own most of their products and think them good. For what it's worth, the Canadian Pacific Railway has been the most accomodating of the MSTS user base, authorizing several "official" releases.
Addendum: I have no pecuniary interest in MLT, Microsoft, or the CPR.
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November 24, 2005
And away we go!
0900: Yay, "The National Broadcasting Company"; it's always nifty to hear full corporate names from another era. The only problem is that I'll be stuck with the dreadful duo of Couric & Lauer.
0902: Thirty-nine degrees in Herald Square, ick. When I watched Macy's back in the 1990s, I froze myself to death. Not only was the weather absolutely miserable in terms of temperature, but we must have found the international section, because I heard something like ten languages around me. The only problem with that was that none of them were English.
Mr. Robin Hall is annoying already, and the woman standing beside him looks like Harriet Miers. Of course, maybe I'm just not good at connecting to New York views of how to show enthusiasm.
0905: Ill-tempered rant about the presence of one named guest snipped out of consideration for audience interest. At least the sports entertainment crowd doesn't have anyone announced in this lineup; maybe Kristin Chenoweth will do a good song. Her popular music release from a few years back was pretty good, although she annoyed in Bewitched. Hmm.
0910: Gah, Sprint ads have gotten very bad. Yay, massive train station in Europe. Meanwhile, I just can't get excited about the National Dog Show, although I understand that people watch it. Little children die when Katie Couric opens her mouth.
0913: Rainn Wilson looks like John Lithgow's Blake Edwards in The Life and Death of Peter Sellers. I'm not sure that's a compliment. Let's see how many NBC television programs we can hawk, Roker.
Ooh, here we go with Christina Applegate. I wasn't in Herald Square when I saw the thing, so I've never actually seen these little dance numbers. On second thought, I think I liked Miss Applegate in something else better.
0918: Hmm, stage makeup always makes one look really weird, and that must be the final verdict on Miss Applegate. Hooray, someone with a Washington Nationals hat. Do I really need commercials for food, gambling, and dancing to convince me to go to Puerto Rico? (Admittedly, the only way I'd go to Puerto Rico is on a junket to waste public money, but...)
Expect something extra from CVS? How about lower service? Bah, Sheryl Crow in the NBC Christmas concert. Her last album stunk, so I don't think I'll be tuning in. On the other hand, it might be interesting to see who's got more makeup on in an attempt to cover up age, Rod Stewart or her. Ha ha.
Blah, daytime soap opera stars waste my time.
0923: Ooh, maids. The problem with the Broadway singing style is that every singer sounds alike, or at least alike enough to fool my ears. (We're never going to assign you to Brookhiser's seat or anything near the city desk. ---Ed.) One would think that Dirty Rotten Scoundrel would refer to George Steinbrenner.
0931: Well, finally someone to tell us some more things about the city itself. Thanks to Amy Grant for being useful, unlike Couric & Lauer. Nice off-camera snow gun. I don't think it's a coincidence that Couric is wearing some sort of hat that probably wouldn't have been out of place on the late Raisa Gorbachev. Bloody little hack journalist.
Meanwhile, the gal in the red-and white from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is pleasant to watch and listen to. I don't remember the movie being an economic or critical overperformer, but maybe I'm wrong. Ouch, just watching people do bell kicks causes pain. I'm afraid of the human on the left of the yellow-vested man. That had better be a woman in greasepaint or something.
0938: Brad Paisley versus Kermit the Frog in dueling banjos. I...I have nothing to say. Oh, Couric, you urban sophisticate, "CPW" for "Central Park West". I am nothing before your brilliant acronyms. My God, Adrien Brody is a human woodpecker. Hmm, NASA rocket in the background. Recreating New York ought to be interesting, especially if they put something from the New York Central or Pennsylvania Railroad. A New Haven I-5 on The Merchants Limited might not be out of place, either...
I'd rather ride on a ship of the Cunard or White Star lines than on Royal Carribean's Freedom of the Seas. You don't surf on something that wants to win the Blue Riband.
0943: "We're Sunnnnnnnncom, and we-get-it." Harry Connick, Jr., has been a favorite since I saw him in The Memphis Belle whenever that came out. Yee haw.
0944: The Jersey Boys makes me think of someone from the Central Railroad of New Jersey, but these guys probably haven't seen a CNJ train in their life. (Neither have you.---Ed.) I heard a little something about this one on NPR a few weeks back, I think; I'd rather these sorts of things succeed as opposed to Rent or Angels in America. After all, giving the odious Tony Kushner a red smear in the ledger book is a worthy goal.
Walk like a man, eh? Not with a voice like that.
0955: Yay, the Rockettes. Crawling on sunshine? Give me Katrina and the Waves, not this ersatz arrangement. Ack, pfftbt, or whatever, due to M.C. Hammer outtakes for hand sanitizer ads. Nexium ad! It fixes acid reflux, but it might just wreck everything else in your GI system. Visit purplepill.com and nag the licensed professional who knows more than you to prescribe it!
0959: Yay, Harriet Miers is back on screen. At least Lauer sounds like he's trying, while Couric ought to be nicknamed 'The Phonewoman', 'cause she sounds like she's phoning it in.
1000: Hooray for high school bands. They often keep high school football interesting, especially when they get snide in their song choice.
1003: Hmm, Scooby-Doo. I used to watch a lot of that when I was a kid. It is, however, interesting to know that the Scooby-Doo series have made it into the Guinness book of records. One wonders if they're counting The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo in that run.
1008: Rita Coolidge sings for us. Yay? We last heard from her in the 1983 James Bond movie, Octopussy. Bloody Big Bird; the Children's Television Workshop ought to pay a dividend to the Federal government so we can reduce taxation elsewhere. I'd still like to know why the CPB and PBS don't get the profits from Sesame Street and Barney. There's probably a very good reason for it, but all the more reason to complain. It would be nice to avoid the regular PBS fund drives, after all.
1011: Tommy Tune lives? Amazing. Ooh, European train station in the Nikon D50 ad. Yee haw. Have them boarding a TGV Atlantique or something. I hate OnStar ads. If I buy a new GM car, I'll impose a requirement that any such on-board system be ripped out. Hmm, self-propelled weebles. Interesting.
1015: This is amusing trying to hear Couric stumbling over whatever it is; J-pop is....ach. Puffy AmiYumi. Er, right. Give me some Cibo Matto if you must, but this is more than I can stomach. That guy with the guitar looks like he's really happy. Ugh, that purple dinosaur.
1028: Eatin' time. Service will resume when the foodstores are depleted.
1038: We're back, and "Mr. DJ" girl can kindly move along. I'm not particularly concerned where she's from, and ooh, Kristin Chenoweth coming up. Four feet eleven inches of good singing voice. Interesting, Walt Disney World is fifty. I haven't been there in years, so I don't know what's down there, but I heard they canned the 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea ride, so fooey on Eisner.
1041: Note to Estee Lauder's ad people: Gwyneth Paltrow is not superior to Elizabeth Hurley. I saw the former in an ad while out last night, and I thought it was Sheryl Crow. (In case you're wondering, that's not a compliment.)
1044: I do think Rex Harrison makes a better Dr. Doolittle than Tommy Tune. Hmm, Chicken Little. That was an amusing picture, helped much by the presence of Joan Cusack, who I've liked since Grosse Pointe Blank and Toys. Everyone needs a Marcella, and I've known someone who's about as weird as Alsatia.
1047: Interesting how the Disney people got folks who resemble the animated character's they're portraying. Yay.
1057: Yay, it's Kristin Chenoweth! Whatta setta pipes on that gal. Precise diction and the like. We don't care about Oklahoma, but you're doing fine, Kristin.
1101: Hip hop>? Snore. Please go away. Likewise to the Telemundo types. 'The Click Five' can kindly move along now; I don't care. On the other hand, Hess gasoline is always good to see publicized.
1105: Enh, bilingual Latina adventurer. Snore; I could care less. Here's Natasha Bedingfield. Please go away. See the Statue of Liberty? Go past that and keep heading east. We'll have a place for you at Southampton or London Heathrow.
1110: Hooray, the NYPD and the FDNY. When I was in NYC for the parade, it was nifty to see those guys standing around in the heavy double-breasted jackets. It was like something out of an old movie, but you knew you were safe with those guys around. They were huge. (Of course, nothing surpasses the Virginia State Police for the impression of 'don't mess', so go figure.) Hmm, the obligatory Louisiana mentions. Well, I suppose that makes sense since the clobbering of the Gulf Coast is a very important story.
1115: Couric as queen of the pom-poms? Bah. I thought the cheerleader outfits said "NYP", which brought "New York Pennsylvania Station" to mind. Either I'm going back to sleep, or the parade is not as interesting.
1122: Bring back Mayor McCheese, you dirtbags! Tutenstein? Double-you-tee-eff. Rock and rule with a three thousand year old corpse? Er, no. Funny, shouldn't Egyptian dancers be, well, visually similar to Eygptians?
1124: Gah, Pikachu. An electric rat is about the last thing I need at this point. Where's my whiskey?
1129: Hmm, a Miss USA. Yay. This parade brough to you by the Potato Board. Give me a Darth Tater anyways. Couric, you're casually invited to kill the bad puns. Don't you have any editorial control?
1132: Aaron Neville, you're so cutting-edge for having a tattoo on your face. That's so cool. Maybe when I grow up, I can have one of those, too. And a beret, too!
1141: Brian Wilson is wearing a Yankees hat. Well, down with him. Frog or supermodel? Depends. If I want a phone call, I'll go with Kermit the Frog. If I want a wake-up nudge, I'll go with Carolyn Murphy. Sorry, Frog.
1144: Cheetah Girls? Uh, whatever.
1147: If I understand Couric correctly, the M&M balloon was not displayed live. Well, safety first. Pillsbury Doughboy, hooray. Carrie Underwood sings an eminently forgettable song. I can't say that it's a very good one.
1154: Hmm, The Polar Express. Any parade can be improved by the presence of a replica Nickel Plate Berkshire. Bah, losing signal can make you worried. Twice in the last minute, we've gone to blue screen. One worries when live events get hit by this; I'm reminded of a scene from the new Galactica wherein you see static on one side of a split screen, and someone being buffeted by the winds from an atomic detonation shortly before being caught in the blast themselves. (You've seen too many movies on nuclear war.---Ed.)
1157: Yay, Santa Claus. Thanks to Macy's, the National Broadcasting Corporation, and all the telecast sponsors for making this possible.
Happy Thanksgiving to all of y'all; I'll be back later in the week 'cause now it's time for an over-the-road trip to the relatives. Yee haw.
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Yee haw.
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November 20, 2005
Fred Barnes writing in The Weekly Standard. Mr. Barnes' piece is inspired by an article in the foreign policy journal Foreign Affairs, written by Nixon Administration Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird.
I'm reading this now, and will cobble together my thoughts on the Laird piece some time tomorrow.
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November 19, 2005
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Georgia Tech defeats Miami: Good. As stated before, Miami exists to do one thing, and that is to sledgehammer Virginia Tech. Having done that, I don't care what else happens to them. The Georgia Tech defense did rather well tonight, and my (Red Sox) hat is off to them.
Virginia Tech defeats the University of Virginia: Who Cares. The outcome of this game was foreordained quite a while back. I listened to maybe forty-five seconds of it on the radio while driving around.
Clemson defeats South Carolina: Bad. I know that I called the Gamecocks to win this one in a previous post, but I started getting very uncomfortable once I saw such a low score. Your prognosticator had an unwelcome suspicion that Clemson would win a close game. Rats.
Boston College defeats Maryland: Good. Although I have nothing against the Terrapins, BC might do more with that win than Maryland.
North Carolina defeats Duke: Who Cares. In a couple of months, this is an important matchup. When in November and where there is no Coach K, this game isn't worth turning to, save for alumni.
North Carolina State defeats Middle Tennessee: Who Cares. I should hope that the Wolfpack could pull that off.
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Louisiana State defeats Mississippi: Who Cares. Another predestined victory.
Auburn defeats Alabama: No Call. This appears to have been a good game---I didn't get to see any of it---and I'm glad to see the Tide having a good year. I'm certain that Auburn will continue to be a good program, and I wish the Tide the best in the near future.
Georgia defeats Kentucky: Who Cares. The surprise is that Kentucky scored.
Arkansas defeats Mississippi State: Ouch. The battle of the back markers is decisively concluded by the Razorbacks.
Vanderbilt defeats Tennessee: Fantastic It is a glorious---but highly strange---day in the SEC when Vanderbilt finishes better than Tennessee. Rocky Flop, baby! Between this and the Georgia Tech win, I have had two good games today.
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Enh, not much else went on. I really need to get some sort of comprehensive system to watch more of these games. Curses and so forth for Herbstreit & Corso picking Clemson.
UPDATE: There is, after all, a reason why I'm not employed by ESPN or some other sports broadcast outlet for football coverage. That reason is that I'm not very good at it.
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The Vanderbilt Commodores defeat the Tennessee Volunteers 28-24 in Knoxville! Take that, Big Orange! Joyful joyful, we adore thee, dude who picked off Clauuuusen..."
Perhaps, in the spirit of Spurrier, you can't spell "OUT OF BOWL CONTENTION" without the letters "UT". Heh heh heh. We shall see.
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November 18, 2005
I was hunting back through the mail archives and noticed that I missed a notice from the Adam Smith Institute of their relocation. I quickly zipped over to the blogroll (hosted by Blogrolling) and added/updated their location.
Alex, if you ever see this, I'm sorry for not getting that done sooner. Thanks for having me linked at one point in time.
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November 17, 2005
The interesting thing about this is that the move appears (on the face of the single article) to have been the product of pressure from post-secondary education. While certainly an area of concern, I'm honestly surprised that the WVABCA did what they did because a couple of college administrators asked. That seems to be the reason, at least from the article.
The amusing thing about all this is that there's really no reason for students at the University of Charleston to worry. They've got their own alternate source of high caliber liquid poison, known to the rest of us as the Kanawha River. Drink up! If it doesn't eat your throat on the way down, the pleasurable sensations from dying organs ought to keep you in a blissful state for hours. That is, until the coma sets in.
As for those in Huntingon and Morgantown, they'll have to make do with moonshine. I am certain that the County of Franklin can supply all their needs in that regard.
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Tip of the Wisconsin hat to KLO@NRO. (This got left out the first time around. Sorry 'bout that.)
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The poll is centered around former NYC mayor Rudolph Giuliani and "his 2008 presidential aspirations". Additionally, the poll's lead-in says, "Many polls show Rudy Giuliani as one of the leading prospects for the GOP in 2008. We want to know what you really think. Key media and others want to know your opinion about Rudy Giuliani. Vote today!"
Y'all want my vote? You got it, but you won't like the results. My responses, and the suggested responses for all y'all, below:
1) What is your overall opinion of Rudy Giuliani?
[] Favorable [*] Unfavorable [] No Opinion
2) Is Rudy Giuliani your candidate for president in 2008?
[] Yes [*] No ("Hell no" was not an option.)
3) In the following field, who is your 2008 candidate?
[] John McCain [] Condi Rice [] Jeb Bush
[] Mitt Romney [] Rudy Giuliani [*] George Allen
[] Other
4) If the 2008 President race was between Rudy Giuliani & Hillary Clinton, who would you vote for?
[*] Rudy Giuliani [] Hillary Clinton (Not that I want any New Yorkers running this country...)
5) Who did you vote for in the 2004 election?
[*] George Bush [] John Kerry []Other
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The midwest has had its chance, and I'd prefer not to be led by a Northeasterner or yet another Bush family member. It's time for a Virginian to lead our Republic.
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You scored as Mom and Dad. You are Calvin's mom and dad. Though sometimes Calvin drives you wild, you manage to keep him under control, and sometimes you even get rewards from it. Sometimes... What Calvin & Hobbes character are you? created with QuizFarm.com |
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Getting the same answer as Robbo is probably grounds to go leap off a bridge. However, if I can get the same answer as him, perhaps I could substitute myself for him in this picture. "Hey baby, I really dig your national high-speed rail network. Let us consider the existential questions of the deeper meaning of the TGV system..."
Vive le France!
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I drifted back over to pheadweb and saw the entry for 02 September 2005, which said the following:
"As you already know, the good new is the upcoming Portishead release. Be sure to know that the site will have all the updates about the new album when it's ready or if there's anything else fans need to know."
There's no further information immediately available from their news page, but hope springs eternal. Perhaps I'll have the eerie intonations of Beth Gibbons floating through my headphones again before too long. Yee haw.
Originally saved at 00:03:44, 14th November 2005.
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November 16, 2005
The game will be broadcast from 1900 hours on 19 November 2005 on ESPN2. For those of us not in the Palmetto State, coverage will switch to LSU-Mississippi after 1945 hours. Yahoo! will have an audio broadcast of the game here, with pre-game starting at 1730 hours.
I am of course for the ol' ball coach, and my amateur prognostications suggest that the Gamecocks might pull this one off. Analysis below the fold: more...
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I of course am not impressed with this action, because I was impressed with David Gunn. I hadn't seen a negative thing about him in various profiles and the like, and although I'm not an industry participant, I figured him to be qualified for the job. Conversely, Norman Mineta had been pretty much on my 'losers list' over issues of airport security. Several watchdogs had caught Mineta in what were either considerable errors or outright lies in his public statements regarding Amtrak, and this reduced Mr. Mineta's credibility to zero in my eyes.1
Anyways, there's a large brouhaha from Congressional representatives along the Northeast Corridor about Gunn's firing, and the best place that I can think of to keep track of it is Rip Track.2 I'm willing to bet that Rip has dealt with Amtrak under Gunn's predecessor, George Warrington (now heading New Jersey Transit) as well, so some sort of comparison can probably be made. Rip has already commented upon working with Gunn's Amtrak; see here.
It probably goes without saying that I support Mr. Gunn's plans for an improved Amtrak, and do not favor the President's.
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1 Not that my opinion of Mr. Mineta matters; he serves at the pleasure of the President, and I doubt that George W. Bush cares what I think.
2 "The Northeast Corridor" is defined, more or less, as the ex-Penn Central line from Union Station in Washington, D.C., to South Station, in Boston, Massachusetts, and various States inbetween. Go Sox!
Originally, Washington-Boston service was a joint effort by the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad. Both were components of the Penn Central merger; the New Haven arrived in 1969 after its creditors successfully sued for inclusion. Thanks for nothing, Patrick McGinnis.
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A preface: I don't listen to a lot of country music, for whatever reason. I like Johnny Cash and Charlie Daniels, having seen the latter in concert a couple of times. Martina McBride, Lee Ann Womack, and Deana Carter fill the front ranks in the women, and there you have it. It helps that I grew up in the rural South and went to a lot of county fairs as a child. On the other hand, Gretchen Wilson's schtick tends to send me scrambling for the frequency knob on my car's radio.
With that being said, I may have taken myself out of any authoritative position to write this entry, but enh. If authoritative positions were a requisite for blog posting, then there'd be a lot less bloggin' goin' on. Take my words for what you will, but I will defiantly maintain that, having been to both of them, Nashville is not New York. (And thank God that it isn't!) I knew there was trouble when NASCAR seemed to care more about New York than North Wilkesboro (if you'll pardon the phraseology) but for the CMAs to be held in the capital of the culture that hates country music, well, er, fire off a few railroad torpedoes and have the red lanterns flapping.
To make this entry short, Aaron Keith Harris got an NRO Comment wherein he let the country music industry have it for their errant ways. The only thing I'd quibble with is his swipe at Martina McBride, but then again, the woman does seem to be fond of her ballads.1
I didn't watch the whole thing, seeing as how I was preparing the post about the N&W's 500-car coal train and watching snippets of the Akron-Ohio game, but I did manage to catch some of the low points. I had to watch in disbelief for a few seconds to see that stupid Bon Jovi smiley face to really drive home that yes, Bon Jovi was performing at the CMAs. Great googly moogly! Jon, the er, "Blaze of Glory" was quite some time ago. In more ways than one.
While I'm at it, isn't the deliberate use of Dolly Parton and Elton John in a duet grounds for some sort of felony indictment? I mean, come on, folks...
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1 She's good-looking enough to get away with it, too. Yee haw.
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November 15, 2005
Sure it's another success for Precision Transportation, but so what? Here's what: Five hundred hoppers loaded with coal plus six locomotives (EMD SD45 with the high hood, each rated at 3600 horsepower) and a single cabin car equals 21,424.75 feet. In other words, that's over four miles of train, hauling 48,000+ tons of coal. For comparison, modern unit trains of coal "tend" to max out at around 130 or so hoppers of similar size.1 Forty-eight thousand tons is more than the standard displacement of an Iowa-class battleship, so make of that what you will.
I doubt this effort was repeated, but it wouldn't surprise me if someone else tried it. My source for this post indicates that the train topped out at 20MPH, for whatever reason. I am neither an employee of a railway nor am I particularly good at operations, but I would bet that such a train would probably be more trouble than it's worth, for the following reasons: more...
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Said Mr. Rose, ""BNSF has identified itself as progressive, vital, approachable and resourceful -- a strong part of the global transportation network. As we look to the future, we believe that our identity should reflect those core attributes. We are excited about this new identity as we believe it reflects our future as a leader in transportation service and innovation, as well as the growth of BNSF Railway and its contributions to the global transportation network".
Now, I'm not the smartest guy in the world, so I'm not exactly sure where one gets 'progressive, vital, approachable, and resourceful' from "BSNF Railway". If I were a shipper, I'd more probably think "trend-chasing, poorly focused, and wasteful" to spend what the BN&SF probably did to get this logo. (On the other hand, it wasn't as stupid as 'Verizon'.) Call me crazy, but I don't see how changing your name to 'BNSF Railway' reflects your place in the 'global transportation network'. Not that I really care; the only modern railway I care for is headquartered in Norfolk, and hopefully wouldn't do something so bone-headed.
Anyways, to make a long story short, the BN&SF has had approximately ten months to tell the world that it's now reflecting its place in the global transportation network with its new identity and yackety schmackety. Meanwhile, David Gunn has been fired, and there may be lawsuits over it. Amtrak stockholders are potentially involved here, and what does the New York Times call Mr. Rose's railway?
The Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway. Ha ha ha.
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Yes, this is probably a juvenile entry.
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November 14, 2005
Considered to be standard in all ways, you try to set the tone for those around you. Aspiring to push the limits of what others think you can accomplish, you would be a good candidate to aim for the Guinness Book of World Records. With a long history of success and prosperity, you will have a full life. If you were a stone in a building, it would be the keystone. Your favorite number is 65000.
You're the Pennsylvania Railroad!
Take the Trains and Railroads Quiz
at RMI Miniature Railroads.
Yee haw.
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My source (albeit a PRR one) indicates that "[m]any small towns had their own ramp for 'circus style' loading". Compared to somewhere like Philadelphia or Harrisburg, Bristol qualifies as a small town. My source in the Bristol area says that he's never seen anything like a TOFC ramp, but admits that he wouldn't recognize one anyways.
I've never actually seen a vintage TOFC car, but I do believe that the Virginia Museum of Transportation may actually have a first- or second-generation example. It's not linked at their website, and I don't have any digital images of it.
The Trailer Train Company would later include a lot of railroads amongst its stockholders. This was a move to avoid demurrage charges, which arose when one road's railcars were left on another road's property. It may have been calculated on a per day or per week basis; sources seem to conflict on this. Basically put, demurrage is like a late fee for a boxcar.2
Anyways, the creation of TOFC/Container on Flat Car service would lead to the intermodal trains of today, which whistle along the paths once trod by trains like the Powhatan Arrow and the Broadway Limited. TOFC service was a desperate (and apparently successful) strike at over-the-road truckers who had been wrenching market share from the railroads for at least a quarter century at that point (1955).
While the Pennsylvania Railroad vanished into history on 01 February 1968, the Trailer Train Company survives today, as the TTX Company. If you're even just a casual observer of railroad operations, you've probably seen a TTX-owned well car, a RailBox ("Next Load/Any Road") boxcar, or one of their RailGons. Hats off to Trailer Train for their half-century of success! (Notice their 50th anniversary logo; the PRR's stylistic influence lives on with a sleek keystone.)
UPDATE: I looked back at my post on this subject in 2004, and found something interesting. My correspondent in the Bristol area can't figure out where the TOFC ramp would have been, but this fellow appears to have located the thing in his layout designs. I sent the map of the N&W Bristol yard to my man in the Bristol area, and he's come up short as to where it might have been. It's been half a century since this existed, and there's been plenty of time for things to have been removed.
For what it's worth, I would have enjoyed seeing an N&W "A" 2-6-6-4 pull a TOFC train.
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1 The N&W was a logical partner for this venture, inasmuch as the PRR held something like a third of N&W stock at this point. The PRR derived a lot of income from the N&W dividends, and would sorely miss that revenue after 1968. The Interstate Commerce Commission would order the divestiture of the PRR's N&W holdings from 1965 forward as a result of the N&W/Wabash/Nickel Plate/AC&Y mergers, and final divestiture was necessary for the PRR/NYCS/NYNH&H merger creating the ill-fated Penn Central Transportation Company.
2 I'm sure that the Superintendent of the Cold Spring Shops or Rip will correct me on this if I'm wrong.
Considerable information for this post was gleaned from the Keystone Crossings website.
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I need to implement the three-column layout and a few other things, but I can't translate any of the readily available tutorials into viable solutions. Thus, things may look screwy here from time to time. My long-range hope is to have themes that can be selected by either a single click or a pull-down tab. The themes aren't all that complicated, but they are beyond my operational capabilities.
Any assistance would be appreciated.
Posted by: Country Pundit at
12:36 PM
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November 13, 2005
It serves as the soundtrack arm of this publication, and features artists who the publisher either listens to or is favorably inclined towards. The publisher has been working on the playlist(s) for a while, and believes it close enough to release-ready. Any feedback is appreciated.
Not quite the same as Radio Caroline, but in the same spirit. Of sorts. Enjoy!
NOTE: The publisher is over eighteen and the playlist reflects this. There is an excellent chance that material considered objectionable by some will be broadcast.
Posted by: Country Pundit at
09:47 PM
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Post contains 128 words, total size 1 kb.
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