Archive - Aug 2, 2006

Waterfalls

On Monday of our week in Sylva, NC, we took a car ride to visit several waterfalls including Cullasaja and Dry Falls.

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Cullasaja Falls


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Finn and Kathryn


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Dry Falls


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Alice and Bill


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Jeannie and David


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Matt, Eli, and Laura


Ironic DUIs

July 2006 seems to be the month of ironic DUI incidents...

First, in mid-July, Peter Coors (executive of the Coors Brewing Company) lost his license as a result of a May incident. From an AP article on MSNBC.com:

Beer baron Peter Coors' driver's license has been revoked after his arrest for drunken driving following a wedding celebration.

Hearing officer Scott Garber ruled Friday that Coors did not stop at a stop sign and was driving impaired on May 28.

Coors, 59, said he had consumed a beer about 30 minutes before leaving the wedding, the Rocky Mountain News reported Saturday. He faces a July 20 arraignment and has 30 days to appeal the revocation.


Then, at the end of July, Mel Gibson (who has long been dogged by charges of anti-Semitism due to his Passion of the Christ movie and statements about the holocaust made by his father) was arrested for DUI and made sexist and anti-semitic comments. Slate.com described the controversy and showed some of the police report here.

No One to Confide In

Churches, are you paying attention? People are depending on family more and more but live away from family more and more. Providing the network that people can lean on when they are in need is right up the church's alley.

From a USA Today article by Janet Kornblum titled "Study: 25% of Americans have no one to confide in":

Americans have a third fewer close friends and confidants than just two decades ago — a sign that people may be living lonelier, more isolated lives than in the past.

In 1985, the average American had three people in whom to confide matters that were important to them, says a study in today's American Sociological Review. In 2004, that number dropped to two, and one in four had no close confidants at all…

The percentage of people who confide only in family increased from 57% to 80%, and the number who depend totally on a spouse is up from 5% to 9%, the study found. "If something happens to that spouse or partner, you may have lost your safety net," Smith-Lovin says…

The chief suspects: More people live in the suburbs and spend more time at work, Putnam says, leaving less time to socialize or join groups.

Also, people have more entertainment tools such as TV, iPods and computers, so they can stay home and tune out. But some new trends, such as online social networking, may help counter the effect, he says.

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