Sunday, June 29, 2003

White powder closes Topeka post office. Topeka Police spokesman Doug Eisenbarth doesn't know what it is, but it seems safe to assume it isn't cocaine.

Friday, May 23, 2003

Eat at Doug's

Stay away from the long pig, too.

Wednesday, March 19, 2003


Speaking of God, preparing for war
JUAN O. TAMAYO
Knight Ridder, 19 May 2003

CAMP COMMANDO, Kuwait - On the brink of war, chaplain Doug Dowling is thinking about the sermon he will deliver today to American leathernecks in his sandbagged chapel a few miles from the Iraqi border.

He will urge the Marines to treat enemy bodies with respect, to look away from the grotesque mutilations of war. He will tell them the war is not about getting even for 9/11. And he will tell them that amid the horror of war they may find the beauty of valor and comradeship and, perhaps, the presence of God.

A stocky Navy lieutenant with a blond mustache and bare-walls haircut, the 42-year-old Milwaukee native looks like a Marine in his digital desert camouflage uniform, floppy "boony" hat and military web gear.

But he wears a tiny black metal cross on his shirt and speaks with the fervor of a former Navy warplane navigator who was stationed in Kuwait during the Iraq-Iran war in the 1980s, who fought in the 1991 Gulf War and then became a pastor for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

"There is a God who is a warrior, but God is the same always," Dowling said. "The God you believe in as you may go to war is that same God you believed in yesterday and the day before, so nothing changes for me on this day."

Dowling has baptized 32 people here, including a Navy officer he met briefly in a military base parking lot and christened with water from a plastic bottle.

He will hold one more service today in his tiny chapel with a cross on top, really a bunker dug halfway into the desert sand and then sandbagged for protection.

"I will pray for our men and for theirs, too," he said. "And I will pray especially for peace."


Tuesday, March 18, 2003

"It's really about the mind games," Doug Walker, co-president of the Toronto-based World Rock Scissors Paper Society, which sponsored the annual contest, told the Associated Press, according to a story in today's Kansas City Star. "There's a lot of trash talking and mental intimidation."

You might also say that about the diplomacy of the US War Party in recent months, days, hours.

Wednesday, February 05, 2003


Sad days for another Doug...

[...] In televised comments memorializing the shuttle crew, Allen, R-Va., described a telephone conversation with the brother of mission specialist David Brown, an Arlington County native. Brown's brother Doug could not be reached for comment. Yesterday, Doug Brown sat in the first row of a national memorial at Johnson, along with his mother, father, two cousins and 22 other family members of Columbia's crew.

Just a few hours after the service, Allen spoke from the Senate floor. His comments were broadcast on C-SPAN2. According to Allen, Doug Brown told the senator that in private e-mail messages during the mission, his astronaut brother said the crew was "concerned" about the shuttle's left wing. Allen spokeswoman Carrie Cantrell confirmed that the senator stood by his recollection of the conversation.

In the conversation, Doug Brown said the crew photographed the left wing, which was struck shortly after launch by a piece of foam insulation that fell from one of the shuttle's external fuel tanks, according to Allen. Allen said Doug Brown told him he never received any such photos.

NASA "is trying to track what if any e-mails were sent to the family," said Jacobs. The agency is examining NASA computer equipment to see if the e-mails can be tracked, he said. NASA officials investigating the accident have said engineers initially dismissed the insulation incident, but in hindsight are reconsidering whether it might have damaged the craft and contributed or led to the catastrophe. Crew members were told about the insulation during the mission, according to NASA, but they were not alarmed by the falling debris, which had occurred on earlier missions.

"All indications that we had from the crew was that they were not concerned about the insulation strike and if there is new information suggesting otherwise we would be interested in hearing from the family," said Jacobs. [...]

from:
Allen: Crew worried about wing damage
Richmond Times-Dispatch, 5 February 2003

Sunday, February 02, 2003

Condolences, on a very sad day for Doug Haviland, and all who have been touched by the Columbia tragedy.

"Just Friday night, Doug Haviland says he read an e-mail from space from his niece Laurel Salton Clark. 'She was thrilled by the whole thing,' said Haviland, 76, of Ames, Iowa, where Clark was born. 'She loved the views. She said she could see lightning flash over the Pacific Ocean.' His wife, Betty, added, 'She talked about the wonders she saw up there and how proud she was to represent her country and how blessed she felt to have this experience.' The family was on an e-mail network, where they would circulate her messages from space. It turned out to be their last message from her. Clark, 41, was one of seven astronauts on board the space shuttle Columbia yesterday. It was her first mission. A commander in the U.S. Navy and a naval flight surgeon, she was part of a crew working on more than 80 experiments including studies of astronaut health and safety.

'It's a tragedy,' said Haviland, who lost his son Timothy in the World Trade Center disaster. "

from:
'The Seven Souls We Mourn Today'
By Jamie Herzlich and Patricia Kitchen
February 2, 2003
Newsday

It's difficult not to feel anger on learning that the White House, according to the British newspaper, The Observer apparently ignored safety warnings about the Space Shuttle as recently as last fall.

Tuesday, January 21, 2003

A Doug Mood: what I'm in today, and every day, but this Doug expresses it with Energizer Bunny energy. Says the Great Falls Tribune: "the new speaker of the Republican-controlled House [...] likes to test himself -- and he's spent no small amount of time doing it. The 59-year-old Mood has run in five marathons and competed in several triathlons, the grueling event where competitors swim a mile, ride 50 miles on a bicycle and run the final six miles. He plays and composes music on a trio of guitars and also plays or has played the accordion, saxophone, violin and mandolin. As a skier, he pushed himself to become better so he could ski with his expert-skier son."

Wednesday, January 08, 2003

The wolf -- known as No. 2 -- who led that species to successful re-establishment in Yellowstone has died, pushed aside by the next generation that No. 2 made possible, says Doug Smith, Yellowstone's lead wolf biologist, in a Billings Gazette story published today. "He was not a strong presence but a solid one," Doug told the newspaper. "He was a great hunter and a great provider for his pups. He did his job. [...] He was a mammoth wolf with one of the biggest, bushiest tails I've ever seen. But he was old, 8 years old, and a step slower."