Monday, June 16, 2008

Moving to the Country.....

Sat June 14, 2008

With offer, Hobart hopes to land modern-day settlers

By Richard Mize
Staff Writer
HOBART — Not since allotment of the Kiowa-Comanche-Apache reservation lands in 1901 has settlement come to this in Kiowa County:

Land!

FREE LAND in Hobart!


Strings are attached, though. The city is offering free residential lots, and free hookups to utilities, to anyone who will build houses on them and make Hobart their home.

City Manager Wilt Brown said officials were inspired by similar successful appeals to modern-day land grabbers in small towns in Kansas and Alaska.

Not that Hobart is desperate, although the Kiowa County seat, about 115 miles southwest of Oklahoma City, has been losing population — it stood at about 4,300 in 1990, about 4,200 in 1997, about 4,000 in 2000, about 3,900 in 2005, and projected at 3,870 in 2010.

In fact, Hobart has some things going for it that other Great Plains towns are, well, dying for:

Take the General Tommy Franks Leadership Institute and Museum. Brown said fundraising goes on.

The retired general's wife, Cathy, is from Hobart. Planned is a $15-million, 45,000-square-foot complex on a two-city block area on S Main Street.

Gaining momentum

Last year, Hobard Mayor Tom Talley received the Oklahoma Mayor of the Year Award for small towns from the Oklahoma Conference of Mayors, and Hobart received a Municipal Innovations Award for its “Big Bang” beautification effort led by the Junior Main Street program.

The Hobart area has a civilian labor force of 4,810, with an unemployment rate of 4.6 percent, according to the Oklahoma Department of Commerce.

A recent job fair listed more than 500 jobs open in the area, in aircraft construction, corrections and health care, Brown said.

But, times have been better.

Somber centennial

Brown said Hobart natives who returned for the town's centennial celebration in 2001 helped residents decide something needed to be done before the town started seriously suffering the fate of other Plains communities.

“They said, ‘Hey, our town's dying. We're not going to let that happen,'” Brown said.

The appeal is reminiscent of the flyers and broadsheets that town builders used to lure homesteaders in the 19th century — except for the airport, of course.

“Our community, framed to the south by the Wichita and Quartz mountains, offers a quiet rural life with an excellent hospital, airport, library, schools, parks, nursing home, senior day care center and churches,” Brown wrote in a modern-day flyer, an e-mail headlined just like the ones from the old days:

“FREE LAND: WE HAVE A HOMETOWN FOR YOU! Welcome to Hobart, Oklahoma ... the little town with a big heart.”

Lots of lots

Unlike land ads from more than a century ago, most of which were printed up by hucksters high on hype, Brown said there is no bait-and-switch deal in the works in Hobart.

The city owns 35 lots, most with dilapidated houses on them, 30 deeded over from Kiowa County. As the shacks come down, the land will be available to modern-day homesteaders who, just as their homesteading forebears did, can “prove up” their intentions: They're going to build houses and they're going to live in them.

First things first, though. Getting the word out about the city council's decision to go forward with the idea, last Monday, was job No. 1.

Next is drawing up applications and guidelines. They'll be available Sept. 1, which, if Hobart officials realize their dreams, could go down in history, alongside Oklahoma's other historic land runs, rushes and lotteries.

They're even calling it Hobart Land Rush of 2008.

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This article led me to dreams of creating my community in the desolate wastes of southwest Oklahoma. Imagine you and 34 of your friends being 10% of a town and then helping to mold that town from the brink of oblivion to a modern oasis. Then my wife reminded me where Hobart is.

Friday, June 6, 2008

The New Nietzsche??




Any fan of Firefly could have told you the man is great philosopher....

Ark. academic conference examines TV hit `Buffy'
By JON GAMBRELL, Associated Press Writer
Fri Jun 6, 8:34 AM ET

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Aristotle. Nietzsche. Buffy? The blond heroine of the campy TV series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," as well as other works by creator Joss Whedon, will be the focus of a three-day academic conference beginning Friday at Henderson State University.

The show starring Sarah Michelle Gellar won cult fame and critical praise during its seven seasons on The WB and UPN networks.

Since it ended, the series has spawned enough academic books on the philosophy surrounding the roles of friendship and feminism to fill a 15-foot-wide bookshelf at the college in Arkadelphia, said Kevin Durand, an associate professor of philosophy.

"It has staying power," Durand said. "It's like I tell my students in philosophy a lot of times: We're not so much about necessarily finding all the answers as wanting to ask better questions. `Buffy,' I think, does that. `Buffy' never really leaves you with nice, pat answers. You have even more questions than when you started."

Durand said more than 90 academic papers will be discussed at the conference. He expects about 150 people to attend and discuss the vampire slayer and Whedon's other works, including the television series "Firefly" and "Angel." Another point of discussion will be a lesser-known part of Whedon's work — his screenplay for the hit animated film "Toy Story."

Among the papers: "Buffy and Feminism," "Buffy and Identity," "Gender Stereotypes and the Image of Domesticity in `Firefly,'" "`Firefly:' The Illusive Safety of Big Damn Heroes" and a Durand favorite by a British scholar, "Hero's Journey, Heroine's Return: Buffy, Eurydice and the Orpheus Myth."

"That one just sounds cool," he said.


Monday, June 2, 2008

Springtime in Syracuse




So this weekend Robely and I took our (quickly becoming annual) trip to upstate New York to visit our friends Scott and Ken.
Oh, it was a blast. Robely and Ken went out to see the sites while Scott and I geeked out with some of the locals.
The weather was absolutely beautiful (at least compared to the heat brewing in Dallas). The temperature was in the 60s and 70s and spring was beginning to bloom up there.

Since our last visit Scott and Ken had purchased a 3 story manor (at least compare to our humble abode) on 4 1/2 acres besides (what was generously called) a lake. At the end of a quiet lane we seemed out in the middle of the woods. I saw deer and turkey in the back yard and even heard foxes Thursday night while having a smoke.

Two surprises that I discovered in my gaming orgy were Indiana Jones: Game of Life and Monopoly: Tropical Tycoon. Both surprisingly scratched that Ameritrash itch and were quite enjoyable (mainly because of the company).
Then Robely and I discovered Scott's Wii. We stayed up waaaaayyyyy too late Saturday playing Boom Bloxx (quite addictive) and no alcohol was involved. Who knew waving your wrists around could be so addictive? I was not sure Robely and I would be able to pull ourselves away from the paradisaical setting.

Surprisingly, the air travel was smooth (compared to my last few trips). It helped, of course, that we mailed our luggage ahead of time instead of playing the TSA lottery. Somewhere along the weekend someone mentioned Origins and it stuck in my head. Arriving home I realized I have far too many unscheduled vacation days remaining for this year (and I can't save them anymore) and looked at it more as a lark than a serious vacation. But after a horrible return to work today, I quickly decided another vacation was in order indeed.

A few clicks later and plastic money through the ether off I soon to go. As I finished the whole reservation process I came to the realization that Origins is not my true goal. No my true goal is getting away from work and Dallas. Lock me up in a closet away from the office and I'll be happy. Getting to game and seeing friends is definitely an added bonus.

Now I'm like a kid before Christmas and can't wait.