Tell me what company you keep, and I'll tell you who you are."
Miguel de Cervantes 1547-1616 (Author of Don Quixote)
Norm's Daily Ramblins
"THE BIRDS" --An allegory by Paul Harvey
Everyone's friend.... Paulllll HARRRVEY
A flock of birds had become lost in the storm
The more I tried to lead them to safety, the more they scattered!
If only I could become a bird so I could show them the way.
For today's featured Sound From the Past, we would like to bring to you one of Paul Harvey's broadcasts, that's become a tradition at Christmas time. I think I heard it for the first time back in the 1960's. It is a story you may well remember, of how a man on a cold snowy evening came to realize the true meaning of Christmas. He usually presents it on the Christmas Eve broadcast. He has titled it, "The Parable of the Birds" and in a story that speaks to issue of why and how would God come to earth in the form of a baby. Many people are not able to accept the incarnation of God or why such an act would be necessary.
To listen to the "Parable of the Birds" click the Sounds of the Past Button on the bottom left of this page (if you haven't already) and Paul Harvey will roll right into your room! /B>
Paul Harvey News and Commentary has been a radio broadcast since November 1950. My Dad remembers when Paul Harvey, a young reporter for the Chicago Tribune, made big news in the late 1940's by climbing over the fence at the top-secret Argonne Labratory (atomic lab) southwest of Chicago to prove that the security at the facility was not what it should have been at the time. That was front page stuff back then.
With over fifty years of broadcast experience Paul Harvey has long since become an institution and an icon of American Radio. To this day he is probably still one of the best known voices on radio. You will find him in your city probably on the "best" talk show outlet. Or visit his website on the link below and listen to him on the Internet.
Harkening back to the days of Bill Stern and, in the opinion of my Dad, copying Bill Sterns delivery including the page one, page two reporter style verbal presentation, Harvey has brought us news and human interest pieces over the many years with his "News and Commentary" in the morning and at noon, and the "Rest of the Story" programs his son now writes in the evening. On all his broadcasts Harvey brings a special style of newsmanship and salesmanship, served with generous portions of his warm and winning personality. Human interest, a friendly nod to evangelical thought, honesty in his presentation and real news have won the hearts of millions of people. -- Chris Plunkett
Shepherd in the midst of telling one of his wonderful stories.
Click for a great photo of Jean's studio (click photo to enlarge)
Jean Shepherd in his prime
We know exactly what happened, don't we?
Jean Shepherd author, humorist, late-night radio personality, broadcast 1948 – 1955 on various stations in Cincinnati and Philadephia and 1955 –1977 on WOR in New York.
The Jean Shepherd is perhaps best remembered by today’s audiences for his contribution to the revered “holiday movie canon” as author, producer, and narrator of the 1983 film A Christmas Story. Others may know the gifted humorist/satirist for his many columns, essays, and short stories that appeared over the years in issues of Mad, The Village Voice, Car and Driver, National Lampoon, Grump, The Realist, TV-Guide, Playboy, and Field and Stream. Many of Shepherd’s essays and short stories -inspired by his experiences growing up in the depression-era industrialized Midwest- have been compiled into four books, which have recently come back into print. Their titles (in order of my own preference) are as follows: ”Wanda Hickeys Night of Golden Memories,” “A Fistful of Fig Newtons,” “In God We Trust –All Others Pay Cash,” and ”A Ferrari In the Bedroom”. However for countless others, who were fortunate to have grown up on the east coast in the 50’s, 60’s, and 70’s, Jean Shepherd will forever be remembered as the first grand voice of late-night radio.
Broadcast nightly from 1955 to 1977 on the clear-channel WOR in New York, Shepherd played a unique roll in radio as the pioneer, bridging the gap between old-time radio theater and the syndicated talk-programs of the modern era.
Jean Shepherd was born in 1921 in the town of Hammond, Indiana -a southeastern, industrial suburb of Greater Chicago. He was raised in a house on Cleveland Street, attended Harding Elementary, and had two friends named Flick and Schartz –all names and figures that would later appear in his fictionalized tales of “Ralph Parker” from “Hohman, Indiana.” After graduating from Hammond High in 1939, Shepherd served in the signal corps during WWII, an experience from which several of his later stories would also be drawn. After the war he attended the University of Indiana in Bloomington, then in 1948 found “gainful employment” as a disc jockey in Cincinnati. On the air, rather than playing records, he would often break into a story or some other prolonged monologue for the listeners (which would often land him in trouble with station managers.) For several years Shepherd worked on various stations in Cincinnati and Philadelphia, before moving to New York in 1955 to begin his late night radio programs for WOR.
Initially broadcast five nights a week from 1:00 to 4:30am, then as nightly 45-minute programs earlier in the evening, he soon attracted a legion of faithful fans who referred to themselves as Shepherd’s “Night-People.” The programs were highly varied in content -though usually ran along themes based on the season or perhaps some recent trip or occurrence in Shepherd’s life. Sometimes there were quite serious moments in the program, when Jean might read poetry to listeners, while at other time he might break into song while playing a kazoo or nose whistle. Often there were elaborate pranks he would incite his listeners to perform. In 1956 he encouraged fans to go to bookstores across the city ask for the nonexistent book “I Libertine,” which would ultimately make the New York Times bestseller list before it was ever written (by Shepherd and friend Ted Sturgeon). Every night at some point in the program Shepherd would give a prolonged and improvised rendition of one of his many short stories.
When he wasn’t writing or performing on the radio, Shepherd was performing in hundreds of live shows at colleges and theaters across the country. He would record 6 albums, and appear on such television programs as “Steve Allen,” “The Tonight Show,” “Merv Griffin” and create three local shows of his own: “Rear Bumpers,” “Jean Shepherd’s America,” and “Shepherd’s Pie.” The various short stories he had written would be combined into two commercially released films -as well as four others produced for PBS.
Jean Shepherd passed away on October 16, 1999, leaving behind the rich legacy of his stories and his trememdous influence on modern radio. A fan and former “Night-Person” Jim Clavin, upon recalling the countless nights he spent as a child in the secret company of Shepherd’s voice, would write in tribute...
”His wit and Humor which has entertained so many of us for so many years will play forever, on those little transistor radios hidden beneath all our pillows.”
A Mr. Jones purchaed the house in Cleveland, Ohio that was used in the movie The Christmas Story for $150,000. Yes, it was filmed in there in spite of the real story setting in Hammond, Indiana. November 2006 it was opened as a museum and will now be the Mecca for all the fans of that wonderful story.
I have streaming audio of Jean Shepherd reading his original Christmas Story on his daily program on WOR-AM New York, back in 1974. Having trouble with the Audio of The Christmas Story. Will have up shortly. Meanwhile listen to Buying a Pipe for Dad. We have a bunch of other clasic Christmas radio shows for you as well further down in Ramblins.
WE OFFER YOU SOME WONDERFUL OLD TIME RADIO CHRISTMAS PROGRAMS
Great Gildersleeve, Red Skelton and Philco Music Hall were just posted Friday, Dec. 21.
The Skelton has audio problems at first but levels out. These are from the early and mid 1940's when Christmas was a celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ and not the Winter Carnival it has become as a result of the secular humanists and our change to a pluralistic society.
INTELLECTUALLY ASSENTING OR BELIEVING WITH ALL YOUR HEART?
COME CLOSE AND SEE! …on this 22nd Day of Advent
Take your bible and turn to the following Scripture -- John 6:53-57
Prayerfully read the verses two times, and then read the Advent Devotional that follows written by Dr. Thomas Q. Robbins, Pastor of the University Park United Methodist Church in Dallas, Texas. Then spend a few moments in prayer using the suggestions Thomas Q. offers. Be sure to wait a few moments in silence to let your Creator God speak to you.
Think About It -- John 6:53-57
The intimacy that God offers to us in Jesus Christ can only be obtained by participating with him. The Lord’s Supper or Communion is a symbol of that intimacy. As we drink the wine and eat the wafer, we say to the world that we believe in Jesus Christ and his shed blood on the Cross. It’s because of His willingness to die for us we have access to God because the gulf that separated us by sin was bridged by his shed blood that provided forgiveness. It’s not the taking of communion that does it for us, but a whole-hearted sell-out and belief that Jesus is the Christ -- and that our sin had been forgiven!
This intimacy we trying to explain far exceeds just a knowledge of Jesus Chriist; it’s way beyond any intellectual assent to the fact that Jesus is God’s Son. There must be an intimate uniting of our spirit with the Holy Spirit of God as we experience that same Spirit in Jesus Christ. Paul says that as our spirits witness with the Holy Spirit that we are, in fact, children of God. The Sacrament (ordinance, if you prefer) of the Lord’s Supper is when we act out our response to God’s offer to us to unite our lives to the life of Jesus Christ. Participate in a sacrifice to Almighty God by eating the flesh and drinking the blood of Jesus Christ – and live with Him forever
How intimate do you feel you are with God and Jesus Christ? Is He part of your thinking each day. Is He part of your decision making? Is He part of your expression of gratitude. Are you honoring Him with what you do and who you are? That's intimacy!
Prayer: What a marvelous and wondrous tenor there is to your love for us, oh God in Jesus Christ. You gave yourself so that we might be united with You in Jesus Christ. What a Mystery! What a love! May I eat and drink in pure delight by participating in His life!
Our gratitude for these Advent Devotions to
Dr. Thomas Q. Robbins, Senior Pastor
University Park Methodist, Dallas, Texas.
[Click the Link at the bottom of this article to listen to a Billie the Brownie program from the 1040's.]
"IT'S BILLIE THE BROWNIE FROM SCHUSTERS!"
It's time to replay this narrative about a special time in a special city -- long, long ago........
What could be more exciting for a young boy in the early 1940's living in Milwaukee? So naive, so easy to have his imagination tweaked, so ready for the unknown and adventure. Yes, even Billy the Brownie could do it for this boy.
Oh, how I used to anxiously await 5:00 pm so I could turn our radio dial from WGN and "Terry and the Pirates" to 640 and WTMJ. Billy the Brownie from Schusters was the marketing tool of one of the four main department stores in Milwaukee. There was Schusters, Gimbles, The Boston Store, and Chapmans (East of the river for the upper crust).
The program was a marketing tool for Schusters to get families in the store to "see Santa" and shop while they were there. The program was 15:00 each weekday and aired at 5:00 pm for 24 years (1931 to 1955), always from Thanksgiving night to Christmas day.
The characters were, of course, Santa Claus, Billie the Brownie, Me-tik the Eskimo, Willie Wagtail (Billie's Dog), Fairy Queen, Bongo (Santa's Dog) and often Mrs. Clause via telephone hookup from the North Pole where she would give a full report on cookie baking and toy manufacturing complete with sound effects. The creator and writer was Larry Teich, and the sponsor was Schuster's Department Store -- a long time before Federated.
Billie the Brownie had a fine "elf" voice. Mi-tek had a more base voice and limited vocabulary with grunts -- after all, he was a genuine Eskimo who was in charge of the reindeer. Willie Wagtail was Billie’s' dog, Bongo was Santa's dog, and "Fairy Queen" would show up ever so often as the adventure story merited.
The first Billie the Brownie was Esther Werner, nee Schmidt of West Bend who died in Menominee Falls the summer of 2001. The last voice of Billie was Carol Cotter. This memorable, local children's program aired on WTMJ from 1931 until 1955. Santa would come on at the close reading letters from children. During the broadcasts we would be fed a strong diet of adventure, problem solving, mystery, Santa stuff and what was on special at Schusters. Sometimes there would be a remote call from the North Pole, and we'd get a report from Mrs. Santa and some of the production elves.
The photo at the top of the page is the result of "Billie the Brownie" program. I'm not going to say who is on Santa's lap since I think you can guess. Isn't it interesting how easily customers were pleased? Look at that garish photo customer number in the middle of the picture. Can you believe that horrendous interruption of photographic composition was accepted by the parents? This was not the year I asked for a Red Ryder air rifle. Notice the long hair on that kid! I had 48 wiener curls until I was six-years-old. I don't know...you ask my mother. Maybe it had something to do with Dad's advertising contract with Morton Salt.
I distinctly remember riding home in our 1937 Buick with side mounts and jump seats after seeing Santa and having this picture taken. I stood up and asked mom and dad why Santa Clause had a staple in his beard near his mouth! As usual, no definitive answer. I though it was dumb. I also remember telling them that he smelled like beer.
My most memorable winter evening was when Mrs. Haack asked me to shovel her sidewalk and driveway. The Haacks lived a block east on Cedar Street and were the last house next to Jacobus Park. Mr. Haack was Chairman of the New York Stock Exchange and would come back to Wauwatosa on the weekend. Later he would become CEO of Lockheed Aircraft.
Anyway, after school that day I rushed down to the Haacks and started shoveling. I wanted to be home before 5:00 so I wouldn't miss Billie the Brownie. Don't know how or why I was able to finish in an hour and a half but I did. At 4:40 it started getting dark so I worked all the faster.
When Mrs. Haack paid me I looked down and saw a five-dollar bill in my hand! I was stunned and couldn't believe what she had given me. This was in 1946! FIVE DOLLARS? I thanked her but I don't think I did a very good job beause of my excitement. I ran home as fast as I could. Made it just in time for "It's Billie the Brownie from Schusters!" Taking off my snow suit and galoshes I ran into the living room and listened to Billie and Mi-tek while holding the treasure I had just been given; staring at it in disbelief. I was rich. Mrs. Haack would never know how happy she made this 12-year-old boy or what an incredible memory she gave him that night which is just as vivid 61 years later -- as it was the cold snowy night it happened.
Last month, I sent Ray Py, a Wauwatosa classmate, some material I had gathered about the "Billie the Brownie" program. He is using it for some Christmas presentations he's doing this year. I think you will thoroughly enjoy and be blessed by the report he sent me this morning. Ray is an actor and a retired UPI reporter who worked the International Desk in Washington D.C." Norman--I thought you might like to know this: Yesterday I had an opportunity to read various selections to the elderly veterans at the VA hospital here and used the Billie the Brownie tape from a radio broadcast of 1940. One veteran who was heavily medicated and deep within himself, head down, wheel chaired, suddenly picked up his head and loudly uttered "Schusters" when the tape mentioned the store name.
Another, similarly into herself, a woman named Viola, at the back of my listening circle who seldom talked, was mouthing "The Night Before Christmas" when Larry Teich began reading that poem on the tape. I don't know if that was a breakthrough for these patients or not because I don't see them that often.
But the VA recreation coordinator who was in the group was more than mildly surprised at the reactions of both of those people.
I also did one hell'uva Franklin Roosevelt in reading his Declaration of War speech before Congress on Dec. 8. 1941 The healthier among the group wanted to go to war again. -Ray Py
.
In researching my beautiful memory about "Billie The Brownie," I found an incredible short story written by Phil Pluta, who lived "by Schusters plus two blocks." I don't know who Phil is but he perfectly described "how it was" and it's great fun to read. Don't miss his Milwaukee Dutch phrase in his title -- "BY SCHUSTERS..." Dutchers used "by" in place of to, near, over, at, and words like that. "I'm goin' down by Schusters" would be a normal way to tell someone where you were going. My favorite Milwaukee Dutch phrase is, "Ya, noo, over by tirdy-tird street where the streetcar turns the corner around." Next favorite is "Throw me down the stairs da broom so I can vacuum da floor. Getting back to the excellent story about Milwaukee, Schusters was the touchstone of direction and you used it's location as the center of your map and added from that point. Phil Pluta's great memory about Schusters is the next aritcle. Be sure to read it -- and listen to the Billy the Brownie program from 1940.
In researching the beautiful and exciting memory of "Billie the Brownie from Schusters," I found an incredible short story written by Phil Pluta, who lived "by Schusters plus two blocks." I don't know who Phil is but he perfectly described "how it was" and it's great fun to read.
In Old Milwaukee, Schusters was the touchstone of direction. You'd use it's location as the center of your map and add instructions from that point. The street photo will be sentimental to any old timer resident of Milwaukee. But all of you can be whisked away to 12th and Vliet some 60 years ago by reading Phil Pluta's wonderful writing.
To the adults Schusters was just a department store. There were three of them in Milwaukee when I was growing up in the forties. My very own was between 12th and 13th on Vliet Street just a half block from where I lived.
Schusters was the big guy on the block. It towered over the busy Vliet street shopping strip that stretched from Samson's, Walgreens and The First Wisconsin National Bank on 12th Street to Fareway Meat Market, the A&P, Omar and Father and Son's shoe store on 14th Street. It was part of the neighborhood that embraced the Colonial Theater on 15th Street where lines of kids spilled over from the entrance on Vliet every Sunday afternoon each clutching his twelve cent admission that would treat him to a double feature, news reel, and cartoon not to mention the coming attractions and the nickel popcorn.
I could see the Schusters main parking lot from my front porch. At one time it was the only parking lot until after the war when they tore down an old brewery on 13th street and made room for more cars. From my porch I could hear the all seeing and all wise parking attendant high up in his tower calling out the make and model of each car that entered and guiding them to a parking spot. I sometimes would hang around outside the cyclone fence that separated the parking lot from the rest of the neighborhood, fascinated with the man in the tower with his ability to know at a glance that the car entering was a 39 Buick that he advised to take isle three the third isle. Then he would guide a new 47 Studebaker to isle five--the fifth isle. At those moments I would wonder if I would ever be smart enough to learn to identify all of those cars and be able to sit up in that high tower surveying and guiding the people below.
Schusters was a landmark; a point of reference. Other places in the neighborhood were " by Schusters and yet two blocks." It was where Santa Claus kept his Reindeer after the Christmas Parade. It was were Santa, Billy the Brownie and Willie Wagtail hung their hat until Christmas and where Santa sat on a red and white throne flanked by helpers who handed out gifts after you had a chat with their boss. I always approached those helpers with a jaundiced eye, suspicious that they might be the very Brownies assigned to peek into our windows and catch me being naughty and then reporting my behavior to the Big Guy. Whenever the magic story book did not open on the Billy the Brownie Show I knew it was because I was not completely honest when I faced the radio and said "I have been a good boy today."
Schusters was also a fantasy land and a playground for the neighborhood kids. It wasn't that we didn't have any thing else to do, or that there were not playground facilities and recreational equipment in our neighborhood. One block away from my house Siefert School, my grade school, covered one square city block and had not one, but two playgrounds. The larger playground was called the "boys' play ground , probably because it had three soft ball diamonds and in the fall was converted into a touch football field. In addition there was a fenced off basket ball court ,which served as a supervised snowball fight arena in the winter, a horse shoe court, monkey bars, parallel bars, a shack full of equipment and a row of swings where you stood in line and counted to 100 to earn your turn..
The girl's playground had a sand box and a wading pool with a shower pole in the middle, that was a haven on sultry summer afternoons.
Both playgrounds were covered with asphalt (except for the horseshoe court) , and in the winter time the larger playground was flooded for ice skating. The whole area was flooded with light in the winter allowing the skaters to enjoy themselves until closing time, and on summer evenings the lights shined down on the organized tavern league underhand fast pitch softball games that drew the whole neighborhood.
Besides this summer and winter activities out on the playground, Siefert had a top notch Social Center Program during the school year. We did everything from after school shirts and skins basket ball games, to working on an ad hoc newspaper that my friends and I put together and Tony, who we called the coach, ran off on a mimeograph machine. So we were not without things to do. If we needed a more exciting adventure we walked straight up Cherry Street to Washington Park. We would leave early in the morning with a packed lunch and either play hardball, explore the zoo, catch carp in the lagoon or rent a boat and row out to one of the islands pretending to be shipwrecked.
Then there was Schusters! There was of course the obvious attraction at Christmas time. Right after Thanksgiving Vliet Street would suddenly be transformed with Christmas decorations, and the Schusters windows would be bright with winter and Christmas displays. On Sunday morning as I waited with my mother on the corner of 14th and Vliet (on dry asphalt that magically melted the falling snow) for the street car that would take us to church, I would stare with fascination at the mannequins fantasizing that they might come to life at night when no one was watching.
During the week or on Saturday's (in those days no store would dream of being opened on Sunday), we explored the wonderland of the toy department the main feature of which was a huge model railroad layout with cities and tunnels and bridges. Every accessory you could buy for your Lionel or American Flyer train set, was set up in working order. At specially planned times someone would come and run the trains. We would watch them for what seemed like hours. By the time Christmas was over we knew ever inch of that toy department. We knew we couldn't own all the toys we wanted, but being able to touch them and look at them seemed to help fulfill our fantasy.
It was not, however, just the Christmas magic that made Schusters our playground. There were the frozen malts!. For ten cents you could buy this cone full of frozen malt that swirled out of the machine like custard at a Carvell stand, but tasted nothing like custard. Unfortunately ten cents was a lot of money for a ten year old, so we did not get that particular treat as often as we would have liked. Candy, on the other hand, could be free to an observant and enterprising buccaneer.
No, the Schusters employees didn't exactly hand out free candy because they thought we were such cute little fellows. Although that worked like a charm when I would walk my two kid sisters up the alley from our house to the back end of the Hires Root Beer bottle House and hang around the open overhead door until someone noticed those two cute curly tops and gave us all a free bottle of rootbeer At Schusters, however, careful reconnaissance uncovered the reality that when the clerk behind the counter would dig into the candy tray with her metal scoop and pour the contents into a bag for a customer, some pieces of the wrapped candy would fall over the sides of the bag and roll under the counter.
We unanimously agreed that the candy under the counter was fair game, like sunken treasure, waiting for a salvage crew. We would wait for a moment when we would not be conspicuous and then drop to the floor with outstretched hands to scoop our treasure from beneath the counter to be stuffed into the hold of our pirate ship trousers
With the candy secure in our pockets we made our way past the new 10 inch television sets with the big magnifying glass in front of them. Our destination was the record department. We examined the selection of 78 rpm records until we found some that we thought we would like or we would take a whole album of one artist. (An Album was just that--an album with six pockets for six separate single disks.) We headed for one of the listening booths, closed the door, unwrapped our candy and enjoyed our concert until one of the clerks realized what we were up to and shoed us on our way.
As we got older, though, our relationship with Schusters began to change. When school let out a 3:30 the swarm of kids descending on the store became an irritant to the customers and thus a community problem. Schusters and the rest of the retail community turned to Siefert School to work out a solution. At this time our school under the direction of its Principal Mr. Peck, was experimenting with an active student government. We had elections for Mayor, council members, court officers including a judge, clerk of court, district attorney and jurors. On one occasion we put on a skit of a mock trial over WTMJ-TV--channel 3. Since our parents did not own television sets, Schusters played host to them in their television department.
The store cooperated with our school's innovative approach to teaching civic responsibility. Arrangements were made to have cadets posted at the doors for a half hour after school to turn back students that only wanted to roam the store. Only an official note from ones' parents certifying a legitimate shopping trip would get you in. A metamorphosis took place. We were no longer crawling on the floor like pirate caterpillars snatching treasured goodies. Like a proud Monarch fresh from his cocoon, we preened ourselves at our post, our yellow cadet badge announcing to the passing adults that we were worthy of respect.
The Schusters management gave us that respect. When our tour of duty was completed the store management arranged a banquet for us and our parents. The manager told us all that when we were old enough, and we needed employment Schusters would be proud to hire us. I never knew if anyone ever took the store up on that offer. Within a few years of graduating from sixth grade most of us had moved out of the old neighborhood as our parents became part of the coming suburban sprawl. It was the offer that counted though. It was a family thing and it made the prospect of growing up just a little less scary.
We needed that support. Though we didn't know it, rapid change was going to sweep over the remainder of our lives. The street cars would soon disappear, and the tracks that carried Santa Claus to his Christmas throne at Schusters would soon be ripped up. The wise voice in the parking lot tower went silent and neighborhood kids could no longer linger at the cyclone fence talking to Reindeer nestled in the warm hay.
Some of us would try not to let go. My parents moved to the far north side of town, but we still had the Fareway Market deliver our meat to us. For a while my parents made trips to the old neighborhood and bought our dress up cloths at Schneiderman's as they always had.
Eventually though new ways of living seduced us to the glitter of the new shopping centers, and supermarkets made shopping so much easier if less personal. One after another familiar friend closed shop. Of course the changes that came made us materially better off. I would not have wanted to raise four children in a one bedroom cold water flat as my parents did until they bought a home in 1949. Yet as my own life moved towards greater material prosperity Schusters, my old friend, was swallowed up by a bigger fish in the corporate pond, and my store, which once offered jobs to the neighborhood youth became the main headquarters for the County Welfare System.
Maybe in every mans life there is that "one brief shinning moment" that Camelot celebrated by Alan Jay Lerner's musical. It isn't a place or a time though. There was nothing mystically special about Schusters on 12th and Vliet or the "yet two blocks" and more that was its community. The people that lived there then were no better or no worse examples of the human race than those that live there now. What was different and what is implanted in my memory, is the feeling of community and the spirit of genuine neighborly concern that flowed from our homes our schools, and even the businesses that we patronized. The relationship of Schusters with its community, especially the young people, stand out in my memory as a symbol of the spirit that permeated the community in which I grew up.
I have carried that spirit with me and have been better for it.
Outdoor Christmas displays have long been a "one-ups-man-ship" to not only celebrate what has become the holiday of Winter but perhaps how much better can I do it than others? Most of the elaborate and unbelievable displays are more Santa, Snow, and Rudolph oriented, but there are exceptions.. What once was keyed on the birth of Jesus as the "Light of the World," has been redirected into a more generic theme to reach a larger secular audience. But it will always be a very beautiful and exciting time to watch the neighborhoods become alive with color.
It was Carson Williams, a Mason, Ohio electrical engineer who was the first to plan, build and sequence 88 Light-O-Rama channels that controlled the 16,000 Christmas lights in his annual holiday lighting spectacular back in Christmas 2004. His 2005 display included over 25,000 lights that he spent nearly two months and $10,000 to hook up.
Now that this has caught on nationally. Last year we saw video on network news and variety shows of a neighborhood of 15 homes all hooked to the same computer and FM signal. But we want to acknowledge the people who set the pattern and were the trailblazers in neighborhood lighting technology. There is no telling what we might eventually see in the years ahead.
So that the Williams' neighbors aren't disturbed by constant noise, viewers driving by the house are informed by signs to tune in to a signal broadcast over a low-power FM radio station to hear the musical accompaniment.
Carson's Christmas display proved so popular that it was featured in a Miller Lite beer commercial in December 2005. Carson pulled the plug when asked by City Hall. The traffic congestion and a serious accident prompted the request.
CLICK THE LINKS BELOW TO SEE VARIOUS DISPLAYS IN ACTION -- TIMED PERFECTLY TO THE Trans Siberian Orchestra's "Wizzard in Winter.
We're always honored by visitors. We do our best to provide new information on this "Ramblin" page ... and leave some of the stuff we think is extra good a little longer than the others. Please visit again.
We'd enjoy hearing from you. Drop us a note. We'd enjoy knowing you're visitin.' "Drop Us A Note" at: norman@peachmm.com
We extend to you an old Southern salutation you don't hear much... any more down here in Atlanta. "Ya'll come back now, ya'hear?"
Norman Plunkett
God is good -- ALWAYS!
And especially as He floods you with all the grace you need no matter what the situation. As you trust Him, God's grace is always just enough and always on time.