[hpsdr] AB2KT and the opera

Bob McGwier rwmcgwier at gmail.com
Tue Mar 11 12:07:41 PDT 2008


Frank Brickle wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 11:47 AM, Bob McGwier <rwmcgwier at gmail.com 
> <mailto:rwmcgwier at gmail.com>> wrote:
>  
>
>     Well I apologize for sending that note out inviting everyone to
>     come to
>     a sold out performance.   I hope no one was inconvenienced...
>
>
> For the record, it should be noted that the N4HY crowd in the audience 
> led the cheering, so the level of enthusiasm should be viewed with 
> some skepticism.

Okay, so I brought half of New Jersey with me.  Bill Andersen (master of 
ceremonies) said WOW, did you bring half of New Jersey with you?  ;-).  
He then introduced me to the conductor for the guitar ensemble and I 
could not figure out why until the conductor (prodded by Bill) 
introduced himself as an ex-Marine who left an intelligence division in 
Iraq on medical disability and then out.  He then introduced me to his 
sister,  who was STILL such a non-com and was headed back.  They showed 
me a picture the OTHER sister who was still there!   

Let me assure you,  NEVER EVER judge a book by its cover.  You would not 
have picked this long haired, VERY stereotypical musical scene type nor 
his GORGEOUS sisters out as Marines.

When Bill and I compared notes,  we found that Frank has almost managed 
to keep his musical and "polymath" worlds completely separated.  We have 
each known Frank as long as the other and I never heard Frank mention 
Bill until the (now infamous) George Antheil Music Festival (coinventor 
of Spread Spectrum with Hedy Lamarr and major composer).
>
> The presenters may actually have made some money on this show. That is 
> the part nobody could have predicted.
With packed house,  and people TURNED AWAY at the box office (I heard 
them doing it as Meghan arrived late),  I believe all parties made 
money.  Congratulations indeed.
>
> After many decades of being a composer, it's my belief that writing 
> music is a lot like architecture: the fundamental task is to make sure 
> nobody gets killed or injured by your work. By that standard, the 
> evening was a raging success.
>
And here I thought that the process was simply living long enough 
without getting killed or killing yourself so that your contemporaries 
were too senile or tired to know better.  ;-).
>
> My greatest thanks to everyone.
>
> Frank

Our thanks to you for allowing us to have so much fun by having you as a 
peer. The evening was fun beyond belief until I picked up the bill for 
four people at Trattoria del Arte. 

Now! Can we do some ham radio?

;-)

Bob


-- 
AMSAT Director and VP Engineering. Member: ARRL, AMSAT-DL,
TAPR, Packrats, NJQRP, QRP ARCI, QCWA, FRC. ARRL SDR WG Chair
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by
definition, not smart enough to debug it." - Brian W. Kernighan 


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