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Sunday, December 4, 2011

2011 Santa Cruz Holiday Parade




It was an extremely beautiful day yesterday, Dec. 3., 2011, with the bluest sky and most golden morning sun. As an annual tradition, I joined Sheila and more than a dozen library friends and colleagues to be part of Santa Cruz Holiday Parade. Of course, Paul is our photographer. Here is the site for our 2011 holiday parade.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving 2011 from PennyApple



We are going to celebrate another great Thanksgiving and give our THANKS to our families and friends for all the things they have done!

Photography courtesy of Lee Anne and PennyApple.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Lee Anne Wins Best Use of Another Species Award

On the eve of Halloween 2011, the Doe Centennial Committee organized entries for creative costume prizes. As it was just announced, nine prizes have been offered and 31 people (and two mummies),awarded for their great creativity and high sense of Halloween fun. Among them is Lee Anne and her hamster:

Friday, October 21, 2011

First Friday Art Tour Kicks off Titangos Studio’s 20th Anniversary Celebration


November 2011 will be Titangos Photography Studio’s 20th Anniversary. The three-month long series of exhibits hosted by Santa Cruz First Friday Art Tour will display the best of his personal photographs from around the world.

The exhibit will begin at Titangos Photography Studio on the First Friday in November 2011, with a reception from 5-9 PM. It will continue in December 2011 and January 2012 at Santa Cruz Public Libraries Downtown Branch, with First Friday receptions there each month.

For more details about Titangos Photography Studio, please visit the First Friday website.

There is also an interview by Kirby Scudder on NPR's KUSP.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Bill Maher on Libraries

According to J. McRee Elrod (mac@slc.bc.ca), comedian Bill Maher made a remark last Friday night that there would not be any need to visit libraries because of the Internet. Here is the link to respond to his HBO show.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Friday, September 23, 2011

Mystery Solved by Bizarro

No wonder vehicles around us need washing more frequently than ever before! Here is why: courtesy of Dan Piraro's comic on car wash.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Bancroft Centennial Exhibit on California Women Suffrage

The Berkeley Daily Planet reported Bancroft centennial exhibit on California women suffrage, "One exhibit is already open, and it’s a splendid one, organized by Bancroft Library staffer Lee Anne Titangos." To obtain more details, please read sections on Bancroft Exhibit.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Hurricane Irene at Westchester County

Hurricane Irene did not hit Westchester County as hard as predicted. However, she did knock out electric power in a number of cities and towns, such as Yorktown Heights and Ossining. Residents and businesses there were without power for more than 48 hours.

I slept through the sound and fury of Hurricane Irene. Around 8:00 am, my sister and I went to Marina, one of our hiking places and found it blocked by a police car. The path was submerged by flood. Many morning hikers like us looked amazingly at the high tide pushing water banks continuously. For some reason we were all thinking the same thought that we were lucky to be spared of any more damages!

Murphy's Law on the Eve of Hurricane Irene

26 August 2011 is a memorable day for my sister, niece and me. Our day plan could not be simpler: they would pick me up at Cedar Manor at 2:00 pm, then we would shop at Flushing and drop some necessities at the niece's dorm. By 6pm, The sister would resume her lab work and I, join Mama.

Little did we know that our car had a flat tire the moment it was on Whitestone Bridge. I had never experienced such a deafening sound while talking to my brother who was on his way to China. We stopped at the first legal stopping place, to call AAA for road service. Our waiting period turned out to be a stretch of 4 hours, for we did not realize that AAA was unable to service any cars on freeway in Queens. The local contractor we contacted only rendered oral promises but never materialized in person. Finally a pass-by toll truck driver came to advise and helped us to back into a local street.

Acting upon the advice from the tire changer that the spare tire could not sustain more than 30 minutes, we found ourselves at the deserted Enterprise HQ at 10 minutes before 6 pm. Fortunately a manager in charge happened to leave for the day and sent us to a nearest rental agency to replace the rental car. Once we arrived at the agency, the agent was not too thrilled to see us. It was closing time, but he was still working his way with two other customers. After 40 minutes' waiting, we were finally being served. But the result was a surprise: the agent produced a mountainful of paperwork for my sister to sign and insurance company to call. According to him, our car was scratched on the side, and tire was sliced by a knife. After contacting her insurance and refusing to sign any faulty reports, the sister drove us away with a new car.

It was 7:00 pm, and the bridge was still busy. At this point, we all decided that we needed to shop for our mental therapy and physical needs. So we headed towards Flushing to brave ourselves with extra long shopping lines, hot and flooded underground parking floors. It was at a crowded gas station that it dawned on us why everywhere was busy, and everyone was stressed: it was the eve of Hurricane Irene.

With a big sign of relief, we left NYC for the quiet and dry Westchester. At 12:00 am my niece and I were waiting patiently for my sister to finish her lab work. At 2:00 am we were back home, exhausted by a series of unfortunate events. I never joined Mama at her manor the previous day.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Backyard Chickens for Sustainable Life

Paul forwarded me a WSJ article entitled Cooped Up: Chickens Come Home to Roost for Urbanites With a Yen for Hen.



As a chicken lover throughout my childhood, I read the whole article with great relish. It is very informative about chicken tours going on in Austin, Texas (the Funky Chicken Coop Tour), Dallas (A Peep at the Coops) and Portland, Ore. (the Tour de Coops). Other cities like Seattle, Los Angeles, Salt Lake City, Madison, Wis., Bend, Ore., Davis., Calif. have their own chicken tours. According to the article, urban chicken caretakers have now more than 100,000 members on backyardchickens.com on July 27, doubling its membership from last year.


Personality-wise, chickens are more like cats. Unlike affectionate ducks (and dogs), they like to be fed and left alone. As for food, they tend to prefer pasta (and rice) to bread. I am wondering if it has anything to do with their sharp and accurate beaks. Bread crumbs do tend to be sticky on their tongues.

More and more city dwellers are taken on the idea of raising chicken in their back- or front-yards. It does sound an idyllic lifestyle, if they can collect eggs everyday straight from their chicken coops. No wonder Henry Crabbe (Richard Griffiths) is always reluctant to go back to his detective duties in Pie in the Sky! It seems that only those chickens can restore his sanity if he ever returns from his cases.



Monday, August 1, 2011

Cyrus Back from El Salvaodr

Cyrus just finished his latest trip to El Salvador. He can always capture the spirit of a foreign land, people and animals:

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

From Lark Rise to US Post Office Closure List

Paul just sent me a Wall Street Journal article entitled Post-Office Closure List Sent.

It is like a reconfirmation that post-offices are always confronted with competitions whenever a new technology emerges. Anyone who has seen Lark Rise to Candleford will remember Dorcas Lane's fight for the survival of her post office when a railway was built and passed through the area. The only differenc is that the same competitions are now fiercer and multifaceted with the evolution of Internet.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

July: a Great Month




July 4 is the birthday of the United States of America. It is the anniversary of the day on which the Declaration of Independence was adopted by the Continental Congress - July 4, 1776. Independence Day was first observed in Philadelphia on July 8, 1776.

July is a special month to our family. On July 2, 1997, Nick, accompanied by his grandmother, came to the States to live with us in Santa Cruz. In July 2002, we adopted our Chippy on the steps of Santa Cruz Main Post Office. It is also a birthday month shared by my mother, nephew and myself.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Happy Birthday, Elijah & Chippy!!







It is a birthday for Elijah and Chippy today. They are nine now. Ever since, Gail and I found them on the steps of Santa Cruz Post Office, these two siblings have been a bundle of joys to two families. with their respective families, they have been through good times and hardships in life.


Happy Birthday to Elijah & Chippy!



Saturday, May 14, 2011

James Durbin Going to Santa Cruz Boardwalk


Paul and I decided to join Santa Cruzans to welcome home James Durbin, American Idol's newest reject this afternoon. As it happened, we drove by Louden Nelson Community Center and saw a big crowd cheering Durbin who showed himself on the second floor with his guitar from time to time. We parked our RAV-4 and proceeded to the Boardwalk. As the concert goers were too numerous for us to have any decent view, we left and found ourselves a roomy beach bench.

Paul told me that it was the best site, for it would be the route for Durbin to go through to the stage. After an hour's wait, we saw the formal band parading first, flanked by many police cars and then 4X4s and fire trucks. I actually screamed and waved enthusiastically at Durbin who waved at us beach crowd. Here is one of the pictures taken by Titangos Photography Studio:

Friday, May 6, 2011

Another Special Gift for Mother's Day


Every year, Lee Anne and Nick will bestow on me unique Mother's Day gifts. I really love this year's, especially its bright colors and beautifully conceived concept. Thank you.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Happy Easter!



Our family had a wonderful Easter together, despite unexpected rain. Last night, we went to our church for a midnight service by Father Tom and a feast afterwords. We are so thankful that we are all safe and sound with a new beginning to look forward to. Our Easter ended with a CBS special 60 Minutes on Mt. Athos.


The above are some greetings from Lee Anne's kid and our Chippy.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Fourteen Citations for Our 2009 Paper!

Google Scholar Alerts sent me another alert today: there has been a new citation for our Learning Library 2.0: 23 Things @SCPL, published by Library Management in 2009. Those 14 citations are from Australia, Canada, Greece, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Korea, Taiwan and U.S.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Watson Won a Million-Dollar Prize



Per Ying's reminder, Paul and I watched a three-day Jeopardy show (Feb. 14-16, 2011) featuring Watson competing with Jeopardy's two all-time champions, Brad and Ken. With ups and downs, Watson managed to become a final winner of the one million dollar prize.

It is a very interesting endeavor not only in the sense of entertainment value, but more so in that IBM has pioneered in transforming science fiction into reality. In the process, Watson has revealed his weaknesses such as being born with no hearing, bulky hardware, and some algorithmic errors in missing key parameters like answering Toronto when the question was concerned only with US airports.

However, Watson has shown tremendous potential to many aspects of our life. One of them, as my colleague Heidi pointed out, is that he can help doctors determine drug interactions for their patients who take multiple drugs.

The growth of Watson is just like that of us human beings, from imperfect to perfect. His infrequent lack of confidence has helped to demystify the myth perpetuated by science fiction that solving all our problems is just a computer keystroke away.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Happy Year of Rabbit: 2011!



Who are rabbits?
People who were born in 1915, 1927, 1939, 1951, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1999

What are rabbit people's characteristics?
People born in the Year of the Rabbit are articulate, talented, and ambitious. They are virtuous, reserved, and have excellent taste. Rabbit people are admired, trusted, and are often financially lucky. Rabbit people seldom lose their temper. They are clever at business and being conscientious, never back out of a contract.

What does the year of rabbit signify?
According to The Holidays Spot, A placid year, very much welcomed and needed after the ferocious year of the Tiger. We should go off to some quiet spot to lick our wounds and get some rest after all the battles of the previous year.

Which animals come before and after the rabbit?
2008 is the Year of the Rat
2009 is the Year of the Ox
2010 is the Year of the Tiger
2011 is the Year of the Hare (rabbit)
2012 is the Year of the Dragon
2013 is the Year of the Snake
2014 is the Year of the Horse
2015 is the Year of the Ram (sheep, goat)
2016 is the Year of the Monkey
2017 is the Year of the Rooster
2018 is the Year of the Dog
2019 is the Year of the Pig (Boar)

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