Alpha 150

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Take The Tickle Test And See What Your IQ Is

Congratulations, Tracye!Your IQ score is 124

This number is based on a scientific formula that compares how many questions you answered correctly on the Classic IQ Test relative to others. Your Intellectual Type is Insightful Linguist. This means you are highly intelligent and have the natural fluency of a writer and the visual and spatial strengths of an artist. Those skills contribute to your creative and expressive mind. And that's just some of what we know about you from your test results.

Funny I always wanted to be a writer LOL! It is fun and interesting to say the least!

Go to this website to take the free test ... of course they will want you to buy a detailed report when you are finished but you don't have too and it is kinda fun!

http://web.tickle.com/

BEST JOB FOR YOU TEST:

They also have an what is the best job for you test too ... they don't tell you what job is perfect without a CCard number but it is another personality test and well it is alot easier than the IQ test LOL (no math) here are my results:

Creative and Personable

With your skills, you could be earning up to $83,000 per year. Find out which jobs match these skills in your personalized Right Job Report. You're a visionary in many people's eyes — able to think outside the box and to come up with your own solutions. You're creative not necessarily in the artistic sense, but because you can expand your mind to do things differently from others.It might take a while for colleagues to recognize and reward you for your entrepreneurial spirit and abilities. That could be because they envy you, or because they find your ideas slightly rebellious — willing to go against the current. All in all, you make it hard for people to pigeon hole you. That is why you, more than others, need a job that allows you to play to your strengths, break out of the mold, and truly excel.

And finally the career interest test here are my results:

Tracye, based on your responses, your top career area is Writing and Journalism

Careers in this field often demand that you possess exceptional verbal and written communication skills. You have a natural talent for articulating a message in a way that resonates with other people. Writers and Journalists not only understand and appreciate the power of the written word, but are able to harness that power and use it in their own unique way. Most likely, you enjoy sharing your opinion and perspective with others.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

The Galatas Family Needs Your Help!

The Galatas' Could Use Some Help
Janis is selling car magnets in holiday colors that say "Remembering Our Troops" for $5.00 and Horse coloring books for $10.00. This is to help them with expenses with their travel and with care of their beloved horses while they are yet again at Walter Reed! They are also having to get fencing repaired and this is an added expense! If you can help them out or purchase an item please contact Janis at:

244 Knight Parker Road
Meridian, MS 39301

or go to her website:
www.horsestocolor.bravehost.com

Thank you for helping out!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Mississippi Soldier Prepares For More Surgery

From The Clarion Ledger And The Associated Press

MERIDIAN — A Mississippi Army National Guard soldier, recuperating at home for injuries he received in Iraq in April, will return to Washington D.C. on Tuesday for more surgery.Sgt. 1st Class Grayson "Norris" Galatas, a member of the 150th Combat Engineer Battalion, has been home in the Martin community for about a month."I'm doing all right," Galatas said. "I still have a little trouble walking, I'm having a problem with a hand that doesn't want to work right, and having a colostomy is not one of my favorite things. But other than that, I'm OK."Galatas, 43, and four other soldiers were injured April 19, when a roadside bomb exploded near their vehicle.Galatas is scheduled for two rounds of surgery at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. His injuries included lacerations to his stomach, buttock and back and shrapnel wounds over much of his body.While Galatas hopes to return home for Christmas, he said he wasn't sure that would be possible.He said he will be released from Walter Reed when a medical review board clears him.Galatas said it will be some time before he is sent back to Iraq, if he goes at all.The 150th will return from Iraq soon, and a second deployment, if it happened, would likely be at least a year away.A medical review board will determine if Galatas should be medically discharged from the Guard. His preference is continued service."I liked what I was doing," he said. "I just don't like getting blown up in a truck."

Saturday, November 26, 2005

2006 Honda Civic Voted Motor Trend's Car Of The Year!

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com)

The Honda Civic has captured Motor Trend magazine's "Car of the Year" award, the publication for auto enthusiasts announced Tuesday. The magazine said that it is giving the award to the Civic for all four of its new versions.

"Honda deserves a standing ovation for not playing it safe again," said a statement from Angus MacKenzie, Motor Trend editor-in-chief. "With the sizzling Si, a sleek coupe, an elegant sedan and a Hybrid that averages 50 miles per gallon, each model shines through with what Motor Trend looks for when crowning Car of the Year."

It is the first Motor Trend "Car of the Year" award for Honda, although it had won "Import Car of the Year" from the publication four times in the past, most recently in 1994. "For 2006, the Civic underwent the most radical transformation in its 33-year history," said a statement from John Mendel, senior vice president of American Honda. "It is a cornerstone of the Honda lineup, and we're delighted that Motor Trend has recognized ... the new Civic. Customers have validated our direction, too, as evidenced by strong sales of the new model." The magazine tested 28 newly designed models before honoring the Civic, the largest field of candidates the magazine had considered in the award's 57-year history. The magazine said it considers three factors in picking a winner: significance, superiority and value. Significance refers to impact on the market, while superiority looks for class-leading levels of performance, style and functionality. For value, the editors say they ask the question, "What does this vehicle deliver in relation to what the consumer has to pay to purchase and own it?" The Civic, which had been the nation's best-selling compact car model, was the only Honda model up for consideration for the award, and Japanese auto manufacturers had a relatively thin list of candidates. Toyota's Avalon and Lexus GS and IS models were up for consideration. The Nissan's Infiniti M35/M45 models were also considered. In addition, Mazda, which is controlled by Ford Motor Co., had the Mazda5, a small wagon%

Friday, November 25, 2005

I Never Walked Alone ... A Letter Of Thanksgiving From SFC Wayne West Stationed At Dogwood Iraq

Another year has gone by, one that will never be forgotten.
An emotional rollercoaster, this year could inspire a new ride at Six Flags. Exciting and exhilarating moments. Adrenaline rushes, speed, alertness in the dark.And then, there are the long 12-hour night shifts. And the fear of silence that makes you want never to be quiet for too long, because you know what you'll think about—how much longer it is. And thinking about it only makes it seem farther away.On the other hand, you long for the quiet peacefulness of nothing, just to sit and watch the sun blaze across the sky in a hundred different colors as it bids you goodnight.The wind blows across a sea of sand, throwing my cowlick into a frenzy, but I don’t mind. It's Thanksgiving Day and I'm alive to see it!!I have lived every day this year with the sounds of voices to carry me through. Sounds through a telephone or a computer; it doesn't matter. The sounds are from angels 8000 miles away who never have given up and never will give up on me, but have always stuck with me through very tough times. And I am grateful. I have a mother who knows not how to limit her love for me and fiancee who cherishes the very air I breathe. I am in love. I love life and everything that makes living alive.I have been stretched past my comfort zone into levels of strain and stress I never knew I could bear nor wanted to try to bear, but I have never walked alone.I have felt strong and confident, ready to take on the world, and I have also felt weak and corroded. Yet through both, I have never walked alone. I’ve seen, heard, and physically felt things that have made me tremble in fear for my life, fear that I may not see my precious love again. But faith was stronger than fear, and I have never walked alone.I am a soldier, a son, a fiance, and a friend. Above all, I am a child of a living God who knows not how to limit his love for me, who cherishes the very air I breathe. The ground I have walked is holy ground and shall be blessed! And never once have I walked alone.I am covered by a protection policy that was paid for and signed in blood almost 2000 years ago which says that ‘no harm shall come nigh the dwelling of the Lord,’
AND BY GOD, I AM THANKFUL FOR THAT!!!




Sgt. D. Wayne West
150th Combat Engineers
155th Brigade Combat Team

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Governor Barbour and Other Governors To Visit Troops For Holidays!

Gleened from www.clarionledger.com

Barbour, 3 other governors to visit troops in Middle East
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour and three other governors will travel to the Middle East over the Thanksgiving holiday to visit U.S. troops and meet with local military and political leaders, Pentagon and State Department officials said today.Specifics of the trip were not being released today for security reasons.Barbour, a Republican, will make the trip with Democratic Govs. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas and Jennifer Granholm of Michigan and Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue of Georgia.Barbour spokesman Pete Smith said the Pentagon had told the governor's staff not to release details about the trip.Smith would only say that Barbour "will be accompanying the Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, on a trip to the Middle East."The 155th Armored Brigade from Mississippi is attached to the II Marine Expeditionary Force in Iraq. The 48th Infantry Brigade from Georgia is serving in Baghdad.Perdue's spokeswoman, Heather Hedrick, would not comment.Sebelius said in a written statement: "As commander in chief of the Kansas National Guard, I assure the family members out there, if I see your soldier, I'll be sure to pass on a handshake, a hug or a smile for you. These men and women are remarkable Americans and I am honored to be in their company."The Defense Department and the State Department are sponsoring the trip. The four governors were meeting in Washington today with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff."They will be meeting with troops from their states as well as senior military and civilian leaders in the area," said Lt. Col. Barry Venable, a Pentagon spokesman.He said the governors will be able to spend substantial time with troops from their states and "get a sense of the impact those constituents have in the global war on terror."The governors will visit "several locations in the Central Command area," he said."Deployments to support the war on terror have significant impact on the states from which the soldiers come," said Venable, when asked why the governors were going.Granholm spokeswoman Liz Boyd said: "For Governor Granholm, this trip is all about visiting our Michigan men and women serving in the Middle East and provides her with an opportunity to talk to them. Being away from home is always difficult, particularly during the holidays. The governor is hoping her visit will bring Michigan a little closer to them this Thanksgiving."

Monday, November 21, 2005

What are we doing in Iraq????? Just ask this soldier!

Ask SGT Walter J. Rausch, currently fighting in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division. He and his platoon have penned a message to the American public that may be a lot different from the message you are hearing in the mainstream media.I’m helping his mom to help get this message out. Here it is from the soldiers on the ground.

Mom,
Be my voice. I want this message heard. It is mine and my platoon’s to the country. A man I know lost his legs the other night. He is in another company in our battalion. I can no longer be silent after watching the sacrifices made by Iraqis and Americans everyday. Send it to a congressman if you have to. Send it to FOX news if you have to. Let this message be heard please…My fellow Americans, I have a task for those with the courage and fortitude to take it. I have a message that needs not fall on deaf ears. A vision the blind need to see. I am not a political man nor one with great wisdom. I am just a soldier who finds himself helping rebuild a country that he helped liberate a couple years ago. I have watched on television how the American public questions why their mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters are fighting and dying in a country 9000 miles away from their own soil. Take the word of a soldier, for that is all I am, that our cause is a noble one. The reason we are here is one worth fighting for. A cause that has been the most costly and sought after cause in our small span of existence on our little planet. Bought in blood and paid for by those brave enough to give the ultimate sacrifice to obtain it. A right that is given to every man, woman, and child, I believe. by God. I am talking of freedom. Freedom. One word but yet countless words could never capture its true meaning or power. “For those who have fought for it, freedom has a taste the protected will never know.” I read that once and it couldn’t be more true. It’s not the average American’s fault that he or she is “blind and deaf” to the taste of freedom. Most Americans are born into their God given right so it is all they ever know. I was once one of them. I would even dare to say that it isn’t surprising that they take for granted what they have had all their life. My experiences in the military however opened my eyes to the truth.Ironically you will find the biggest outcries of opposition to our cause from those who have had no military experience and haven’t had to fight for freedom. I challenge all of those who are daring enough to question such a noble cause to come here for just a month and see it first hand. I have a feeling that many voices would be silenced.I watched Cindy Sheehan sit on the President’s lawn and say that America isn’t worth dying for. Later she corrected herself and said Iraq isn’t worth dying for. She badmouthed all that her son had fought and died for. I bet he is rolling over in his grave.Ladies and gentleman I ask you this. What if you lived in a country that wasn’t free? What if someone told you when you could have heat, electricity, and water? What if you had no sewage systems so human waste flowed into the streets? What if someone would kill you for bad-mouthing your government? What if you weren’t allowed to watch TV, connect to the internet, or have cell phones unless under extreme censorship? What if you couldn’t put shoes on your child’s feet?You need not to have a great understanding of the world but rather common sense to realize that it is our duty as HUMAN BEINGS to free the oppressed. If you lived that way would you not want someone to help you???? The Iraqi’s pour into the streets to wave at us and when we liberated the cities during the war they gathered in the thousands to cheer, hug and kiss us. It was what the soldier’s in WW2 experienced, yet no one questioned their cause!! Saddam was no better than Hitler! He tortured and killed thousands of innocent people. We are heroes over here, yet American’s badmouth our President for having us here. Every police station here has a dozen or more memorials for officers that were murdered trying to ensure that their people live free. These are husbands, fathers, and sons killed every day. What if it were your country? What would your choice be? Everything we fight for is worth the blood that may be shed. The media never reports the true HEROISM I witness everyday in the Iraqis. Yes there are bad ones here, but I assure you they are a minuscule percent. Yet they are a number big enough to cause worry in this country’s future.I have watched brave souls give their all and lose their lives and limbs for this cause. I will no longer stand silent and let the “deaf and blind” be the only voice shouting. Stonewall Jackson once said, “All that I have, all that I am is at the service of the country.” For these brave souls who gave the ultimate sacrifice, including your son Cindy Sheehan, I will shout till I can no longer. These men and women are heroes. Their spirit lives on in their military and they will never be forgotten. They did not die in vain but rather for a cause that is larger than all of us. My fellow countrymen and women, we are not overseas for our country alone but also another. We are here to spread democracy and freedom to those who KNOW the true taste of it because they fight for it everyday. You can see the desire in their eyes and I am honored to fight alongside them as an Infantryman in the 101st Airborne.Freedom is not free, but yet it is everyone’s right to have. Ironic isn’t it? That is why we are here. Though you will always have the skeptics, I know that most of our military will agree with this message.Please, at the request of this soldier spread this message to all you know. We are in Operation Iraqi Freedom and that is our goal. It is a cause that I and thousands of others stand ready to pay the ultimate sacrifice for because, Cindy Sheehan, freedom is worth dying for, no matter what country it is! And only after the world is free, can we hope to have peace.

SGT Walter J. Rausch, and 1st Platoon101st Airborne Division (Air Assault)

Gleened from: www.waynesworld2005.blogspot.com

Sunday, November 20, 2005

ENTER INTO HIS GATES WITH THANKSGIVING!


Now Thank We All Our God

Based on Ecclesiasticus 50:22-24 by Martin Rinkart (1586-1649)
Translated by Catherine Winkworth (1827-1878)
Music: Johann Crüger (1598-1662) Harmony by Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)


Now thank we all our God,
With heart and hands and voices,
Who wondrous things has done,
In whom this world rejoices;
Who from our mothers' arms
Has blessed us on our way
With countless gifts of love,
And still is ours today.

O may this bounteous God
Through all our life be near us,
With ever joyful hearts
And blessed peace to cheer us;
And keep us still in grace,
And guide us when perplexed;
And free us from all ills,
In this world and the next.

All praise and thanks to God
The Father now be given;
The Son, and him who reigns
With them in highest heaven;
The one eternal God,
Whom earth and heaven adore;
For thus it was, is now,
And shall be evermore.

Give Thanks
author unknown

GIVE THANKS
WITH A GRATEFUL HEART
GIVE THANKS
TO THE HOLY ONE
GIVE THANKS
FOR HE'S GIVEN
JESUS CHRIST, HIS SON

AND NOW LET THE WEAK SAY
I AM STRONG
LET THE POOR SAY
I AM RICH
BECAUSE OF WHAT
THE LORD HAS DONE
FOR US
GIVE THANKS...


He Has Made Me Glad
author unknown

"This is the day which the Lord hath made;we will rejoice and be glad in it."
Psalm 118:24

I will enter his gates with thanksgiving in my heart,
I will enter his courts with praise.
I will say this is the day that the Lord has made,
I will rejoice for He has made me glad.
He has made me glad,
He has made me glad,
I will rejoice for
He has made me glad.
He has made me glad,
I will rejoice for
He has made me glad.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Our "Trees" Will Be Missing Some Ornaments This Christmas....



ORNAMENT

Trans Siberian Orchestra

There is an ornament

Lost inside the night

There on a Christmas tree

With a thousand lights

No one can see her

She's standing all alone

Somewhere she glistens where no one can see

I don't believe

I can say what had happened

All of those words that we put into play

No longer matter, I should have known that then

I just know you're far away

On this Christmas day

On this Christmas day

On this Christmas ....

Somewhere the wind

Carves moments in the snow

And if he sees her

He never lets it show

He just drifts behind her

Erasing every step

Tinsel and garland are whispered through trees

I don't believe

I can say what had happened

All of those words that we put into play

No longer matter, I should have known that then

I just know you're far away

On this Christmas day

On this Christmas day

On this Christmas ....

Come, Christmas

Stay, Christmas

Watch over her this day

Keep her

Protect her

From harm now in every way

Shelter her gently there in your arms she'll be

Until the day when you bring her back home to me

There is an ornament lost inside the night

After he had heard the prayer

The angel gently set it free

And followed it to the father's child

In a far away city

And there the girl in desperation

Was searching through the sky

For a star that she could wish upon

But stars were in short supply

And the only light that she could see

There shining all alone

Was a neon sign on an old bar

And so on this, she wished she was home

Watch over her this day Keep her Protect her From harm now in every way Shelter her Gently There in your arms she'll be Until the day When you Bring her back home to me .... This right here is our prayer this holiday season for all the men and women of the 155/150 from Mississippi! We love you all we miss you tremendously! You can not be home soon enough for us! Stay safe... have a happy holiday knowing you are loved and that there are best wishes and presents under our trees and that we are anxiously waiting for our ornaments to return to us sometime in the new year!

A Must Read Letter I Gleened From The Wayne's World Site

Day 302 - Letter from Col. William Glasgow


The 155th Brigade Combat Team's deployment to Iraq is rapidly approaching its completion. Approximately 4,000 soldiers from Mississippi, Arkansas, Vermont and across the United States will be returning home to their loved ones. I wanted to write this letter just to let the folks back home know how much the 155th BCT has accomplished during its tour of duty and how much we appreciate the support our family and friends have provided.The 155th BCT area of operations encompassed two provinces and a large portion of a third province (Karbala, Najaf and northern Babil). Tremendous successes have been attained by the soldiers of the 155th BCT. Numerous weapons caches have been found throughout the area of operations. Approximately 35,000 artillery and mortar rounds have been discovered and destroyed by the 155th Brigade Combat Team, each one destroyed denying the enemy a potential IED (improvised explosive device). Soldiers of the 155th BCT have detained approximately 1,300 suspected insurgents, with over 500 of those being sent to Abu Gharib prison. This is only a small example of what your soldiers have accomplished. Many humanitarian aid projects have been undertaken and completed by the 155th BCT. Endless boxes of school supplies and backpacks have made it into the grateful hands of the children of Iraq.The 155th Brigade Combat Team has suffered casualties during its tour of duty. Our hearts, thoughts and prayers will always remain with the family members of our fallen comrades, and we will not let their sacrifice be forgotten. In closing, I say to the family members and friends of the 155th Brigade Combat Team, you can be proud of your sons, daughters, husbands and wives who met the challenge here in Iraq and continue to "make a difference" every day. We look forward to seeing you all soon. Once again, thank you for all the support you have provided from the home front.

Monday, November 14, 2005

The Ultimate Show!

We went to the ultimate concert on November 11.... We attended the Trans Siberian Orchestra Concert in the Coliseum in Jackson Mississippi... if you have not seen TSO in person please if you get the chance experience this event! It is a feast for the eyes, ears ... just all the senses! If you would like to get a glimpse of the group go to this link www.trans-siberian.com ... We have all their CDs and they are all WONDERFUL! They will make your whole holiday more joyous! I have had the opportunity to go to alot of amazing performers concerts but this one tops them all even ELVIS! This is a must see concert! They are AWESOME!

************************************************************************************
A little TSO history from their website!

Trans-Siberian Orchestra was formed in 1996 by Paul O'Neill who immediately approached long time friends and collaborators Robert Kinkel and Jon Oliva to form the core of the writing team.
While producing and writing for a number of years with various rock groups Paul was always looking for ways to make the music have greater and greater emotional impact. He tried to write the music that was so melodic it didn't need lyrics. And lyrics that were so poetic that they didn't need music but once you put the two of them together, the sum of the parts would be greater than the whole, and you couldn't imagine them apart. Once he'd done this, he was still looking for a way to take it to even greater heights and he realized that putting the songs within the context of a story would give it a third dimension that wou ld make that additional emotional impact possible.
Hence, he started writing not just albums, but rock operas.
He realized then, that there was an inherent problem recording rock operas within the standard rock and roll band makeup. Rock operas by their nature need the voices to change as the characters change. Rock bands normally only have one (or if you're lucky) two great vocalists to work with, therefore limiting how far you can go. You're forced to make the music fit the band, as opposed to allowing the music to go wherever it needs to.
With Trans-Siberian Orchestra, first the music is created with no artificial limitations, and then we seek out within the classical, rock, Broadway and R & B worlds, the very best singers and musicians to bring each song to life. This also in many ways forces us to operate on a higher level. This environment has the additional benefit of causing a cross pollenization of musical ideas, creating hybrid forms of music that normally never would have occurred, such as an R&B singer doing a classical style melody and bringing gospel touches to it that causes it to glitter in ways that even the creators could not have predicted. Another very important aspect in the creation of the band, is that there could be no limits on the members; we mix all races and ages.
The young get to mine the experience of the old musicians, while they can't help to be inspired by the enthusiasm of people just entering the business. This has created a vast constantly changing musical group that even we do not know what it is going to do next.
Once when asked what Trans-Siberian Orchestra was about, Paul O'Neill replied, "It's about creating great art. When asked to define what great art was, Paul said, "The purpose of art is to create an emotional response in the person that is exposed to that art. And there are three categories of art; bad art, good art and great art. Bad art will elicit no emotional response in the person that is exposed to it, i.e.; a song you hear in an elevator and it does nothing to you, a picture on a wall that gives you the same emotional response as if the wall had been blank, a movie that chews up time. Good art will make you feel an emotion that you have felt before; you see a picture of a forest and you remember the last time you went fishing with your dad, you hear a song about love and you remember the last time you were in love. Great art will make you feel an emotion you have never felt before; seeing the pieta, the world famous sculpture by
Michelangelo, can cause someone to feel the pain of losing a child even if they've never had one. And when you're trying for these emotions the easiest one to trigger is anger.
Anyone can do it. Go into the street, throw a rock at someone, you will make them angry. The emotions of love, empathy and laughter are much harder to trigger, but since they operate on a deeper level, they bring a much greater reward.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Like A Rock !!!!!!

http://www.metacafe.com/watch/29848/like_a_rock/

This video says it all! Turn on your speakers and enjoy!

Honoring all that have served our country so that she may be free and so that we may know the blessings of liberty! Thank you! For all of our military who are serving we love you, we pray for you and we miss you!

Our Family Veterans:

Revolutionary War:

Lt William McCorkle

Civil War:

John A. Wynn(e)
William Teague
Hines Wynn(e)
J.P. Teague
Billie Wynn(e)
William Prewitt
William Malone
WB Malone
Joe Teague
Sam Teague
P.B. Thomas
A.H. Harding
?? Gerrard
J.W. Burgamy
Mangus Teague

WWI:

Albert McCorkle
William McCorkle
James McCorkle

WWII:

John Pat Malone Jr.
Howard Malone
Maston Levi Prewitt

Iraqi Freedom (our soon to be veteran):

SPC Jonathan R. Prewitt

Monday, November 07, 2005

A Little About My New Baby! My 2006 Honda Civic Coupe!


Hot, Hip, Honda
Road Test: First Drive Test
First Drive: 2006 Honda Civic
Going After the Kids
By Edmunds.com Editors
Date posted: 09-19-2005


As usual, it comes down to the numbers. Honda says there will be 81.5 million Americans between the ages of 15 and 34 by the end of the decade. That's enough iPod addicts to make Gen Y the largest consumer group ever, topping even the baby boomers.In order to take advantage of this next "age wave" Honda is taking action now. After selling 7 million Civics over 22 years, the company is shifting the Civic's U.S. market focus from baby boomers to Gen Y-ers. It even says it has designed this all-new eighth generation of the Civic specifically for that 80-plus million who are packing iPods.This qualifies as radical thinking for Honda, which is often so conservative it makes the 700 Club look like The Howard Stern Show. But here's the cool part: this shift in the Civic's desired buyer demographic has put a priority on design and performance. You know, the things the kids like. And the resulting 2006 Honda Civic is sleeker, more powerful and better performing than any Civic before it. Fact is, the new iteration is undeniably the best and most interesting Civic Honda has ever produced.More Style, Less Room Available in two body styles — coupe and sedan — the new 2006 Civic is offered as four distinct models: the Civic Coupe, Civic Sedan, Civic Hybrid (sedan only), and the racy Si (coupe only). The hatchback body style, which was exclusive to the previous Si, is a goner.For the first time, the coupe and sedan don't share a wheelbase. Honda's engineers felt the sedan's new 106.3-inch wheelbase was just too long for the coupe to feel as sporty and responsive as they desired. So while the new sedan's wheelbase has grown 3.2 inches over last year's, the coupe's is only 1.2 inches longer.Even with the longer wheelbase, somehow the coupe has lost 2.5 inches of rear-seat legroom. Meanwhile, in the name of styling, Honda's designers sacrificed some rear headroom. The new coupe's roofline is several inches lower than its predecessor's. Combine that with the car's radically fast backlight, and those with large craniums should ride in the front."True coupe buyers will sacrifice a little rear-seat room for better performance and sexier styling," says Greg Thomas from Honda's product planning division. "But you can still sit full-size adults back there very comfortably."He's right, you can.The sedan's rear-seat room is about the same as before, and both body styles gained 1.4 inches of additional width, so sticking a third in the backseat of either no longer qualifies as bad karma.Due to the shorter rear overhang, trunk space also took a hit. It's now 12 cubic feet in the sedan and 11.5 in the coupe (both used to be 12.9). But Honda points out that the trunk sides are now flatter so the space is more useful. And the rear seat in every model but the hybrid folds flat to increase cargo space.Futuristic Style Let's face it: The last Civic's look was the automotive equivalent of a Lunesta. Whether you like the new style or not, the shape of either body will never be compared to a sleep aid.Honda says the new Civic has a one-motion profile and calls the car's design expressive and futuristic. We think the sedan looks a little too much like a Toyota Prius, but its laid-back windshield, minimal front and rear overhangs and tight 50mm tire-to-fender gap (Honda says that's tighter than the gap on a BMW 5 Series) do make it look more upscale.Honda also points out that the coupe, which was designed in Ohio, and the sedan, which was drawn in Japan, don't share a single body panel. The two body styles don't even share the same windshield rake; the sedan's is laid-back at 23.9 degrees, while the 21.9-degree rake of the coupe's glass is the most radical in Honda's history. Yes, sharper than even the NSX's.Beam Me Up, Scotty The new interior design mixes elements from previous Civics, Toyota's Prius and the Starship Enterprise. The result is a comfortable and pleasantly ergonomic environment with one of the strangest gauge layouts ever conceived.It seems the radically slopped windshield forced Honda to oversize the dashboard. The Civic's dash is so big it's rumored to be the location for Diddy's next bash. To camouflage all that space, Honda divided up the instruments, keeping the analog tachometer in the traditional location and placing a digital speedometer and gas gauge up at the base of the windshield. Honda calls it a two-tier design. We call it questionable. A space-saving Z-shaped parking brake handle opened up real estate for larger cupholders and a center console that can hold 25 CDs.More Money, More Stuff As usual, the coupe and sedan are available in DX, LX and EX trim levels. The hybrid sedan is equipped very much like a sedan LX, while the Si coupe sort of does its own thing.Content and prices are both up in the customer's favor, according to Honda. The least expensive model is the DX coupe which starts at $14,360 with a five-speed manual. The least expensive sedan costs $200 more. Pricing for the hybrid, which will go on sale in October, and the Si, which will hit dealers December first, haven't been set yet, but the Si will start under $20 grand.New standard features on all models and trim levels are side curtain and front side airbags, ABS, active front-seat head restraints and a tilt and telescoping steering wheel. And for the first time all Civic audio systems have MP3/WMA CD playback capability and a satellite navigation system is available.More Power Horsepower is up on every model. Now the front wheels of all coupes and sedans, regardless of trim level, are powered by an all-aluminum, single-overhead-cam 1.8-liter inline four-cylinder engine with 16 valves and Honda's i-VTEC variable valve system. It makes 140 hp at 6,300 rpm and 128 lb-ft of torque at 4,300 rpm.Honda still makes the world's best four-cylinders. This engine is silky-smooth, fun to rev, and gets better mileage than the two smaller and less powerful engines it's replacing. With the optional five-speed automatic, the Civic is EPA rated at 30 mpg city and 40 mpg highway.We covered the Si's new hardware, including its 200-hp, 2.0-liter engine, in a dedicated First Drive of that model, so let's move onto the hybrid. It also gets more guts, 23-percent more combined power than the 2005 Civic Hybrid.The fourth generation of Honda's IMA (Integrated Motor Assist) system still consists of a 1.3-liter, single-overhead-cam four-cylinder gas engine (which is the car's primary power source) connected to an electric motor and a Continuously Variable Transmission. And a Nickel-Metal Hydride (NiMH) battery pack still captures and stores electricity for the motor.For the first time, however, the gas engine features a high-profile camshaft within its i-VTEC system. It kicks in at high rpm and increases output to a 93-hp peak at 6,000 rpm. That's 9-percent more than before. The electric motor provides up to 20 hp and 76 lb-ft of additional torque.Mileage is up, too. Honda says it gets 50 mpg in the city or on the highway, which would give it a maximum driving range of over 600 miles. The improved efficiency is largely due to a third stage added to the i-VTEC and Variable Cylinder Management (VCM) system. The additional stage allows the computer to deactivate all four cylinders under deceleration and in steady state cruising situations. When the engine shuts down, the electric motor alone propels the car.We briefly drove a Civic hybrid through the wide-open expanse of Joliet, Illinois, and found its new technology to be very much transparent and its newfound power welcome. On occasion you would be aware of the gas engine stopping and starting itself, but it's generally unobtrusive.Better Handling A new, stronger body structure with 35-percent more torsional rigidity gave Honda's suspension engineers a better place to start. They kept the front MacPherson strut suspension and the rear multilink layout, but all the parts are new and much of the geometry is changed.In the front they added caster, reangled the struts and moved the steering box lower for more on-center steering feel and more off-center effort. In the back, new longer shocks are mounted closer to the wheels so they perform better throughout the range of suspension travel, and the aluminum rear shaved some unsprung weight.To make the coupe feel sportier, it gets its own suspension tuning, with higher spring rates, stiffer dampers, and thicker antiroll bars.Only the Si and the hybrid get Honda's excellent Electric Power Steering. The rest of the lineup uses a proven variable speed-sensitive rack and pinion hydraulic power steering system with a quick 13.73-to-1 ratio.All Civics but the Si are equipped with 10.3-inch front disc brakes, but the hybrid, LX and DX models use 7.9-inch drums in the rear. EX trim-level cars get 10.2-inch rear discs. Every Civic gets a new four-channel ABS with Electronic Brakeforce Distribution, and Honda increased the size of the power brake booster for added pedal feel.The hybrid and DX examples ride on standard 15-inch wheels and tires, while LX and EX get standard 17-inch rubber.We sampled a coupe EX and a sedan LX, and both rode beautifully. Each felt tight and responsive and both were noticeably quieter out on the road than their predecessors. The coupe's shifter felt a little flimsy, but its clutch was easy to modulate, as were its brakes.Still a Civic It might not look like any Civic we've ever seen, and that funky dash is going to take a while to grow on us, but this is still a Civic. It's a well-made, very comfortable and very affordable car with strong performance and a fun-to-drive attitude.Honda wants to sell 300,000 a year. That sound you hear is the iPod addicts lining up.

All I have to say is this is the coolest car I have ever had! It is so awesome to drive! It corners like nobody's business; has some powerful ponies under the hood and stops on a dime as well! It has an engine that is smooth as silk. It looks well HOT! And it gets great mileage! It is just an awesome awesome car... Honda gets two thumbs WAY WAY up on the 2006 Honda Civic Coupe!

Got My Clothes In A Matchbox By Ike Turner (Recorded by Jonny Lang)

"We have just about finished packing up the CONEX's"; I got this from an email sent to me from "over there" the other day and it is so exciting hearing how close we are to our guys coming home! They said they are about 2 weeks ahead of schedule packing up! HURRAH! All this packing up made me think of this song from the Jonny Lang CD "Lie To Me"... and I thought it was appropriate for the situation! Not much longer now! Thanks be to God this deployment is almost OVER!

Yeah I'm tired of sighing
tired of worrying you too
but I made up my mind baby
what I'm gonna do
I got my clothes in a matchbox
I'm gonna forget about you
But I tried to tell you
many times but I never could do it
you believe me baby this time I'm through
I got my clothes in a matchbox
I'm gonna forget about you
Now when things get harder
yeah and rough on you
don't try to get me back now baby
'cause baby I'm through
I got my clothes in a matchbox
gonna forget about you.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

In Honor Of All Of Our Veterans Past, Present, And Future...

Please go to the following link for a two hanky video honoring America's bravest! The men and women who have, are, and one day will stand up and fight for their country. We honor them all for giving of themselves so we may live in freedom! And let us never forget that FREEDOM IS NOT FREE! Thank you, thank you all for your service! God bless the USA!

http://www.metacafe.com/watch/29848/like_a_rock/


Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty. This much we pledge—and more.

And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country.

My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.

Excerpts from JFK's Inaugural Speech January 1961

Friday, November 04, 2005

Thank God For Boredom

I got an email from Iraq a couple days ago ......

My nephew had seen my frantic subject title

ARE YOU ALL OK!

Seems like all the news from Iraq for the last few weeks is bad 2,4,6 GIs killed....

I was really worried since I hadn't heard from Kevin or Jonathan in a few days.

He said he was sorry he hadn't emailed and that they were fine! He said he was bored and homesick ( I am paraphrasing).... He was counting the days and we are all thankful that there are not that many to count now! He was tired of it all .... I am tired of him being in harms way I can tell you that ....

According to other reliable sources we are into the last month of so of the deployment with some of our boys coming home next month!

I am so thankful that Jonathan is bored and I told him so... I told him I rather him be bored and safe than busy and dodging IEDs, car bombs, morters, and small arms fire! I hope he is bored to tears for the rest of his "visit" to the ancient sands of Iraq.

So here in Mississippi tonight we are thankful for the boredom of our soldier in Iraq and thankful he is safe and sound for another day!

All I Ever Needed to Know I Learned From My Dog

Naps are essential and should be taken daily.
Playtime is important.
Every day can be an adventure.
Don't be afraid to snuggle up next to someone you love.
Don't mess with someone bigger than you.
Sometimes a bark is worse than a bite.
Too much of anything will make you sick.
Once something goes in the garbage, it should stay there.
It's hard to stay mad at something cute.
Drink lots of water.
A shady area makes a good resting place.
Looking adorable or pitiful can work in your favor.
It's nice to be taken care of.
Begging for food is okay.
Long daily walks are good exercise.
Kisses are good, even wet ones.
Accidents happen.
Play nicely with others and they'll play nicely with you.
It's okay to get excited when you see people you like.
Tummy rubs are mandatory.
Treats are wonderful and make you feel special.
Protect those you love.
Humans make good pillows.
Stop and smell the roses, the dirt, the grass...

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Freedom Is NOT Free!

Jackson 11/01/05

155th Soldier Killed in Iraq

A member of Mississippi's 155th Brigade Combat Team has become one of the latest victim's of the war in Iraq.
First Lieutenant Robert C. Oneto-Sikorski of Bay Saint Louis was on a foot patrol west of Baghdad when he was killed by a roadside bomb.
He's the 14th Mississippian in the 155th to die since the unit deployed in January.

Keep this soldier and his family in your prayers! And remember all the brave Dixie Thunder Families who have paid the ultimate price for our freedom!

Also continue to pray for all those brave Thunders/Sappers who are continuing their recover from wounds received in Iraq!

If You Live In Ripley Area Celebrate This Soldier Home!

November 1, 2005
Wounded guardsman returning home today
By Holbrook MohrThe Associated Press

A Mississippi Army National Guard soldier severely injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq will return home today, Guard officials said.Spc. David Yancy, 32, of Ripley, a member of the 155th Brigade Combat Team, was wounded along with three other soldiers when a bomb ripped through their Humvee on March 19, said Lt. Col. Tim Powell, a Guard spokesman.Spc. William Brooks, who lost both his legs in the same explosion, and Maj. Gen. Harold A. Cross, the adjutant general of Mississippi, will join others to greet Yancy when he arrives at the Memphis International Airport about 12:30 p.m. from Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.
Brooks, who still spends part of each month at Walter Reed mastering his prosthetic limbs, said he looks forward to seeing Yancy."He's a great guy," Brooks said. "He's just a good old country boy, and I'll be glad to see him back home."
Allen Yancy, the soldier's brother, has said David Yancy suffered extensive injuries — collapsed lungs, a broken leg, broken ribs, a severed artery in his arm and shrapnel wounds.Sgt. Leonard A. Casper Jr. of Myrtle and Sgt. 1st Class Wyman C. Floyd of Hattiesburg also were injured in the explosion but returned to duty in Iraq, Guard officials said.

Started My 6th Week Of My Diet Monday!

I tell you Halloween and all that chocolate was a temptation but I did not waiver.
I am still walking 2 miles a day took the week off last week due to fighting a horrible cold/allergy thingy. I've been sicker than two dogs lately! I have gotten back into some of my jeans that I have been unable to wear for some time... and some of my pants are getting really really loose ... I have friends at school tell me I am losing too but when I look in the mirror I still see my stomach and that doesn't seem to change to me... but I will perservere ... I have too!

Well thought you might like to know how it was going and that is how it is going!

I am sorry I have no numbers for you all .... I refuse to weigh it is TOO depressing!

Keep me in your prayers... but ya know it is not as hard as I thought it would be... I guess it is true.... you can do anything you put your mind too!

It is just making up your mind and doing the work....