Jim Myrick

Name:
Location: Meridian, Mississippi, United States

Monday, February 25, 2008

Music For our Veterans

Organizer: DJ Tommy Dean
Cell# (207) 479-7506
I'm collecting Country Music, Gospel & Show Tune CD's or Cassettes for our Veterans in the Machias Maine Veterans Home. This year I'm asking for new or used CD or Cassette players for the home. Last year with the help of folks across the USA we collected over 600 CD's & Cassettes for the Bangor Maine Veterans Home! Nite*Sky Recording Artist Andrew Dean put on a concert for the Veterans in the Bangor Home to cap off a GREAT day.This is our way to give back to those Men & Woman that fought for the Freedoms we have today!Maine Country Music Recording Artist Bob Elston will be this years performer at the the Machias Home. The presentation of the Music and the Concert will be May 6th. at 2:00 pmI work very closely with Am. Legion Unit #207 Ladies Aux. President Ruth Butters in Trenton, Me. Mrs. Butters is also the Rep. for Maine Veterans homes. I appreciate the guidance of Ruth Butters.Machias is the sixth of the six long term care Maine Veterans' Home. It was built on the campus of the Down East Community Hospital provides a 30-bed residential care facility for veterans, their spouses, widows, widowers, and gold star parents in the early stages of Alzheimer's and other forms of dementias.Please send your new or used CD's, Cassettes, CD players or Cassette Players to:
MUSIC FOR OUR VETERANSc/o DJ Tommy Dean
408 Christian Ridge Rd.
Ellsworth, Me. 04605

Sunday, February 24, 2008

U S 11 Antique Alley


U S 11 Antique Alley

From Meridian, Ms. On U S Highway 11 to Bristol, Va. May 15 - 18, 2008

The offical starting point in Meridian will be.The Red Porch Barn Antiques and Flea Market2631 A Street.For Information and vendor set up call 601-693-9838

Monday, February 18, 2008

Song in my head


The Wedding Song "There is Love"
Paul Stookey


He is now to be among you at the calling of your hearts
Rest assured this troubadouris acting on His part.
The union of your spirits, here,has caused Him to remain
for whenever two or more of youare gathered in His namethere is Love, there is Love.
Well, a man shall leave his mother
and a woman leave her home
and they shall travel on to where
the two shall be as one.
As it was in the beginningis now and til the end
Woman draws her life from man
and gives it back again.
And there is Love, there is Love.
Well then what's to be the reasonfor becoming man and wife?
Is it love that brings you hereor love that brings you life?
And if loving is the answer,then who's the giving for?
Do you believe in somethingthat you've never seen before?
Oh there is Love, there is Love.
(Short solo)
Oh the marriage of your spirits here
has caused Him to remain
for whenever two or more of youare gathered in His name
there is Love, there is Love.

Friday, February 15, 2008

US to try to shoot down spy satellite

US to try to shoot down spy satellite

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

Taking a page from Hollywood science fiction, the Pentagon said Thursday it will try to shoot down a dying, bus-sized U.S. spy satellite loaded with toxic fuel on a collision course with the Earth.
The military hopes to smash the satellite as soon as next week — just before it enters Earth's atmosphere — with a single missile fired from a Navy cruiser in the northern Pacific Ocean.
The dramatic maneuver may well trigger international concerns, and U.S. officials have begun notifying other countries of the plan — stressing that it does not signal the start of a new American anti-satellite weapons program.
Military and administration officials said the satellite is carrying fuel called hydrazine that could injure or even kill people who are near it when it hits the ground. That reason alone, they said, convinced President Bush to order the shoot-down.
"That is the only thing that breaks it out, that is worthy of taking extraordinary measures," said Gen. James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, during a Pentagon briefing.
He predicted a fairly high chance — as much as 80 percent — of hitting the satellite, which will be about 150 miles up when the shot is fired. The window of opportunity for taking the satellite down, Cartwright said, opens in three or four days and lasts for about seven or eight days.
"We'll take one shot and assess," he said. "This is the first time we've used a tactical missile to engage a spacecraft."
Deputy National Security Adviser James Jeffrey discounted comparisons to an anti-satellite test conducted by the Chinese last year that triggered criticism from the U.S. and other countries.
"This is all about trying to reduce the danger to human beings," Jeffrey said. "Specifically, there was enough of a risk for the president to be quite concerned about human life."
There might also be unstated military aims, some outside the administration suggested.
Similar spacecraft re-enter the atmosphere regularly and break up into pieces, said Ivan Oelrich, vice president for strategic security programs at the Federation of American Scientists. He said, "One could be forgiven for asking if this is just an excuse to test an anti-satellite weapon."
A key issue when China shot down its defunct weather satellite was that it created an enormous amount of space debris.
"All of the debris from this encounter, as carefully designed as it is, will be down at most within weeks, and most of it will be down within the first couple of orbits afterward," said Jeffrey. "There's an enormous difference to spacefaring nations in ... those two things."
He and others dismissed suggestions that this was simply an attempt by the U.S. to flex its muscles, and that officials were overstating the toxic fuel threat.
Left alone, the satellite would be expected to hit Earth during the first week of March. About half of the 5,000-pound spacecraft would be expected to survive its blazing descent through the atmosphere and would scatter debris over several hundred miles.
If the missile shot is successful, officials said, much of the debris would burn up as it fell. They said they could not estimate how much would make it through the atmosphere. They said the largest piece that would survive re-entry would be the spherical fuel tank, which is about 40 inches wide — assuming it is not hit directly by the missile.
The goal, however, is to hit the fuel tank in order to minimize the amount of fuel that returns to Earth, Cartwright said.
A Navy missile known as Standard Missile 3 would be fired at the spy satellite in an attempt to intercept it just before it re-enters Earth's atmosphere. It would be "next to impossible" to hit the satellite after that because of atmospheric disturbances, he said.
Known by its military designation US 193, the satellite was launched in December 2006. It lost power and its central computer failed almost immediately afterward, leaving it uncontrollable. It carried a sophisticated and secret imaging sensor.
Software associated with the Standard Missile 3 has been modified to enhance the chances of the missile's sensors recognizing that the satellite is its target. The missile's designed mission is to shoot down ballistic missiles, not satellites. Other officials said the missile's maximum range, while a classified figure, is not great enough to hit a satellite operating in normal orbits.
"It's a one-time deal," Cartwright said when asked whether the modified Standard Missile 3 should be considered a new U.S. anti-satellite technology.
He said that if an initial shoot-down attempt fails, the military would have about two days to reassess and decide whether to take a second shot.
NASA Administrator Michael Griffin told reporters that analysis shows the hydrazine tank would survive a fall to Earth under normal circumstances, much as one did when the Space Shuttle Columbia crashed.
"The hydrazine which is in it is frozen solid, as it is now. Not all of it will melt," he said. If the tank hits the ground it will have been breached because the fuel lines will have broken off and hydrazine will vent out, he said.
Jeffrey said members of Congress were briefed on the plan earlier Thursday and that diplomatic notifications to other countries were being made by the end of the day.
"It should be understood by all, at home and abroad, that this is an exceptional circumstance and should not be perceived as the standard U.S. policy for dealing with errant satellites," said House Armed Services Chairman Ike Skelton.
___
Associated Press Writers Pauline Jelinek, Robert Burns and Ted Bridis contributed to this report.
___

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Track 45

Meridian, Mississippi
Track 45, formerly known as 45 South, is returning for an MCC FOUNDATION Arts & Letters encore performance. These homegrown Meridian siblings, Jenna, Benjamin & K.K. Johnson are back with their musical variety show---offering “something for everyone” at Meridian Community College’s McCain Theatre, Ivy Hall on TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19 at 7:00 p.m. You will not want to miss this delightful family, so Call MCC Foundation Program Coordinator Leia Hill at 601.484.8696 to reserve your tickets today!

Monday, February 04, 2008

NASA beams Beatles' "Across the Universe" to aliens

NASA beams Beatles' "Across the Universe" to aliens
Mon Feb 4, 2008 7:53pm GMT
LONDON (Reuters) - An intergalactic celebration of The Beatles is launched on Monday with the beaming of their peace anthem "Across the Universe" into outer space.
The man behind the idea, which marks the 40th anniversary of the recording of the song in 1968, is an avid Beatles fan who has persuaded U.S. space agency NASA to kick off the party and now hopes to convert alien life forms to The Beatles.
"At the moment we are sending up Morse code as a way of contacting aliens," Martin Lewis told BBC radio. "Maybe we should send them something a little more cheery."
If all goes according to plan, NASA will transmit the Beatles tune via its deep space network at Midnight British time.
At exactly the same time, fans across the world are being asked to play "Across The Universe" in a bid to "create a harmonic convergence" around planet earth and throughout the universe.
According to a statement from NASA, the transmission will be aimed at the North Star, Polaris, which is 431 light years away from earth. The song will travel across the universe at a speed of 186,000 miles per second.
Former Beatle Paul McCartney, who beamed his first intergalactic concert to the International Space Station in 2005, congratulated NASA and asked them to pass on his regards to anyone else out there.
"Amazing! Well done, NASA!" he said in a statement released by the space agency. "Send my love to the aliens. All the best, Paul."
Fans can watch the event online via the Web site www.acrosstheuniverseday.com.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland. Editing by Paul Casciato)

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Jim Myrick for President 2008

Will make up laws as I go.