Bad Blogger!

Actually, I guess I’m not even a real blogger, because no one bothers me if I fail to post something every day, or even every week.
The truth is, I’m pretty busy, and I’m sorta sick right now. I’m also trying to finish the golf hole. Not much fun while feverishly sweating. Yesterday for lunch I went to Corner Bakery and got a bowl of cheddar broccoli soup and a hot Chamomile tea. This may not sound strange unless you know me and my preference for, well, NOT soup and hot tea for lunch. Hot wings. McDonald’s. Coke. Salami: Lunch.

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NCAA Bracket Update: Not much to talk about. I’m in last place in all but one of my pools, and the person I’m beating in that one is a girl who signed up but failed to fill out a bracket. Pitiful. Good tournament, though. The Ohio State, Georgetown and North Carolina games were as exciting as any you’ll ever see in the Sweet 16. I’m all North Carolina from here on out, they being the only ACC team left, and my $10 check sealed, stamped and just waiting for a mailing address.

Northpark Show Correction

For the half of this blog’s audience that lives in Chicago (I think that’s about three people…), Tim Lowly pointed out to me that the reception for the show at Northpark U. is on Thursday March 29th, rather than the 28th, still at 5pm.

Experimental Putt-Putt Blog

Here’s a link to the blog for the experimental putt-putt course that I’m taking part in. There are some really cool holes, including some by fellow sculpture MFA’s.

Infinite Bridge at Northpark University

I’ve installed my Infinite Bridge in this fantastic outdoor setting at Northpark University in Chicago. The piece is part of a show called “Something About Coming and Going” curated by Tim Lowly. It was always intended to be suspended, so I’m pleased to finally get to do it. The show opens next week with a reception on March 28th.

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Green Test

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Tim Hawkinson/Getty Museum NYT Article

Good article on Tim Hawkinson doing some work for the Getty Museum in L.A. Below, a bat made out of zip ties and heat-shrunk and shredded plastic Radio Shack bags. I like that the head actually looks like some kind of terrier.
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Putt-Putt Poster

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Schizophrenic Baseball News

In the college ranks, my boys at FSU took a 12 — 4 loss today.

In the Major Leagues the Phillies were on the winning side of a 12 — 4 battle.

Could this point spread be a mere coincidence? It could be… but it isn’t.

For the first time in my life, one of the teams I wholeheartedly support, beat another one of the teams I wholeheartedly support. Philadelphia Phillies 12 — Florida State Seminoles 4. I did not see the exhibition game (the only similar match-up that I witnessed being FSU vs. Kansas City Royals, circa 1989), and I’m not sure what it would have been like emotionally for me.

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The Phillies are 1 - 1 in spring training “grapefruit league” ball, not counting the victory over the ‘Noles.

FSU, a traditionally powerful program, is 15 - 0 to start the season, tying the record for the best start in program history, with it’s only “loss” coming in the exhibition against the Phillies. The Seminoles have outscored their opponents 185 - 55 this season.
One highlight that I sure would have enjoyed seeing was FSU’s Tony Thomas Jr. hitting a solo home run off of Phillies starter Kyle Drabek to lead off the game. But just so the kids didn’t get too big for their britches, Chase Utley went yard in the bottom half of the first for a three run shot and the Fightin’ Phils never looked back.

Ahhh… I’m glad baseball is back!

Subperitoneal Placenta Accreta Succenturiate in the Case of a Successful Near-Term Extrauterine Abdominal Pregnancy

How’s that for a post title?

Some blog readers may know that my nephew Ebenezer Breckinridge Castleman was born in a miraculous way, going nearly to full term as an extrauterine abdominal pregnancy and being perfectly healthy. This means that he gestated entirely outside of the womb, in my sister-in-law Rebecca’s abdomen. That’s right, Eben and all the organs and everything were all mixed together. My bro’ and I like to joke that ‘Eben’ the sperm swam right up into the girls locker room, but didn’t stop there, and kept right on going out the back door. We figure he’s gonna be an amazing athlete. A good outcome for both mother and child in this situation is nearly unheard of in medicine, with mortality rates being extremely high for both parties. Normally they terminate the pregnancy as soon as this is detected, but by the grace of God, no one ever noticed that he wasn’t in her uterus until they performed an emergency C-section.

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So, recently, a medical journal article has been published related to his birth. It actually focuses primarily on Rebecca’s placenta, and it’s full of unknowable technical medical jargon, but if anyone is interested, here it is.

On a side note, as I was reading the references at the end (don’t ask me why I was reading the references of an article I could hardly understand in the first place), I noticed a name that I recognized: JK Sessums.

J. Kim Sessums is a surgeon in Mississippi, Belhaven College graduate (our ‘family’ alma mater), and, in his spare time, a successful sculptor who has done bronze busts of a number of notable figures, including Billy Graham, Eudora Welty and Andrew Wyeth. I like this quote from his website reflecting on sculpting Andrew Wyeth, who personally requested that Kim execute his sculpture:

“There we sat, a country boy from Pennsylvania and one from Mississippi, discussing Edward Hopper and Thomas Eakins; the history of American art at its best. No big deal, I suppose, except that one of us was Andrew Wyeth, himself an integral part of that same history.”

I emailed Kim, and he confirmed that he was the same that wrote the article on abdominal pregnancies while a med student in Jackson, Miss. I had seen a show of his at Belhaven while I was a student, but it was strange way to finally make a personal connection.