RIP: Jerry Reed

Singer-actor Jerry Reed dies at the age of 71
By JOHN GEROME, Associated Press Writer


Jerry Reed, a singer who became a good ol’ boy actor in car chase movies like “Smokey and the Bandit,” has died of complications from emphysema at 71. His longtime booking agent, Carrie Moore-Reed, no relation to the star, said Reed died early Monday. “He’s one of the greatest entertainers in the world. That’s the way I feel about him,” Moore-Reed said.

Sony BMG Nashville Chairman Joe Galante called Reed a larger-than-life personality. Everything about Jerry was distinctive: his guitar playing, writing, voice and especially his sense of humor,” Galante said. “I was honored to have worked with him.”

Reed’s catalog of country chart hits, from 1967 through 1983, were released under the label group’s RCA imprint. As a singer in the 1970s and early 1980s, Reed had a string of hits that included “Amos Moses,” “When You’re Hot, You’re Hot,” “East Bound and Down,” “She Got the Goldmine (I Got the Shaft)” and “The Bird.”

In the mid-1970s, he began acting in movies such as “Smokey and the Bandit” with Burt Reynolds, usually as a good ol’ boy. But he was an ornery heavy in “Gator,” directed by Reynolds, and a hateful coach in 1998’s “The Waterboy,” starring Adam Sandler.

Reynolds gave him a shiny black 1980 Trans Am like the one they used in “Smokey and the Bandit.” Reed and Kris Kristofferson paved the way for Nashville music personalities to make inroads into films. Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson and Kenny Rogers (TV movies) followed their lead. “I went around the corner to motion pictures,” he said in a 1992 AP interview.

Reed had quadruple bypass surgery in June 1999. Born in Atlanta, Reed learned to play guitar at age 8 when his mother bought him a $2 guitar and showed him how to play a G-chord.

He dropped out of high school to tour with Ernest Tubb and Faron Young. At 17, he signed his first recording contract, with Capitol Records. He moved to Nashville in the mid-1960s where he caught the eye of Chet Atkins.

He first established himself as a songwriter. Elvis Presley recorded two of his songs, “U.S. Male” and “Guitar Man” (both in 1968). He also wrote the hit “A Thing Called Love,” which was recorded in 1972 by Johnny Cash. He also wrote songs for Brenda Lee, Tom Jones, Dean Martin, Nat King Cole and the Oak Ridge Boys.

Reed was voted instrumentalist of the year in 1970 by the Country Music Association.
He won a Grammy Award for “When You’re Hot, You’re Hot” in 1971. A year earlier, he shared a Grammy with Chet Atkins for their collaboration, “Me and Jerry.” In 1992, Atkins and Reed won a Grammy for “Sneakin’ Around.”

Singer-guitarist Brad Paisley said Reed was one of country music’s most influential players.

“Anyone who picks a country guitar knows of his mastery of the instrument — one of the most inspirational stylists in the history of country music, a complete master,” Paisley said. “I’m in debt to him for paving the way for myself and the other guitarists of today.”

Reed continued performing on the road into the late 1990s, doing about 80 shows a year.

“I’m proud of the songs, I’m proud of things that I did with Chet (Atkins), I’m proud that I played guitar and was accepted by musicians and guitar players,” he told the AP in 1992. In a 1998 interview with The Tennessean, he admitted that his acting ability was questionable. “I used to watch people like Richard Burton and Mel Gibson and think, `I could never do that.’ “When people ask me what my motivation is, I have a simple answer: money.”
_____________________________________________________________________

Associated Press Writer Joe Edwards contributed to this story.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080902/ap_en_ot/obit_jerry_reed

Popular Baby Names 1950 – 2007

Most popular boy/girl baby names in 1950:
1. James / Linda
2. Robert / Mary
3. John / Patricia
4. Michael / Barbara
5. David / Susan
6. William / Nancy
7. Richard / Deborah
8. Thomas / Sandra
9. Charles / Carol
10. Gary / Kathleen

Here’s the list from 2007:
1. Jacob / Emily
2. Michael / Isabella
3. Ethan / Emma
4. Joshua / Ava
5. Daniel / Madison
6. Christopher / Sophia
7. Anthony / Olivia
8. William / Abigail
9. Matthew / Hannah
10. Andrew / Elizabeth

Read more about it: http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20080708/sc_livescience/mostpopularbabynameschangedramatically

Rest in Peace George Carlin

**WARNING: Video Contains Adult Content!**

GEORGE CARLIN HAS DIED AT THE AGE OF 71.


Along with Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor, George Carlin was one of the most influential, respected and controversial stand-up comics of the late 20th century. His humor was built on the vagaries of human behavior – the truth behind words and phrases, the quandaries presented in everyday life, and the hypocrisies of authority – which was unleashed on audiences in a stream-of-consciousness delivery that was equal parts profanity and profundity. Carlin sowed his seeds of free thought through over 20 albums and a record 14 specials for the HBO network, as well as five best-selling books and countless live performances in Las Vegas and around the United States. And over the course of a 50-year career in comedy, he helped re-define the notion of the stand-up, as well as broaden and question the boundaries of free speech in entertainment.

Born George Dennis Carlin on May 12, 1937, Carlin was raised in New York City, NY primarily by his mother, who left her husband when Carlin was an infant. His early years showed a marked anti-authority bent – he quit school at the age of 14 and spent much of his twenties earning numerous court martials and rank demotions while serving as a radar technician with the Air Force at a base in Shreveport, LA, from 1954 to 1956. He was honorably discharged in 1957. While still in the Air Force, the 19-year-old Carlin started working as a disc jockey at a local radio station, and pursuing this line of work for several years after his discharge in Boston and Fort Worth, TX.

Carlin partnered with another fast-talking and funny jock named Jack Burns while at KXOL in Texas, and in 1960, the duo lit out for Hollywood with dreams of finding their fortune as a comedy duo. The pair worked as DJs in Los Angeles while honing their stand-up act in local clubs; even recording a live album, Burns and Carlin at the Playboy Club Tonight, which was actually recorded at the less-upscale Cosmo’s Alley. The pair covered the Los Angeles and national nightclub scene until 1962, when they parted ways amicably to pursue solo careers (the “Playboy Club” album was released a year after they broke up). During this period, Carlin also met Brenda Hosbrook while performing in Dayton, OH, and after driving from New York to Dayton to propose to her, the couple was married on June 3, 1961 in the living room of Hosbrook’s parents. A daughter, Kelly, was born on June 15, 1963.

Carlin made his debut as a solo stand-up act on “The Tonight Show” (NBC, 1954- ) in 1961, shortly after Jack Paar had left the program. The appearance did nothing for Carlin’s career, but he refused to relent from his goals; instead heading for New York with the intention of landing appearances on some of the primetime variety and talk shows. He also began appearing at some of the hipper clubs in the city, like Café Wha and The Bitter End in the East Village. Eventually, talent bookers for “The Merv Griffin Show” (NBC/CBS, Syndicated, 1962-63, 1965-69, 1969-1972, and 1972-1986) caught his act, and he made his debut on the “Griffin” show in 1965. This was followed shortly by appearances on “The Mike Douglas Show” (syndicated, 1961-1982) and “The Jimmy Dean Show” (ABC, 1963-66). The sudden wave of success prompted Carlin to relocate with his family to Los Angeles, after which his profile grew even larger with guest shots on “The Ed Sullivan Show” (CBS, 1948-1971) and a 12-week stint as a writer and performer on “The Kraft Summer Music Hall” (CBS, 1966). Carlin also logged his first acting role as Marlo Thomas’ agent on “That Girl” (ABC, 1966-1971). His first movie appearance came in 1968 as a “kooky” carhop in the Doris Day vehicle “With Six You Get Eggroll.”

Carlin’s comedy at this point was essentially a cleaner and less confrontational version of his act in the 1970s and beyond. He was enamored with observational humor, and used his deep, flexible voice to excellent effect – most notably on popular characters like “The Indian Sergeant” and “Al Sleet, The Hippie-Dippie Weatherman,” who gave philosophical and occasionally thick-headed broadcasts on the weather. Both of these routines, along with several others he honed during his growing television appearances, were featured on his first comedy album as a solo performer, 1967’s Take Offs and Put Ons, which was recorded before a live audience in Detroit. The LP earned Carlin his first Grammy nomination.

But as the 1960s drew to a close, Carlin became uncomfortable with his standing as a mainstream comedian, so began to align himself with the growing counterculture movement. His onstage persona grew more confrontational – he left stages if the audience was not responding to his material – and he began incorporating more frank and adult language into his act, as well as questions about religion, societal trends, politics, and oddities in American and Western culture. The response was not entirely positive – Carlin was fired from the Frontier Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas for using the word “ass” onstage – but he felt a newfound creative freedom in his decision to move outside the mainstream. An interest in and appetite for drugs – in particular, LSD and cocaine – also helped to fuel his material and dangerous onstage personality.

Carlin entered the 1970s with a new look – a stint in the hospital to repair a hernia resulted in a beard and longer hair – and a new act, which he cemented in wax on the LP AM & FM (1972), which won him a Grammy. The popularity of the album and his non-conformist attitude made him popular with counterculture audiences, though he never lost the majority of his mainstream fans – thanks in large part to Ed Sullivan, who continued to give him air time on his program. In 1972, Carlin made his debut at Carnegie Hall to considerable acclaim, as well as criticism over his increasingly graphic language. That same year, he was arrested on obscenity charges after performing at Milwaukee’s Summerfest.

Among the routines that earned Carlin his bust was a version of his famous “Seven Dirty Words You Can Never Say on Television” – a hilarious list of the proper uses of seven particularly vulgar curses and terms. The bit, which sought to nullify the words’ power by making them seem both commonplace and foolish, was later included on his 1972 album Class Clown, which went gold and helped to cement Carlin’s stature as a free-thinking and risky comedian who appeared to be following in the footsteps of Lenny Bruce. He followed this with Occupation: Foole (1973), which culled material from Carlin’s upbringing and included an expanded version of “Seven Dirty Words” called “Filthy Words.”

The latter became the center of a Supreme Court decision when, in 1973, a man in New York overheard his son listening to “Filthy Words” during an afternoon broadcast on WBAI. The resulting complaint to the FCC earned the station’s network, The Pacifica Foundation, a citation for broadcasting obscene material and the threat of a sanction. Pacifica appealed the ruling, which was overturned by the Supreme Court in 1978. The resulting attention over the case only served to increase Carlin’s popularity among hip and smart audiences, quickly making “Seven Dirty Words” a touchstone for fans of outrageous comedy. Carlin expanded the list throughout his career before bringing it to a close with a massive, 200-word list broadcast during his 1982 HBO special, “Carlin at Carnegie.”

Carlin responded to the new wave of popularity by launching into a hectic work schedule for the next few years, releasing three albums between 1974 and 1977 – 1974’s Toledo Window Box; 1975’s An Evening with Wally Londo Featuring Bill Slazso, which earned him a Grammy nomination; and 1976’s On the Road), which tackled hot button subjects like death, drugs, religion, sexual and bodily functions, and the elastic nature of the English language, which became a particular obsession for Carlin. Despite some reservations on the part of the peacock network, he also hosted the first episode of “Saturday Night Live” (NBC, 1975- ) and appeared in the cult movie “Car Wash” as a randy cab driver. Carlin even branched out into mainstream network TV with 10 appearances on “The Tony Orlando and Dawn Show” (CBS, 1974-76) and a guest shot on “Welcome Back, Kotter” (ABC, 1975-79). In all of the TV appearances save the latter, Carlin only performed a monologue from his stand-up act, citing that he disliked sketches and felt his acting skills were not up to snuff.

Carlin also taped his first two comedy specials for the fledgling HBO Network: 1977’s “On Location: George Carlin at USC” and 1978’s “On Location: George Carlin at Phoenix,” which was transferred from videotape to film for a proposed theatrical concert film which never came to fruition. The latter specials were the only live performances by Carlin for several years; the punishing schedule, exacerbated by a growing cocaine addiction, resulted in a minor heart attack in 1978.

Carlin returned to comedy with a vengeance in 1981 with A Place for My Stuff, arguably his best and most popular album to date, and his first to feature material written specifically for the LP’s release. He also filmed his third HBO special, the aforementioned “Carlin at Carnegie,” which focused on newer material. Even a second heart attack (at Dodger Stadium) could not halt Carlin’s upward momentum. He published his first book, Sometimes a Little Brain Damage Can Help, in 1983; returned for a second guest shot on “Saturday Night Live” in 1984; and taped his fourth HBO special, “Carlin on Campus” that same year. “Campus” featured Carlin revisiting his “Class Clown” routine, playing piano on an original song, and appearing in three animated segments. An album version was released the same year.

By the mid-80s, Carlin was approaching his fifth decade – a period when most stand-up comics have either settled into an acting career, relocated permanently to Las Vegas, or faded into obscurity. But Carlin’s comic skills and energy showed no signs of slowing, though he did attempt to venture into other entertainment avenues outside of stand-up. The first of these was a failed pilot for HBO called “2C,” which was taped in 1985. He also co-starred with Bette Midler and Shelly Long in the feature film comedy “Outrageous Fortune” (1987), playing as an aging hippie, and spoofed the private eye genre as a deceased detective whose spirit assists a young woman solve his murder in “Justin Case,” a 1987 TV-movie by Blake Edwards that was intended (but never saw the light) as a series pilot. He also shot a low-budget feature comedy called “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure” (1989) – an unexpectedly witty pop-culture spoof in which he played the futuristic mentor to a pair of hapless California nitwits charged with saving humanity. The latter was a huge hit with younger audiences, who got their first taste of Carlin’s offbeat humor through the picture.

On the comedy front, Carlin taped two more HBO specials – 1986’s “Playin’ with Your Head” and 1988’s “What Am I Doing in New Jersey” – both of which were also recorded as comedy albums, which both received Grammy nominations. He also received his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1987 in a ceremony presided over by the dean emeritus of television comedy, Milton Berle.

Carlin kicked off the 1990s with his seventh HBO special, “Doin’ It Again” (1990), which was released as an album under the title Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics, earning him another Grammy nomination. He also purchased the independent record label Little David, which had released all of his albums since 1971, and renamed it Eardrum Records. In 1991 alone, he appeared in two feature films –“Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey” and “The Prince of Tides,” as star/director Barbara Streisand’s gay neighbor – and surprised many longtime fans (and parents) by replacing Ringo Starr as both the narrator of the PBS broadcast of “Thomas the Tank Engine” (ITV, 1984- ) and as Mr. Conductor, the six-inch-tall host and star of “Shining Time Station” (PBS, 1989-1993), an American spin-off of “Thomas.” Carlin would remain with the series until 1993, and earn two Emmy nominations from the kid-friendly series. Again, Carlin’s hectic schedule and lifestyle caught up with him during this period, and he suffered the worst of his three heart attacks while driving to Las Vegas in 1991.

Again Carlin bounced back with more new material, beginning in 1992 with “Jammin’ in New York,” his eighth HBO special and the first to be broadcast live on the network. The special won him a CableACE award, and the resulting comedy album landed him his first Grammy Award. Two years later, Carlin attempted a sitcom on the Fox network, but “The George Carlin Show” (1993-1995), which featured the comic as a garrulous New York cab driver, ended after its second season – proving yet again that Carlin was best left unscripted.

Carlin gave one of his best performances as a grizzled Indian tracker and companion to Sonia Braga in “Streets of Laredo,” a 1995 follow-up miniseries to the popular “Lonesome Dove” (1993). He taped his ninth and tenth HBO specials in rapid succession during the following years: 1996’s “Back in Town” was also broadcast live on the network, and 1997’s “George Carlin: 40 Years of Comedy” featured a career retrospective of his television stand-up appearances, as well as a tribute and interview by Jon Stewart. The special won two CableACE awards and was nominated for an additional two Emmys; however, the celebration was dimmed significantly by the death of Carlin’s wife that same year on the day before his 60th birthday.

Carlin bounced back from the tragedy with the release of Brain Droppings, a 1997 collection of his musings on life, society, politics and the human condition. The book spent 18 weeks on The New York Times best seller list, and the soft-cover edition (1998) beat that record by an additional two weeks. Its popularity spurred Carlin to pen two more books – Napalm and Silly Putty (2001) and When Will Jesus Bring the Pork Chops? (2004). The former was another best seller and earned Carlin a Grammy for the audio book version, while the latter – which compiled routines from throughout his career – received press for its cover, which placed Carlin next to Jesus in Da Vinci’s “The Last Supper,” keeping it off the shelves at Wal-Mart. A collection of all three books, entitled An Orgy of George, which was supplemented with new material, was released in 2006.

In 1999, the comic legend joined forces with independent filmmaker and satirist Kevin Smith to explore a subject the atheist Carlin could truly get behind – the questioning of religion faith – in the feature “Dogma,” in which Carlin played a Catholic cardinal who implements a more “user-friendly” version of Jesus in churches. He also taped several commercials for MCI and relocated from Los Angeles – his home for the past 23 years – to Las Vegas, where he was appearing regularly, ending a 10-year engagement at Bally’s in 2000 and launching a new contract at the MGM Grand the following year. Carlin also taped his eleventh HBO special, “You Are All Diseased,” which featured some of his strongest and darkest material to date – “There Is No God” is among the bits – and earned him two Emmy nods and a Grammy nomination for the CD version. That same year, Carlin’s early career received a retrospective with The Little David Years (1971-1977), a seven-disc set which compiled his first six solo CDs and included unreleased material, as well as six early recordings made by Carlin as a boy at a penny arcade on Coney Island.

In 2001, the 64-year-old Carlin received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 15th Annual American Comedy Awards. He also kicked off a 15-city tour to promote Napalm and Silly Putty, which saw him return to many of the major primetime talk shows, and taped his twelfth HBO special, “Complaints and Grievances” – which was originally titled “I Like It A Lot When People Die,” but was changed after the September 11th attacks. The following year, he was given the Free Speech Award at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival, and re-teamed with Smith for “Jersey Girl” (2004), which gave him his biggest and most dramatic role to date as Ben Affleck’s father. Sadly, the flack over Affleck’s failed relationship with Jennifer Lopez overshadowed the picture’s brief stint at the box office, preventing many from seeing Carlin in fine dramatic form.

In 2004, Carlin made news twice: first for placing second on Comedy Central’s list of the “Top 100 Comics of All Time;” second, for entering a treatment facility to cure his dependency on alcohol and painkillers. He emerged in 2005 and returned to performing, premiering his thirteenth HBO special, “Life is Worth Losing” (2005), which saw Carlin focusing on some of the darkest subject matter of his career – suicide, natural disasters, autoerotic asphyxiation. The CD earned him his seventh Grammy nomination. That same year, Carlin served as the eminence grise of “The Aristocrats” (2005), Penn Jillette and Paul Provenza’s hilarious documentary about a long-running and particularly vulgar joke favored by stand-ups. In 2006, Carlin launched a national tour to hone material for his latest HBO special, “It’s Bad for Ya” (2008). He announced during a date that year that he had suffered heart failure sometime in late 2005 or early 2006. Despite this latest health setback, Carlin was busy with performing and acting gigs, which included lending his voice to characters in the animated features “Cars” (2006) and “Happily N’ever After” (2007).

Born On May 12, 1937 in Bronx, New York
Job Titles: comedian, author, producer, TV host, disc jockey, actor, writer
Education: dropped out of school in 1953

Significant Others
Sally Wade-Carlin has referred to her as “the sweetheart of my life, present and future”
Brenda Carlin- married from June 3, 1961 until her death on May 11, 1997 from liver cancer

SOURCE: http://tv.yahoo.com/george-carlin/contributor/30804/bio

Posted in News. 5 Comments »

Think Before You Poke!

Manners still matter when you’re poking on Facebook
By Paul MajendieFri Jun 13, 11:39 AM ET

Should you reject a friend on MySpace? How do you ward off an old lover on Facebook? Have no fear. Britain’s etiquette bible has come to the rescue for social networkers who are at a loss about how to behave with online decorum. Debrett’s have helped to compile a new set of “golden rules” for devotees of sites like Facebook and Bebo.

The rules were put together after research by the telecoms company Orange showed that almost two thirds of social networkers are frustrated and confused by online etiquette. It discovered that more than a quarter were uncertain about how to respond to unwelcome “pokes” or messages. Eighteen percent confessed to being confused on “how to respond to my ex when in a relationship with someone else.”

Debrett’s etiquette adviser Jo Bryant tried to guide the confused through what can be a social minefield. Acknowledging that social networking has made new demands on traditional etiquette, she said “My advice is to play it safe and always employ your usual good manners when online, treating others with kindness and respect.” And you should never throw caution to the wind.

Mark Watt-Jones, head of development and innovation at Orange, said “Whether you are checking your Facebook profile or posting photos of friends on MySpace at work, these guidelines will ensure you never lose old friends or make unwanted new ones.”

The golden rules compiled by Debrett’s with Orange are:
1. You don’t have to make friends with people you don’t know. Think before you poke.
2. Wait 24 hours before accepting or removing someone as a friend. The delay will help you gather your thoughts.
3. Birthdays, engagements and weddings are not “virtual” events. Always send cards or phone friends when there is an important event.
4. Think before posting a friend’s photo what you would feel like if it was you.
5. Think carefully about your profile picture. Would you want it to be appearing in your local newspaper?

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

Posted in Blogs, News. 2 Comments »

Eat Your Veggies…but not the Tomatoes!

http://www.fda.gov/oc/opacom/hottopics/tomatoes.html

June 10, 2008 11:00 PM: The Food and Drug Administration has expanded its warning to consumers nationwide that a salmonellosis outbreak has been linked to consumption of certain raw, red tomatoes.

At this time, FDA is advising consumers to limit their consumption of tomatoes to the following types of tomatoes. The following types of tomatoes listed below are NOT likely to be the source of this outbreak.

* cherry tomatoes
* grape tomatoes
* tomatoes sold with the vine still attached
* tomatoes grown at home

FDA recommends consuming raw red plum, raw red Roma, or raw round red tomatoes grown and harvested only from the following areas that HAVE NOT BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH THE OUTBREAK:

Alabama
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Delaware
Florida (counties of: Jackson, Gadsden, Leon, Jefferson, Madison, Suwannee, Hamilton, Hillsborough, Polk, Manatee, Hardee, DeSoto, Sarasota, Highlands, Pasco, Sumter, Citrus, Hernando, Charlotte)*
Georgia
Hawaii
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Minnesota
Mississippi
New Jersey
New York
Nebraska
North Carolina
Ohio
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Belgium
Canada
Dominican Republic
Guatemala
Israel
Netherlands
Puerto Rico

* Shipments of tomatoes harvested in these counties are acceptable with a certificate issued by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

Consumers who are unsure of where the tomatoes are from that they have in their home are encouraged to contact the store or place of purchase for that information.

Consumers should also be aware that raw tomatoes are often used in the preparation of fresh salsa, guacamole, and pico de gallo, are part of fillings for tortillas, and are used in other dishes.

Restaurants, grocery stores, and food service operators have been advised by the FDA not to offer for sale or service raw red plum, Roma, or red tomatoes and products made from these types of tomatoes unless they are from one of the areas listed above.

Since mid April, there have been 167 reported cases of salmonellosis nationwide caused by Salmonella Saintpaul, an uncommon form of Salmonella. At least 23 hospitalizations have been reported.

Food and Drug Administration: www.fda.gov

What is a Catahoula?

The Catahoula Cur or Louisiana Catahoula Leopard Dog, is named after Catahoula Parish in the state of Louisiana in the United States. Of remaining dog breeds, the Catahoula is believed to have occupied North America the longest, aside from the dogs descended from Native American-created breeds.

Appearance

As a working dog, Catahoulas have been bred more for temperament and ability than for appearance. As a result, the physical characteristics of the Catahoula are somewhat varied.

Coat
Catahoulas have a single, short, dense coat in a variety of colors. According to Don Abney, an authority on the breed, the term “Leopard” refers to merles which may be blue, gray, black, white, liver, red, and patched. Patched dogs are predominantly white with any color patches. Solid colors are black, red, chocolate, yellow, and brindle.

* Blue – This refers to the mostly grey to mostly black merle color pattern and sometimes the terms “grey leopard” or “black leopard” are used.
* Red - This refers to the red merle color pattern with varying shades of light reddish-brown with darker red or brown patches. These dogs are sometimes called “brown leopard” or “chocolate leopard”.
* White – This refers to a primarily white coat with some areas of leopard color. White Catahoulas carry two copies of the merle gene creating a double merle. A double merle dog is usually born deaf or blind, or both. Some double merle puppies are born without eyes, or with microphthalmia (shrunken eyes).
* Solid – This refers to black, red, chocolate, yellow, and brindle. Trim colors may be black, white, tan, red, or buff.
* Patchwork - This refers to Catahoulas with patches of several different shades in their coats which are white or very light and appear as large patches giving a more blotchy look than a typical Catahoula. A pattern can be similar to the harlequin pattern seen in Great Danes.[1]

Eyes
Typical of the breed are “cracked glass” or “marbled glass” eyes (heterochromia) and occurs when both colored and glass portions are present in the same eye. Cracked or marbled eyes are blue or blue-white in color. Catahoulas with two cracked or marble glass eyes are often referred to as having double glass eyes. In some cases a glass eye will have darker colored sections in it and vice versa. Cracked eyes may be half of one color and half of another. They may just have a streak or spot of another color. Gray eyes are usually cracked eyes, made of blue and green, giving them their greyish appearance. The eyes may be of the same color or each of a different color. Eye color can also be brown, green, gray, or amber. No particular eye color is typical of Catahoulas.

Feet
Though most dogs have webbing between the toes, Catahoula feet are webbed very similar to that of a duck with more prominent webbing which extends almost to the ends of the toes. This foot gives the Catahoula the ability to work marshy areas and gives them great swimming ability.

Temperament
Catahoulas are highly intelligent, energetic, have a high pain tolerance and are very quick, yet they are also very loving and gentle with children they know or have adopted, and their family (pack). One gains a much better insight into their social structure by first understanding the social structure of the wolves. They are inquisitive and have a strong independent streak. The Catahoula temperament is not well suited for everyone; these dogs are very protective of their territory and family, especially the males, but are kind and gentle toward other dogs when on neutral ground. These traits, combined with their independent nature, their high energy levels, and physical strength, can make a Catahoula “too much dog” for inexperienced or meek owners, and can make having such a dog a problem in apartments and small spaces without a lot of exercise. Ideally, a Catahoula should have obedience training, and an outlet for its energy. The ideal place for this breed would be in a rural area where they can have plenty of space to expend their energy. A Catahoula must have a job to do or it may expend its energy in a destructive manner such as digging incredibly large holes, uprooting landscaping, chewing up the garden hose, redecorating the house etc. They are extremely versatile and have been used in search and rescue, hunting, herding and agility.

Hunting
The Catahoula is a common working dog of the region and is seen on farms and ranches across North America. These dogs are outstanding tracking and hunting dogs, commonly used for hunting feral pigs, squirrel, deer, raccoon, mountain lion and black bear. They often track silently and only begin to make their distinctive baying bark, eye to eye with the prey, once it is stopped. For large game it is not uncommon for a pack of three dogs to work together. Uncle Earl’s Hog Dogs Trials, held in Winnfield, Winn Parish, Louisiana pits Catahoulas against hogs to see how fast a dog can corner a hog without actual contact.

Catahoulas have found their way to the Northern Territory of Australia where they have been found to be a superior hunting dog for pigs by breeders.[2] Apparently, they have been introduced in New Zealand as well, but the number of Catahoulas there is unclear.

Herding
They are used for herding cattle, sheep, and pigs by a method of antagonizing and intimidation of herd animals as opposed to the method of all day boundary patrol and restricting the animals being herded from entering or leaving the designated area.[3]

The breed is recognized by the United Kennel Club under the “herding dog” breed group.[4]

Health problems
As a breed, Catahoulas are relatively free of a lot of diseases. Deafness is one of the major genetic flaws in Catahoulas. A Catahoula that is mostly white, or has a white face with glass eyes, has an 80% chance of being deaf in one or both ears. Hearing in one ear is also referred to as “directional deafness.” Breeders are not readily willing to allow deaf Catahoulas to leave their premises and will generally euthanize the deaf pups. Catahoulas are also prone to hip dysplasia. Catahoulas can have eye problems (tunnel vision, eye won’t open all the way, pupil is abnormal, etc.). Some older dogs are known to have been diagnosed with cancer.

History
One theory as to the origins of the breed states that the Catahoula is thought to have descended from “war dogs” (Mastiffs and Greyhounds) brought to Louisiana by Hernando de Soto in the 16th century. Dogs left behind by the explorer’s party were interbred by the local natives with their domestic dogs.

The idea that Native Americans bred their dogs with or from red wolves is not supported by recent DNA work. Several recent studies,[5] have looked at the remains of prehistoric dogs from American archaeological sites and each has indicated that the genetics of prehistoric American dogs are similar to European and Asian domestic dogs rather than wild New World canids. In fact, these studies indicate that Native Americans brought several lines (breeds) of already domesticated dogs with them on their journeys from Asia to North America[6].

There is a plethora of published sources detailing the domestic dogs found in prehistoric archaeological sites[7]. Clearly, the red wolf was not the only canid located in the Mississippi River Valley before the arrival of Europeans. There were also foxes and grey wolves as well as various domesticated Native American breeds[8],[9],[10],[11],[12].

In the 1800s, French settlers arrived in Louisiana with their Beauceron. They told of strange looking dogs with haunting glass eyes that were used by the Indians to hunt game in the swamp.[13] It is thought the Beauceron and Red Wolf/war dog were interbred to produce the Catahoula. The word ‘Catahoula’ is actually a combination of two Choctaw words ‘okhata’, meaning lake, and ‘hullo’, meaning beloved… or a French transformation of the Choctaw Indian word for their own nation, ‘Couthaougoula’ pronounced ‘Coot-ha-oo-goo-la’.(Don Abney)

Jim Bowie and brother Rezin Bowie, who spent much of their youth in Catahoula Parish are reported to have owned a pair of Catahoulas. It was said that they would sleep with a Catahoula at their feet.[14][15] During the early 1900s, Teddy Roosevelt used the Catahoula when hunting.[16] Louisiana Governor Earl K. Long had an interest in the breed and collected them.[17]

In 1979, Governor Edwin Edwards signed a bill making the Catahoula the official state dog of Louisiana in recognition of their importance in the history of the region.

Catahoula lines: There are three versions of the Catahoula Cur:
* The Wright line was the largest at 90 to 110 pounds (40 to 50 kg) and were developed by Mr. Preston Wright. This line represented dogs originally produced from Hernando de Soto’s dogs.
* The Fairbanks line was the next in size at 65 to 75 pounds (30 to 35 kg) and were developed by Mr. Lovie Fairbanks. They were brindle to yellow in color.
* The McMillin line was the smallest in size at 50 to 60 pounds (about 25 kg) and were developed by Mr. T. A. McMillin of Sandy Lake, Louisiana. These were Blue Leopard dogs with glass eyes.

These three lines were crossed back and forth and created the variations of Catahoulas seen today

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catahoula_Leopard_Dog

Other Places to Visit:
American Catahoula Association: http://www.catahoulas.org/
Catahoula Rescue: http://www.catahoularescue.com/

Anhydrous Ammonia and Propane Cylinders

I got the following information today in an email. According to Snopes.com…it has been confirmed that propane tanks are used to transport anhydrous ammonia, a substance used in the manufacture of meth, and they are dangerous to use because they have been structurally weakened. HOWEVER, Snopes.com has not been able to confirm is such tanks are being returned to stores and resold to the public.

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The link below has important information concerning exchanging propane tanks. If you have a propane gas grill or some other use for the small propane tanks, please click on the link below. The Meth Lab operators are now putting us at risk in another way these days.

The Meth Lab operators are now utilizing the propane tanks to store anhydrous ammonia.
The brass valve in a propane cylinder will be damaged if it comes in contact with anhydrous ammonia. This deterioration will lead to cracking of the valve body or its components and can ultimately result in a violent, unexpected expulsion of the valve from the cylinder, causing personal injury or death.

http://www.npga.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=529

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Caution!

The brass valve in a propane cylinder will be damaged if it comes in contact with anhydrous ammonia. This deterioration will lead to cracking of the valve body or its components and can ultimately result in a violent, unexpected expulsion of the valve from the cylinder, causing personal injury or death.

Background and Recommended Action

It has come to the attention of the National Propane Gas Association that propane cylinders are being used in the manufacturing of Methamphetamines. This drug is commonly referred to as ‘crank’. Manufacturers of this illegal substance are using propane cylinders for the storage and the use of anhydrous ammonia. These cylinders have been found in many states at cylinder exchange and refilling locations as well as in hotel rooms and mobile laboratories, where the manufacturing of this illegal substance takes place.

As observed in the illustrations, a blue-green stain on any brass portion of a service valve is evidence that it may have been in contact with anhydrous ammonia*. The pungent odor of ammonia on or near the cylinder is also an indication. If you suspect that a propane cylinder contains or has contained anhydrous ammonia, exercise extreme caution and restrict access to the area.

It can be dangerous to move the cylinder due to the unknown integrity of the cylinder’s service valve. If you determine that it must be moved, keep in mind that hazards due to valve expulsion can be reduced by pointing the end of the container in which the valve is placed away from yourself and others and towards the most safe direction.

Immediately contact your Fire Department, Hazardous Materials Emergency Response Unit or the nearest office of the United States Department of Justice’s Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) for information on properly disposing of the cylinder. If these respondents are not sure what to do, for assistance call 1-800-728-2482, which is the contact number for PERS, an independent hazardous materials information resource.

*Note: Sherwood valves contain a green coated valve stem. Additionally, a green thread sealing compound is used on some valves. These valves should not be confused with those that have been exposed to anhydrous ammonia.