Author: Steve

  • Billikens.com Update

    Well, every few years I do a major update to Billikens.com, and this weekend I did probably the biggest ever since moving to the Billikens.com domain in 1997.

    My site used to be a bunch of linked static web pages. Pretty much if there is a new technology for web design, Billikens.com is always about two years behind it. This time round, I am abusing the hell out of RSS feeds to make Billikens.com the place to get Billikens news. I am pulling from a couple blogs, Yahoo’s News feed, SLU’s Press Releases, and more. It is a little ridiculous. I was able to accumulate over 100 SLU news stories from the month of June. Now, there is little need to go anywhere else to get Billikens news.

    The design itself I am not thrilled with, but it is good to get a fresh face every once and a while. Also it forced me to start using CSS and PHP instead of using about 20 SSI includes throughout the site creating a rag tag CMS. Now I am using Drupal, one of the most powerful content management systems out there. However, the sucker is not easy. I spent 13 hours Saturday trying to figure out how Drupal messed up the cookies on my forum. I think it was a combination of a few things. But somehow a Drupal .htaccess file got above the Billikens.com root directory. I did not spot that sucker until Sunday morning. Boy was yesterday frustrating…but it is how it goes. The forum seems to be working now, but it will get its real test tomorrow when people try to login at work. There is also editing BillikenBlog and getting new forum software on the horizon. But the real heavy lift is done…I hope.

    Tonight talking to Sue I put thoughts together nicely. Tech is my hobby. I would hate having it be my 9 – 5 full time job. However running Billikens.com gives me an outlet for it. I am forced to keep learning (no matter how many years behind) because to keep the baby alive, I gotta put work into it.

  • Gingrich

    Of the candidates in the race, Newt is probably one of the smartest politicians. He hasn’t hopped in the race, but by not doing so, he gets more media coverage. Maybe I am underestimating his name recognition from the 90s, but on both sides there seem to be the big three. Then Gore as the unknown Democrat, and Gingrich as the unknown Republican (admittedly there is a little competition from Thompson for that spot, but not on the national scene yet).

    Just my random thought as I have one of my mornings where I wake up early after drinking, so take that for what it is worth.

  • Today

    Today

  • I got a raise during a job restructuring/evaluation
  • SLU hired the best coach they probably ever could
  • The RFP for my 2008 Cycle Project went out…aka my new baby
  • Lets just hope all of these pan out.

  • David Rogers

    I should really be in bed, but tonight was one of those nights where something caught my attention. The internet then proceeded to suck me in while I searched on a topic.

    Tomorrow, I am planning to go to the Hill to see a Kerry v. Gingrich discussion. I am not going for the discussion as much the participants, but this is not my reason for staying up. Because I was going to be on the Hill, I decided to ask my uncle David if he would like to have lunch. Then tonight, I got on a little spree of Googling him.

    David is a veteran Hill reporter. I admittedly have read little of his work because I don’t peruse the Wall Street Journal much, but if I see a link to an article with his name, I always read it. David is a classic “Rogers.” Fairly reserved, very bright, and a hard worker. I rarely discuss politics with him because honestly I know far too little to have an intelligent conversation. I don’t think he really realizes this, but :shrug:.

    It is just interesting to do some Googling on him. For example, just this year I have found the following two articles.
    Source
    Majority Leader Boehner apparently made some digs at Hill Reporters in his speech at the Congressional Correspondent’s Dinner.

    Boehner took another dagger yesterday when he ran into The Wall Street Journal’s David Rogers in the Speaker’s lobby just off the House floor.

    Boehner, who ridiculed Rogers’s wardrobe in his speech Tuesday, told Rogers, “You don’t look any better a day later.”

    Rogers shot back, “You’re not any funnier.”

    A DC Blog seems to be a little obsessive over David’s Wardrobe

    Thank Heavens that FishbowlDC is recognizing just how totally hot local reporters really are, because The Hill Newspaper is out with its annual 50 Most Beautiful People list today and only two reporters made it on the list (sorry, David Rogers): Fox News reporter Megyn Kendall and Voice of America’s Peggy Chang.

    and hair.

    It is not all laughs, hair, and clothes for David. In February, he called a Senator for not doing his homework
    Source

    Reporter dresses down DeMint on knowledge of resolution

    In a move that raised eyebrows last week, David Rogers, a political reporter for The Wall Street Journal, publicly questioned Sen. Jim DeMint’s (R-S.C.) knowledge of a bipartisan Iraq war resolution introduced by some of his colleagues.

    The resolution, introduced by ranking Armed Services Committee member Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), and cosponsored by Sens. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Carl Levin (D-Mich.), disagrees with President Bush’s troop surge but supports vigorous operations against al Qaeda in Anbar province.

    In a press briefing of GOP senators who disagreed with the resolution — they included DeMint, John Cornyn (R-Texas) and David Vitter (R-La.) — Rogers pointedly asked DeMint, “Did you read the resolution?”

    DeMint, who looked embarrassed, replied that he read the summary of the resolution. Other reporters began to snicker. But Rogers didn’t let up. In a classroom moment, he lectured DeMint on the contents of the resolution.

    And as it happens, there is no summary of the three-page resolution. What Rogers may not know is that DeMint was referring to an inner-office summary of all the competing resolutions that his aides had prepared for him.

    DeMint’s aides expressed to bystanders that they considered Rogers’s questioning a cheap shot but would not say anything on the record. “We decline to comment,” said DeMint’s spokesman, Wesley Denton.

    A Senate Republican aide who attended the press conference remarked, “It’s a reporter’s job to ask tough questions, but continuously interrupting a senator’s response is rude and inappropriate regardless of how long you’ve been covering Capitol Hill. His behavior definitely raised a lot of eyebrows among those who were there that morning.”

    Rogers, however, had little to say about his nervy behavior: “Mr. DeMint has not complained to me about my question,” the longtime Capitol Hill reporter said.

    David really should write a book when he retires. He would likely want to write on something regarding Vietnam (he is a Veteran and definitely appreciates Veteran legislators, i.e. McCain). I think the stories he could tell about Congress would be fascinating. There are few people with his knowledge about the inside workings of Congress. He may not want to because he is someone who doesn’t like the attention or and definitely doesn’t like the inside beltway baseball. Unfortunately, he doesn’t seem like the type to do this.

    Before I go to bed, I have one good David story. When I was in High School, I came to DC for a Conference. They let us loose on the Hill for a few hours. I had prearranged to meet up with David. It was the summer after 9/11, so security was tighter. Instead of having me wait in line with all other visitors and staffers, David took me to a side door of the capital and got a security guard to let us in. He then took me up to where his desk was in a press room, slapped a press intern sticker on me, and off we went. He took me to right outside the House Chamber, the Senate Appropriations room, and he asked who I wanted to see. One of my choices was Gephardt, the minority leader at the time. David then took me to his office and asked if he was available. The staffer there checked, and she said it would be just a minute. David then whipped out of his pocket a scrap of cloth that he called a tie, did a Windsor knot, and just sort of chuckled that he had to look presentable. We then went in; Gephardt knew David, and then spoke to me for a bit about the Cardinals and SLU. It was an absolute thrill for me. (We later went to see Senator Bond, but David said that the Senator probably wouldn’t want to see him, and we parted then, which was slightly humourous).

    Over the past three plus years, I probably should have made more efforts to see David. He has never been unwelcoming to me, and I will probably regret not making more of an effort. Just hope he will be free for lunch tomorrow.

  • Direct Mail -> Internet

    Direct Mail of the 1970s, Internet of the 2000s?

  • Run…