Butch, you are correct about the title. His latest book is
called, One Summer, America 1927, I think, and it's also a great
read. He goes off on some great tangents about baseball, some
high society murders, Charles Lindberg, the stock market etc.
Also one called in a Sunburned Country relates his travels
through Australia. Jim WA6EKS
----- Original Message -----
From: Butch Bussen <[log in to unmask]
To: [log in to unmask]
Date sent: Tue, 17 Feb 2015 15:43:14 -0800
Subject: Re: OT, a great book about growing up in Des Moines
I have read that book and it is good as much of his stuff is. I
have
read and reread his "a short history of almost everything" which
has a
lot of interesting stuff in it. Come to think of it, I think the
title
is "a short history of nearly everything"
73
Butch
WA0VJR
Node 3148
Wallace, ks.
On Tue, 17 Feb 2015, Jim Gammon
wrote:
Phil, have you ever read a book called The Life and Times of the
Thunderbolt Kid by Bill Bryson? If not, you should get it from
NLS. He grew up in Des Moines and wrote about his childhood
there. He has also written numerous other books all of which
are
great in my opinion. Jim WA6EKS
----- Original Message -----
From: Phil Scovell <[log in to unmask]
To: [log in to unmask]
Date sent: Tue, 17 Feb 2015 15:55:19 -0700
Subject: My Favorite Tall Tower
I grew up in Des Moines, Iowa where one of the radio and TV
stations had a
building downtown with a weather tower, so called, on top of the
building.
It was a 4-legged tower that tapered up from the 4 corners of
the
building
to something like heavy gaged rohn tower at the top where the
lights were
displayed. This weather tower was seen from all over and about
20 miles,
and more, in most directions. I recently typed in the old call
letters of
the TV station but couldn't find info on the tower today so I
typed in the
newer call letters and found it listed as a weather beacon. A
youtube short
video talked about damage to the tower during one winter of
harsh
cold
tempes and ice build up on the tower. When ice chunks broke off
when
melting, it broke 250 of the 4500 lights so they had to be
replaced. The
tower, I learned is 500 feet plus the 2 or 3 stories of the
building below.
No guy cables; it is free standing. Each of the 4 colors of
light has a
little rhyming jingle but I don't know if I can recall them all.
Let's see.
When it shines red, it means warmer weather is ahead. Green,
nothing new
foreseen. White means colder weather is in sight and I believe
blue refers
to rain. If anything is blinking, precipitation is in the
forecast. I
lived in far northeast Des Moines, almost where the highway I80
crosses
north of Des Moines, which wasn't there when I was born but
built
later in
the fifties. Anyhow, I went to a friend's house out in the
country, north
of the highway, and standing in the yard, I could see the tower
during the
daylight hours without any trouble and I would have been at
least
20 miles
north of the weather tower. I'd sure like a 3 element 40 up on
top of that
baby. I was please to see the tower was still up and being
maintained and
used by Ioeans to check the weather. Even during my tower
climbing days, I
wouldn't have touched that tower with a ten foot pole. I'm
guessing an
elevator is used internally but I believe I heard once, years
ago
from a
commercial tower guy I knew, that you have to stop at one point
and climb
the 110 foot top to manually change the bulbs that are a foot
apart but I'm
not certain of that.
Phil.
K0NX
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