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	<title>My Days in Texas &#187; work</title>
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		<title>2006 Wrapup (not a typo)</title>
		<link>https://www.batterman.org/susan/2007/12/21/2006-wrapup-not-a-typo/</link>
		<comments>https://www.batterman.org/susan/2007/12/21/2006-wrapup-not-a-typo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2007 18:59:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[sbatterman]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[cool]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cycling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dallas]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.batterman.org/susan/2007/12/21/2006-wrapup-not-a-typo/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8216;Tis the time of year for top 10 lists. Last year at this time I had started a list of 10 notable events that happened in my life in 2006, but in the jumble that was selling our house, I never finished it. I was just looking at the draft and thought it would be [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8216;Tis the time of year for top 10 lists. Last year at this time I had started a list of 10 notable events that happened in my life in 2006, but in the jumble that was selling our house, I never finished it. I was just looking at the draft and thought it would be worth finishing and posting. 2006 was a fun year, and I really didn&#8217;t write about it as it happened.</p>
<ul style="list-style-type: none; list-style-image: none; list-style-position: outside">
<li><strong>10. Skiing at Winter Park in Colorado</strong> It had been years since Ed and I had been skiing, so this partially work-funded trip was a real treat. It didn&#8217;t take long to get the legs back, and we really enjoyed this resort for the sheer size of it, and the fact that many of the slopes were groomed on one side only, leaving the other side to develop excellent mogul fields. This allowed us to ski together more (me on the mogul side, Ed on the smooth). A bonus event was when Ed put a pizza, still in box, in the oven of our condo and started a kitchen fire, then ran outside while I put the fire out.</li>
<li><strong>9. Getting my road bike</strong> Ed has been riding roadies for years, but I had turned more toward mountain biking. I finally got a good bike, my first since my heavy Schwinn bought in about 1979. We started riding regularly in the countryside near Houston, and had an especially nice ride on rented bikes in the Santa Ynez valley while visiting Steeles. We also did our first race ride, a 55-miler called the <a title="Tour de Donut" href="http://www.tourdedonut.com/">Tour de Donut</a>.</li>
<li><strong>8. Riding Segways</strong> My first time on a Segway made my <a title="Best of 2003" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/archives/20031231.htm">&#8220;Best of&#8221; list for 2003</a>, but that was really just a short ride in a mall store. During our summer 2006 trip to Santa Barbara, Ed and I took the <a title="Segway of Santa Barbara" href="http://www.zerve.com/SegwaySB/OldSB">Old Santa Barbara Segway tour</a>. I will just say here that riding Segways is really, really fun. We enjoyed it so much that the other day when Linda mentioned that this Segway dealership is <a title="sale listing" href="http://www.bizben.com/listings/114506.php">for sale</a>, Ed actually read through the details of the offer and was thinking about where he would work while I ran it, and where we would live.</li>
<li><strong>7. Ed&#8217;s transfer to Dallas</strong> While the actual move didn&#8217;t take place until 2007, the event was set into motion in 2006 and occupied much of our mental and physical energy for the second half of the year.</li>
<li><strong>6. Car chases</strong> At Caprock, one of our lunchtime haunts was a Tex-Mex dive which always seemed to be showing car chases on its big screen TV. I think it was Fox News; I don&#8217;t usually watch that channel, but they seem to have the car chase thing covered. One Friday afternoon back at the office, my friend John Robert IM&#8217;ed me from New York City that he was watching a car chase in Pearland (where our office was) on the screen in Times Square. I found a local news station covering the chase, and before long the entire office (plus John Robert in New York) was watching as a driver in a white pickup pulled stuntman moves past many familiar landmarks (including the aforementioned Tex-Mex dive) with dozens of helicopters and squad cars in tow. He drove through the golf course by the Vietnamese restaurant and headed to the intersection with the tollway that would take him past our building. We all crossed our fingers, but no, he passed through the intersection and headed toward downtown Houston. Somehow sensing his mistake, he drove through the massive median and U-turned back toward Pearland and &#8230; would he? would he? YES! he turned east on the tollway right toward Caprock. And the entire workforce ran to the front of the building to watch. Helicopters, motorcycles, cars, all chasing a lone Ford F150. After the show passed, we all went back to our desks and watched as spikes were thrown in the highway and the now tireless truck rode through several more towns, sometimes hopping curbs ON ITS RIMS, near-miss after near-miss, finally plopping into a bayou and sinking. The driver was rescued and miraculously no one was hurt in the whole 2-hour chase. Apparently the reason behind the whole thing was the guy had stopped taking his depression medication and held up a dry cleaner for a pittance. Now, you might think that was the end of the car chase entry for 2006, but no. <a title="COPS Houston" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/2006/12/20/cops-houston/">This car chase</a> ended on our block later in the year.</li>
<li><strong>5. Dynamo soccer</strong> Houston got a <a title="Houston Dynamo" href="http://www.houstondynamo.com">major league soccer team</a> in 2006, and it was wildly successful. Both the fan participation and the team&#8217;s performance were stellar. The games were the most fun professional sports games I&#8217;ve ever been to, due in part to the insane soccer fans with their drums, streamers, wigs, flags, brass instruments, cowbells and smoke bombs. The team made it to the MLS championship game in Dallas. Ed and I drove up to watch the Houston Dynamo beat the New England Revolution in overtime. And the 2007 update is that this year, the Dynamo beat the Revolution for the championship AGAIN, this time in Washington D.C. Attendance at the games in Houston remains strong and loud. Let&#8217;s Go Dynamo!</li>
<li><strong>4. Meeting Kyle Chandler</strong> I met Ed&#8217;s cousin Kyle for the first time when he drove to Houston from Austin, where he was filming a TV show, to join his brothers and cousins for a Buffalo Bills game. What a nice guy! He climbed a grapefruit tree in his brother&#8217;s backyard in his socks to make me juice for a cocktail.</li>
<li><strong>3. Getting a high-tech crown</strong> <a title="Modern Dentistry" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/2006/12/14/modern-dentistry/">I did write about this when it happened</a>, but here it is on my top 10 list; it was just that cool. On a sad note, my dentist of seven years who did the crown committed suicide a few months ago.</li>
<li><strong>2. Jury Duty</strong> Well this is an odd choice for a top 10 list (not that the crown isn&#8217;t), and at number 2 no less! But serving on this jury is still one of the most fascinating things I&#8217;ve done. The dynamics of deliberations (including watching one woman have a meltdown under the pressure to come to a verdict), the interaction between the jurors (two of whom discovered that they had lived in the same house in different decades) and the case itself were all interesting. Best of all was having the judge, prosecutor and defense attorney visit the jury following the trial to answer questions and discuss evidence and testimony which was not admitted for the trial itself. I hope to get the chance to do this again (but not for traffic court, that is boring).</li>
<li><strong>1. Two Gallants show at Walter&#8217;s on Washington</strong> Being a first-hand witness at the concert in Houston where an HPD officer stormed to the stage and knocked down the guitarist of a band while he was playing tops out my list. First of all, it was <a title="Rolling Stone" href="http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2006/10/20/when-a-texas-cop-attacks-two-gallants-reveal-the-bizarre-alarming-and-even-amusing-details/">national news</a> (well, national music news). I&#8217;ve talked to people here in Dallas who know all about it. Second, it definitely changed how I think about law enforcement. I still respect the police, but from the reading I&#8217;ve done since and the anecdotal evidence I&#8217;ve gathered from friends who are outside of my (somewhat privileged) demographic, I now realize how many problem officers there are. Third, it was a lesson in how the power of the internet. If not for the <a title="YouTube video" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JxKQb03A0bw">YouTube</a> videos and the forums and the online coverage, the charges against the band members would not have been dropped. Fourth, I was able to contribute to the effort to see justice done by giving a statement to HPD Internal Affairs and by giving a statement to the bands&#8217; defense lawyers. And finally fifth, because I was interviewed by the local alternative weekly, so I got to show my friends, <a title="Susan Betterman" href="http://houstonpress.com/2006-10-19/music/warfare-on-washington/">but they spelled my name wrong</a>, so future employers can&#8217;t Google it.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Go Texan Day</title>
		<link>https://www.batterman.org/susan/2007/02/23/go-texan-day/</link>
		<comments>https://www.batterman.org/susan/2007/02/23/go-texan-day/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Feb 2007 05:46:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[sbatterman]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[houston]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[work]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.batterman.org/susan/2007/02/23/go-texan-day/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today was Go Texan Day in Houston, which, if you aren&#8217;t from Houston, might need some &#8216;splainin&#8217;. This is a day when everyone wears cowboy garb to work. It&#8217;s a city holiday, and most workplaces plan parties, picnics, chili or BBQ cookoffs, etc. The occasion is the start of the rodeo, and the spectacle is [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today was <a target="_blank" title="Houston Rodeo and Livestock Show homepage" href="http://www.hlsr.com/">Go Texan Day</a> in Houston, which, if you aren&#8217;t from Houston, might need some &#8216;splainin&#8217;. This is a day when everyone wears cowboy garb to work. It&#8217;s a city holiday, and most workplaces plan parties, picnics, chili or BBQ cookoffs, etc. The occasion is the start of the rodeo, and the spectacle is the trailriders arriving in town via horse, wagon, and chuckwagon. My previous references below (the older blog references will force you to hunt.):</p>
<p><a target="_blank" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/archives/feb2000.html">My first drop-jaw observation of the trail ride</a> (this still boggles my mind every year &#8211; chuckwagons on the freeways!!!)</p>
<p><a target="_blank" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/archives/feb2002.htm">The first time I went to the rodeo</a></p>
<p><a target="_blank" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/archives/20030221.htm">Jeans cleaned $225</a> (I remember taking <a title="howdy!" target="_blank" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/images/022003/trailride.jpg">this picture</a>!)</p>
<p>Okay, here&#8217;s my favorite:<a target="_blank" title="Flat Stanley tour book" href="http://www.batterman.org/susan/flatstanley/"> Flat Stanley Does Go Texan Day</a>.</p>
<p>And finally, I&#8217;ll be posting <a title="Go Texan Day on Flickr" target="_blank" href="http://flickr.com/photos/sbatterman/tags/gotexan/">some pictures</a> from this year on Flickr.</p>
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		<title>Sushi and Sake Night</title>
		<link>https://www.batterman.org/susan/2006/11/30/sushi-and-sake-night/</link>
		<comments>https://www.batterman.org/susan/2006/11/30/sushi-and-sake-night/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Dec 2006 06:46:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[sbatterman]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Assuming that doing something twice makes it a tradition, tonight was our second traditional sushi and sake night with coworkers and former coworkers. The first was last December, and involved a different restaurant and slightly different people. This year we went to Uptown Sushi near the Galleria, which is very trendy right now. The atmosphere [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Assuming that doing something twice makes it a tradition, tonight was our second traditional sushi and sake night with coworkers and former coworkers. The first was last December, and involved a different restaurant and slightly different people. This year we went to <a title="Uptown Sushi" href="http://www.uptownparkhouston.com/fw/main/Uptown_Sushi-463.html">Uptown Sushi</a> near the Galleria, which is very trendy right now. The atmosphere and service were great, as was the people watching. The sushi was good but not as original as I would have thought. It was a fun evening with fun people though. I work with some characters.</p>
<p>In other news, Erica turned 20 today.</p>
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