Monthly Archive for September, 2006

Happy Birthday Kimberly

Well you are getting old! Just kidding. In many ways I would like to be 36 again. The most fun years with your kids are just beginning! Hope you get to do something fun for you special day. Have a great one. Check your email. Love you! Mother & Father

Three little stinkers in their skirts and boots

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Abigail begins school

This is a little late, but here is a picture of Abigails first day at school. We are so proud of our little cow-girl!

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Welcome!

Cook Martin Poulson would like to welcome our most recent hire, Rod Forrest Cook. He is very qualified and has a great personality. I figured I gave him 12 hours to submit a post and now have taken the liberty to make the announcement. We look forward to working and playing with such company.

Natalie is in San Diego right now with her friends; must be nice. She will have to make a post of all that happend there. Sounds like the fossils are working hard and have a lot to do. We love and miss you!

Abi - I love you Granma

Eliza - Teach good stuff on your missions. We love you!

Love, the REAL Cooks

Emma Loses Another Tooth

Well, the Tooth Fairy is one tooth richer today! Emma lost another baby-tooth bringing her one tooth closer to “teenager.” Boo Hoo Hoo!

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Hi Again!

Just a quick note. We have had fun handing out hygiene kits this week but it is very exhasting in the heat. The kids are so cute but they go to school in the worst of situations. The schools are all dingy, dirty and bare bones. They have either cement floors or dirt floors with bench type desks that are very old. Really just a bench and a table. They have no glass or screens on the windows just open. The roofs are tin so when it pours rain it is very noisy. They have very few books mostly just for the teachers and one delapidated chalk board per classroom. There are dogs and chickens outside and very few have make shift slides out of a boad or one ball. The toilets which DIC has built are outside but have flush toilets in them like in a campground. The water is at the well outside. The funny thing is that most of the kids seem happy to be there and they are so appreciative of the kits. They tell us saw-bie-dee and cobjie (thank you). Each day you feel good about what you have done. Any way tell the kids to love there beautiful school and be thankful for them. Love you all. Rod We got your email and I will send you one soon.

Situation in Thailand

I know that the news media is probably having a hayday with the Thailand situation. This is the scoop I get from a senior couple in Bangkok.

Nothing of any violent nature has happend in their area. The mission office told all missionaries to stay in their apartments today. Some of the missionaries in outlieing areas have permission to continue their work tomorrow but the ones in Bangkok are still restricted. They had a major trip planned to go South to an English convocation but that has been cancelled. The care-taker Prime Minister that is causing all the trouble was in NY at the UN when he was replaced by the military. If or when he returns they do not know what kind of actions he will take.

BUT, we have had no effect up here in Lao. We are a long ways from Bangkok and are in a different country. We do not anticipate any problem. So we are fine, business as usual. We spent the whole day today in the country visiting schools where DIC has drilled water wells. They decided it did no good to have clean water unless the kids understood some basic hygene. Therefore, DIC funded 5,700 hygene kits, the branch put them together and now we are delivering them to the kids. We placed 1,700 today. Will be out doing another 1,000. tomorrow. It is fun because we go into the classroom and give them directly to the students. They give us a little bow with the hands in the praying possition and say cobji.

Well, be kind and thoughtful of eachother. Communicate with each other often and get together as you can.

Love you all.

Coup in Thailand?

Just wondering if our beloved missionaries in Laos could possibly fill us in on the coup that took place in Thailand on Tuesday, and what, if any, impact it has on their work in Laos.

Flyboys (**)

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Like United States President Woodrow Wilson in 1914, Hollywood has shied away from World War I. In fact, you probably could count the number of World War I films on both hands, compared to the miles and miles of celluloid attached to World War II and the subjects of D-Day, Pearl Harbor and Iwo Jima. While “Saving Private Ryan” is probably the single greatest war movie ever made, I think the same is still possible with World War I. It just hasn’t been done yet.

World War I started around 1914 and pitted the Allied powers of Great Britain, Canada, France, Italy and Russia, against the Central powers of Austria-Hungry, Bulgaria, the German Empire and the Ottoman Empire. Missing from the Allied group was the United States, who finally entered the war on April 6, 1917, after German submarines attacked American merchant ships, and the British informed the United States about the Zimmerman Telegram, a proposal from Germany to Mexico to form an alliance against the United States.

However, even before April 1917, Americans were giving their young men to the war, specifically to the Lafayette Escadrille, a squadron of the French Air Service. This band of American fighter pilots was formed in 1916 and before the end of the war saw 265 Americans in its corps.        These American pilots had a reputation for being daring, reckless and their officer’s club had a notorious party atmosphere. According to historians, the squad had two lion cubs – “Whiskey” and “Soda” – as mascots. One of these lions, Whiskey, is shown in the film.

“Flyboys”, directed by Tony Bill (“My Bodyguard” and “Six Weeks”, both early 80s movies were the only feature films I could find under his credit), opens with introductions to the various young men volunteering for the Lafayette Escadrille. Some, like William Jensen (Philip Winchester), join because of family legacy and the desire to be a hero. Others like Briggs Lowry (Tyler Labine) and Eddie Beagle (David Ellison) leave to escape, one from his father, the other from the law. And finally, there is Blaine Rawlings (James Franco), a hot-headed, cocky cowboy from Texas, who joins because he has no family and, after the bank repossesses his ranch, no place to live.

Despite their willingness to fight for the French, they are perceived by French officers and veteran American pilots as cocky and juvenile, essentially not understanding the harm that will certainly come their way when they take to the skies. The officer in charge of teaching them how to fly is Captain Thenault (Jean Reno) and he is portrayed as grateful, encouraging and extremely forgiving of the American’s constant disobedience of orders, as well as their brash demeanor.

During the American’s training montage, we also come to meet Reed Cassidy (Martin Henderson), a veteran of the Lafayette Escadrille and the corps’ Flying Ace. He watches the new pilots’ backs, gives them advice, but takes an instant father-son role to Blaine. This means only one thing: That Cassidy is going to kick the bucket at the end of the movie and give our hero, Blaine, a reason to make it to the film’s final duel. This must be the case, because the chunk of romance Bill plops into a large portion of the film’s middle is snuffed out tersely at the end of the movie, so it’s definitely not the love of a woman that keeps our hero flying strong.

The problem with “Flyboys” is one of identity and purpose. The movie isn’t a romance, but it’s not an action film. It’s not a drama, but not quite a comedy. Bits and pieces of all those elements are thrown about, and at times, when cinematography, acting and dialogue mesh, the movie works. But mostly the film feels discombobulated, almost like it’s suffering from short term amnesia. It can’t decide whether to be firmly lighthearted, or gritty and realistic. I suspect that’s the PG-13, let’s get the teens to the theaters drumbeat stifling any attempts at a serious war movie.

In the end, “Flyboys,” while energetic and visually astounding in many respects, doesn’t quite hit the bar set by previous war films. And that’s “Flyboys” main problem: It just doesn’t know what road to travel. Part drama, part romance, part action and bits and pieces of comedy sprinkled throughout, the movie ends up an ordinary, enjoyable PG-13 war movie. Not grand enough to be considered amongst the canon of war film, but not lousy enough to be considered a bomb.

Awesome

It was AWESOME to talk to the missionaries today! Thanks for the call. It has been so fun hearing you guys and how much fun you are having. It makes it a lot easier knowing that you are having fun while doing nothing but services and growth. We love you very much.