Cross Canadian Ragweed at Stables
Click below to see the videos I shot at Stables on March 27, 2006.
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Number
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Leave Me Alone
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Lonely Girl
Cross Candian Ragweed – Again
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Constantly
Cross Candian Ragweed – Breakdown .
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Sister
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Fightin’ For
Cross Canadian Ragweed – After All
Cross Canadian Ragweed – “Keep off the Grass”
Cross Canadian Ragweed – This Time Around
Cross Canadian Ragweed – The Times They Are A-Changin’
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Boys From Oklahoma
Cross Canadian Ragweed – Alabama
RIP Paul Dana

Dreams dashed – IRL – Yahoo! Sports
Dreams dashed
By Bob Margolis, Yahoo! Sports
March 26, 2006
Bob Margolis
Yahoo! Sports Exclusive
I met Paul Dana for the first time in May 1998 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
We were introduced by a mutual friend who thought I’d be interested in meeting a guy who was trying to be a professional race car driver but had been schooled as a journalist.
Paul had a unique perspective on his goals. Despite having gone to college to be a writer, he wanted to race cars. He knew that he was trying to break into a profession that at the time was becoming more and more dominated by young drivers who brought money to the show – and money was something he didn’t have.
What he did have was the passion and desire to make it to the big leagues.
That often translated into Paul coming across as a bit pushy, but I loved his overabundant energy. He was always fun to be around. I’ve always liked people with the kind of passion and energy that Paul exhibited and we easily became friends.
He started having some success driving in the open wheel Barber Dodge Series later that year, and I always got emails from him on Monday mornings after every race. It was part self-promotion (which was a good thing) and part confession that he wished he had done better.
He did well in that series, winning six times in his first professional racing opportunity.
He spent the next several years trying to get a break and find someone who would give him a chance without him having to buy it.
I suppose after realizing that the only way to open doors was with dollars, he began to use one of his strongest assets, his personality, and forge relationships with potential corporate sponsors who would financially support his dream.
We lost touch for several years, but then met up again last May at Indianapolis. He was cautiously excited about his first Indy 500.
While happy to have the opportunity to drive in the biggest race in the world, Dana was concerned that his race car perhaps wasn’t the best on the track.
And after his first accident in practice for the 500, he was a bit gun shy.
He was right to be.
He had another wreck the following week, a more serious one that fractured vertebrae in his back and sidelined him from the 500, keeping him away from the thing that he loved the most.
He was able to come back to the track just a couple of weeks later on the weekend of the race, and despite the severity of his injuries he still had that optimism that was his trademark. He hated being sidelined, but he told me right then that he’d get back in a race car.
I last saw him in the fall of last year after his deal with Rahal-Letterman was announced.
It was like he had won the lottery. I’d never seen him so excited. His eyes were full of joy and we talked about how persistence and drive pays off in the end.
He was going to be teammates with Indy 500 winner Buddy Rice and the IRL’s biggest personality, Danica Patrick.
I have to admit that at the time, I felt a bit of envy. It made me think about all the goals I had never realized and here was Paul living one of his.
We hugged and I wished him luck and he tried to make me promise that I would write good things about him.
With Paul Dana’s death Sunday following a crash at Homestead-Miami Speedway, I’ve now had the misfortune of watching three young drivers that I considered friends have their lives cut short while living their dream.
Greg Moore, Tony Renna and now Paul Dana.
A close friend who also is involved with auto racing once told me that if I was going to be a motorsports journalist, I shouldn’t get too close to the drivers.
“They’re the ones who die here,” he said.
I never did listen to him. Sometimes you can’t help it.
Unser Jr. confirms he will race in 500
Very cool.
Unser Jr. confirms he will race in 500 | IndyStar.com
Al Unser Jr. said Monday he is returning to drive in this year’s Indianapolis 500 at least in part to pester Michael Andretti, his lifelong friend and rival.
Andretti is returning to the 500 after a three-year absence.
Unser last competed at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2004.
“Somebody’s got to keep Michael honest,” Unser said, confirming his ride with Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. He will partner with Buddy Lazier on the Indianapolis-based team.
Unser and Andretti, both second-generation Indy-car drivers, joined the sport within a year of each another in the early 1980s. In CART, they combined to win 81 races and three championships. Unser also won two 500s.
Unser will be 44 and Andretti 43 when this year’s race is held May 28.
Unser said the lure of competing in his favorite race was too much to ignore. He sat out last year but found it difficult to watch on television at his home in Henderson, Nev.
“It reminded me of the split (with CART and the Indy Racing League),” he said. “They weren’t good feelings, let’s put it that way.”
Unser said he decided to pursue a ride late last year, and he went with his son, Al, to Tampa, Fla., to train during the winter.
“I also just miss the fraternity of (the paddock); I miss being around the racetrac
Don’t Believe Everything You Read
Urban Legends Reference Pages: Inboxer Rebellion (Thousand Dollar Bill)
No, you’re not going to be receiving money, merchandise, or free trips from Bill Gates (or anyone else), no matter how many people you forward this message to. Tracing all recipients of an e-mail message is not yet technically possible, and even if it were, Bill Gates certainly wouldn’t be testing software that performed such tracking by blindly sending messages out to the Internet with a promise of financial reward to the recipients.
First and foremost, e-mail tracking programs do not exist. That folks continue to fall for myriad varieties of these leg-pulls is in part attributable to netizens having caught so many references to these non-existent programs that the new hoax is able to continue building on an already partially-constructed platform of belief.
(As with every other technological issue, the statement “e-mail tracking programs do not exist” becomes less and less true every day. It is possible in some cases to determine who has read a particular mail message, but there is no method of doing so that will work with all the myriad of e-mail programs out there or keep track of who forwarded the message to whom.)
Once again, e-mail tracing programs do not exist. Any “get something free” come-on or “help a sick kid” appeal which specifies an invisible program is keeping track of who received an e-mail and who it was then sent to is a hoax. Any such note. No exceptions. Not even ones not yet listed on this page.
Likewise, missives which offer no explanation of how the e-mails are being tallied are also hoaxes. Unless you are e-mailing a copy to a central tabulating point every time something is forwarded on, nothing is being counted, traced, tracked, or any other verb that would result in you getting free cargo pants from the GAP or inspiring an unnamed millionaire to donate just a little bit more towards the care of an injured child.
Read on for more email irriations, scares, and myths…
http://www.tallrite.com/LightRelief/debunk.htm
Big companies don’t do business via chain letters and there are no computer programs that track how many times an e-mail is forwarded, let alone by whom. Bill Gates is not giving you $1000, and Disney is not giving you a free vacation. There is no baby food company issuing class action checks.
Proctor and Gamble is not part of a satanic cult or scheme, and its logo is not satanic.
MTV will not give you backstage passes if you forward something to the most people.
The Gap is not giving away free clothes. You can relax; there is no need to pass it on “just in case it’s true.”
There is no kidney theft ring in New Orleans. No one is waking up in a bathtub full of ice, even if a friend of a friend swears it happened to their cousin. If you are hell bent on believing the kidney theft stories, see : http://urbanlegends.tqn.com/library/weekly/aa062997.htm . And I quote: “The National Kidney Foundation has repeatedly issued requests for actual victims of organ thieves to come forward and tell their stories.” None have. That’s “none” as in “zero.” Not even your friend’s cousin.
Neiman Marcus doesn’t really sell a $200 cookie recipe. And even if they do, we all have it. And even if you don’t, you can get a copy at: http://www.bl.net/forwards/cookie.html . Then, if you make the recipe, decide the cookies are that awesome, feel free to pass the recipe on.
If the latest NASA rocket disaster(s) DID contain plutonium that went to particulate over the eastern seaboard, do you REALLY think this information would reach the public via an AOL chain letter?
There is no “Good Times” virus. In fact, you should never, ever, ever forward any e-mail containing any virus warning unless you first confirm that an actual site of an actual company that actually deals with viruses. Try: http://www.norton.com or http://www.mcafee.com . And even then, don’t forward it. We don’t care. And you cannot get a virus from a flashing IM or e-mail, you have to download it …. ya know, like, a FILE !
There is no gang initiation plot to murder any motorist who flashes headlights at another car driving at night without lights.
If you’re using Outlook, IE, or Netscape to write e-mail, turn off the “HTML encoding.” Those of us on Unix shells can’t read it, and don’t care enough to save the attachment and then view it with a web browser since you’re probably forwarding us a copy of the Neiman Marcus Cookie Recipe anyway.
If you still absolutely MUST forward that 10th-generation message from a friend, at least have the decency to trim the eight miles of headers showing everyone else who’s received it over the last 6 months. (Think Cut and Paste). It sure wouldn’t hurt to get rid of all the “>”s and spaces that begin each line either, together with the so-called “manual line breaks”. Besides, if it has gone around that many times we’ve probably already seen it. To get rid of all that surplus punctuation, simply copy the message into Word, then use Edit-Replace (or Control-H), and when you’ve finished copy it back into your e-mail. (You must REALLY think the message is worth forwarding to go through all that palaver !)
Craig Shergold (or Sherwood, or Sherman, etc.) in England is not dying of cancer or anything else at this time and would like everyone to stop sending him their business cards. He apparently is no longer a “little boy” either.
The “Make a Wish” foundation is a real organization doing fine work, but they have had to establish a special toll free hot line in response to the large number of Internet hoaxes using their good name and reputation. It is distracting them from the important work they do. Also, the American Cancer Society does not give 3 cents for each person you forward e-mail to. They ask for you to donate money, they don’t give it, as if they could know how many e-mails you sent out … sheesh.
If you are one of those insufferable idiots who forwards anything that “promises” something bad will happen if you “don’t,” – then something bad will happen to you if I ever meet you in a dark alley.
Women really are suffering in Afghanistan, but forwarding an e-mail won’t help their cause in the least. If you want to help, contact your local legislative representative, or get in touch with Amnesty International or the Red Cross.
As a general rule, e-mail “signatures” are easily faked and mean nothing to anyone with any power to do anything about whatever the competition is complaining about.
KFC really does use real Chickens with feathers and beaks and feet. No, they really do. Why did they change their name? In this health conscious world, what was KFC’s name ? Kentucky FRIED Chicken. FRIED is not healthy. So with the help of a focus group, they changed the name to KFC. It’s short, doesn’t offend dieters and it’s easy to remember. (Personally, I still think “Kentucky Fried Chicken” is easier.)
Another thing, just because someone said in a message, four generations back, that “we checked it out and it’s legit,” does not actually make it true.
There is no bill pending before Congress that will allow long distance companies to charge you for using the Internet.
Bottom Line … composing an e-mail or posting something on the Net is as easy as writing on the walls of a public rest room. Don’t automatically believe it until it’s proven false … ASSUME it’s false, unless there is proof that it’s true. Bookmark the following links to help discern truth or hoax: http://www.truthorfiction.com http://vil.nai.com/VIL/hoaxes.asp .
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