“Respect the masterpiece. It is true reverence to Man. There is no quality so great, none so much needed now.”
– Frank Lloyd Wright
Props 101
January 25th, 2008 — Art, Quotes
A deep and involved birthday conversation with Patrón Silver
January 25th, 2008 — Flashbacks, Friends

Photo by Royman, the big brother I never had. Gracias, amigo!
Appositives
January 25th, 2008 — FYI
From ProofreadNOW:
While many people may not know what an appositive is, clients use them often in the documents we see on our server. This week’s in-depth tip, last seen here in 2004, is on the appositive and how to use it. We use as our guide the venerable Chicago Manual of Style.
A word, abbreviation, phrase, or clause that is in apposition to a noun is set off by commas if it is nonrestrictive - that is, omittable, containing supplementary rather than essential information. If it is restrictive - essential to the noun it belongs to - no commas should appear.
- The yoga instructor, Stella, posed for photos.
- Mortimer Schnerd, chair of the termite eradication committee, spoke first.
- Howdy Doody, Mortimer’s brother, then delivered a rather wooden speech to the crowd.
- Tulabell’s husband, Rockford, had been a student of Big Jim McShane’s. (In formal prose, “Tulabell’s husband Rockford had …” is acceptable.)
- My older brother, Snagglefoot, taught me to waterski.
but
- My sister Wahini surfed the North Shore last winter. (I have two sisters.)
- Margrave’s movie Ski Florida If You Can! is in theatres now. (Margrave made several movies.)
Going Deeper
A problem arises when a proper name includes a comma before the final element, as in “the [Slobovian] Constitution Act, 1798″ or “California State University, Bumbleridge.” Because such a comma is part of the name and not part of the surrounding sentence, a second comma is not, strictly speaking, required when the name appears in the middle of a clause. But its absence may be sufficiently disturbing to most readers to suggest recasting the sentence (as in the first example below), slipping in a mildly illegal comma (as in the second), or adding a nonrestrictive clause or phrase after the proper name (as in the third).
- the 1798 Constitution Act was hailed …
- California State University, Bumbleridge, has a waterski team …
- California State University, Bumbleridge, often called CSUB, has a waterski team …
Note to Self: Pluto ain’t even a planet, dude.
January 25th, 2008 — FYI, Flashbacks, Trivia
I’ve honestly forgotten much of this valuable information. But seriously, soak it in. A good refresher. From 1979:





