Monday, March 16, 2009

Tuesday Challenge #9 - "Vertigo"

#9 required the subject to be at least 30 feet below the camera. This is my entry, which was taken at Askerswell, Dorset, on the way back from Teignmouth on Sunday. Sorry to JG, because it is very similar to hers and I fiddled with lens blur etc. but the tilt shift effect isn't very good, I'm afraid.

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Keeling Schedules

After I retired from local government early in 2004, a couple of very nice people gave me a part-time job as Website Manager for the Association of Electoral Administrators, an organisation of which I had been a member whilst I was working full-time. Yawning already, Omally? Tut, I thought you had an open mind. Oh no, that was last week!

All right, so I could keep mentally active by doing Brain Training on the Ninbongo DS but this is real life and involves real people and I interact with several of them every day and spend time with hundreds of them at Conference (including giving an after-dinner speech to over 400 of them one year concerning my vasectomy; I just tarted up this old blog and it seemed to go down fairly well). I promise I’ll come to the point quite soon.


I send out a newsletter every Friday to all 1,560 members and always include a final item under the heading “Weekly Ramblings”, intended to amuse and prove that there is humanity among the dry-as-dust trappings of electoral administration. I’ve actually pinched a good deal of material from this blog, adapting it as necessary, although I’ve used pretty much all I can and now have to write new stuff; something always seems to come up, though. Like yesterday.

Do you know what Keeling Schedules are? If you are familiar with the law, you probably will. Put simply, they comprise the text of a piece of legislation with bits in bold showing any wording inserted by a subsequent piece of legislation and drawing a line through what’s been taken out. With me so far?
I thought I might find out a bit more about Keeling Schedules so I could pass on some interesting information to our members, especially since one had recently been issued which was of significant interest, what with the European elections looming.

I reckoned they must have been named in honour of the chap who came up with the idea and so, very early on Friday morning (about 10, I think), I commenced using the power of the internet to assist my investigations. I got quite excited when I came across the name of Dr. David Keeling linked to Schedules, only to be disappointed to discover that he is merely the head of the Department of Geography and Geology at West Kentucky University, and the Schedules are simply his term timetable; why they are not called that as opposed to “semester schedules” (pron. skedules) is beyond me.
I glossed over the flight schedule for the Jet Charter and Air Charter Service to and from Cocos Keeling Island (no, neither do I) as being irrelevant, as was the list of TV Schedules for Liise Keeling, who is, apparently, a stunt woman who has performed in many films and TV series from 2001 to date, including the memorable “Monk”; unfortunately, imdb.com fails to tell us what role she played in the episode “Mr Monk Meets Dale the Whale” (2002). Her listings reveal that she was mostly a “stunt double”, “stunt performer” or “stunt driver” but I did wonder what particular qualities were necessary to bring to the set of the 2008 film The Rocker as a “stunt waitress”. Perhaps, as most American waitresses are, she was adept at juggling with eggs over easy, pastrami on rye, bagels, cookies, and interminable steaming jugs of black coffee, all probably whilst wearing roller skates.

I was becoming a little dispirited by now and the only vaguely interesting information I could come up with was the schedule of rowing events in the 2008 Olympics, involving the South African, Shaun Keeling, all you would ever need to know about scheduling a conference call between the Cocos Keeling Islands and Luxembourg (bearing in mind the time difference) and the service schedule of the funeral for Jimmy Keeling in Allegre, Kentucky, in July 2008.
Finally, I had some success. Wikipedia - of all things - tells us that Keeling was the MP for Twickenham between 1935 and 1954, the year of his death. I am unsure of the circumstances surrounding the development of his Schedule (pron. “shedule”) but I found one or two references, despite being riddled with mental fatigue by then. The well-known work Legislative Drafting by V. C. R. A. C. Crabbe explains (at p. 147) that the device is named after Mr E H Keeling (later Sir Edward Keeling) who, with Mr R P Croom‑Johnson (later Mr Justice Croom-Johnson) came up with the proposal.

A bloke called Bennion who subsequently rubbished Keeling’s system in Statute Law (at pp. 278-9) came up with something called a Jamaica Schedule, but I reckon he was just jealous and I dismissed that out of hand as well as a summary of Montesquieu’s Principles, Thring’s Rules and Ilbert’s Questions and Advice. In my book, Keeling is a hero and anyone who can come up with something that can be used to demonstrate the practical effect of the Loan Relationships and Derivative Contracts (Disregard and Bringing Into Account of Profits and Losses) Regulations 2004 and the effect of the Deregulation (Weights & Measures) Order on the Weights and Measures Act 1985 has to be worthy of commemoration.
That's what I think anyway.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

Tuesday Challenge #7 - "Out of the frame"

This is my entry to Stu's Tuesday Challenge #7 ("This week, the subject is absent from the frame. This could be for various reasons - location: your subject is present but off to one side of the frame; temporal: your subject was present but has now gone.") Hopefully, this bird-bath speaks for itself! It looks slightly less rubbish than the original colour version, by the way. I think I'm enjoying this and I'm hoping to come up with a real belter one day!