Archive for August, 2008

Mississippi to get a medical examiner

Friday, August 8th, 2008

Mississippi has been without a state medical examiner for nearly fourteen years. County coroners have been contracting with numerous private pathologists, but primarily Dr. Steven Hayne. Lately some of his work has come under scrutiny. Public Safety Commissioner Steve Simpson announced that Hayne has been taken off the list of pathologists that can be used by county coroners and that the state will finally be hiring a medical examiner. Hayne is not eligible to apply for the job because he isn’t board certified in the correct area. He once took the test to become board certified, but failed.

Hayne was performing 1,500 autopsies per year, which is slightly over four a day, assuming he worked weekends and holidays, or nearly 6 a day assuming he took weekends off, but no holidays. This is in addition to testifying in court on a regular basis. The National Association of Medical Examiners recommends no more than 250 per year, which means Hayne was doing the work of 6 doctors.

I found a very interesting article in Reason that chronicles Hayne’s career and the system that let him keep doing what he was doing. It’s on the long side, but well worth reading. Hayne once testified that he could tell from a bullet wound that two people simultaneously pulled the trigger. In another case, organs that Hayne claimed to have weighed during an autopsy turned out to still be in the corpse. In yet another case he changed the cause of death so he could be paid to testify in a lawsuit.

Hayne claims that he’s been caught up in a “witch hunt,” but after reading the Reason article, I’m convinced. It’s amazing that it took this long for something to be done.

Disc Golf

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

Another hobby that I’ve picked up recently is disc golf. If you’re not familiar with disc golf, just think “frisbees” instead of a club and ball and baskets instead of holes. It’s a lot of fun and it gives me an excuse to get outside and get a little exercise.

Courtney from work gave me my first real introduction to it at Avent Park here in Oxford, where there are nine holes. We also have a nicer 18-hole course at the university’s intramural fields. I’ve also played at Coachman Park in Clearwater, Florida, when I was down there on business at the beginning of July.

Tishomingo State Park, near my hometown of Belmont, has two courses that I’d like to play, and there are several courses in and around Tupelo. Several of the other state parks have courses as well.

I’m still not very good at some (okay, most) aspects of disc golf, but I’m improving. For instance, my driving could use some improvement in both accuracy and distance.

It’s been too hot to play much lately, and I expect Liam will curtail my playing to a large degree for a while. However, it won’t be too terribly long until Luke can follow me around the course.

Amateur Radio

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

Back in the summer of 2002, the summer Cassie and I got married, I picked up a book on ham radio at Radio Shack while we were on vacation in St. Louis. I read the book and could have easily passed the first exam. However, I wanted to wait until I had learned Morse code so I could get the Morse code test (5 wpm) and the first written test out of the way at the same test session. That would have given me the Technician Plus license. I never learned Morse code well enough, so I never took the test.

Fast forward to the fall of 2007. In the mean time the FCC has completely done away with the Morse code requirement for all three licenses (Technician, General, and Extra class). I passed my Technician exam in October, my General in March, and finally my Extra in June. My original call sign was KE5RDQ, but after I upgraded to Extra class I applied for and received WF5N. (Only Extra class hams can hold four “digit” call signs.)

My main interest in becoming a ham was to learn more about electrical engineering and that sort of thing. Ham radio is a pretty broad hobby, and I haven’t been able to investigate even a portion of it yet. Some of the areas I’d like to explore are: Morse code, satellites, digital modes, VHF+ SSB and CW, and homebrewing equipment.

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Luke and Liam

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

For those of you that have been completely out of the loop, our first son, Luke Benjamin Pharr, was born on June 1, 2007. He’s now a little over 14 months old. I posted his early pictures on Flickr and his later ones on Zenfolio. At this point I’m a little behind on both taking and posting pictures, but there should be some more up on the Zenfolio page soon.

Luke started walking about a month ago and hasn’t slowed down since. He had been flirting with the idea for a while, but never could get up the nerve to let go of the furniture. He’s fairly tall for his age, so reaching into drawers and on top of cabinets is no problem.

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The blog is back

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Hi everyone. I’ve been wanting to post to my blog now for quite some time, but my WordPress installation was way out of date. I’ve been procrastinating on upgrading for a while because I knew it would be painful.

Today I bit the bullet, wiped the old version, and installed WordPress from scratch. It took all of five minutes. Yes, I did back up my old posts before killing the old installation, but I doubt I’ll ever find the time to do anything with them.

A lot has happened in the months since I quit posting to my blog, and I’ll try to update everyone in the next couple of posts. Stay tuned.