Tag Archives: Willow Glen

Dead Elvis Stolen

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Halloween is a big celebration here in Willow Glen, California. A month in advance, otherwise stylish houses start growing nasty encrustations of orange and purple lights, plastic bats, black birds, and hairy spiders. Formerly well-kept lawns sprout tombstones and coffins, and spooky sounds drift from artfully concealed loudspeakers behind the well-trimmed bushes.

The Trick or Treat Trail is hosted by the Willow Glen Business Association (with the Willow Glen Lions among the volunteer safety monitors). Thousands of kids show off their costumes parading up and down Lincoln Avenue while collecting treats from local businesses. This event will be 10 am – noon and 2 pm – 4 pm on Friday, 29 October.  Many of the costumes and decorations are shown off as-bought but some of the scariest are home made.

But there is a dark side to Halloween in Willow Glen… Someone has been collecting other people’s scary displays from unattended lawns. One of the protest signs in a temporary graveyard reads

TO THE THIEVING LOSERS
WHO STOLE OUR ZOMBIE
AND DEAD ELVIS….
RETURN THEM OR
BE FOREVER
CURSED BY
THE UNDEAD!

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

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Willow Glen Lions Projects

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I am in my second year as the Secretary to the Willow Glen Lions Club in San Jose, California. A Lions Club Secretary is the administrative officer – making monthly membership and program reports to Lions Clubs International, managing the club roster, keeping minutes of meetings, serving on the Board, etc.

Our club was chartered just over a year ago and we have made good progress. Willow Glen Lions  is now in our second year of community service projects which include:

Last night, the Club Board voted funding to begin a new Leos Club for teens in Willow Glen. My husband John and I just created the club’s first business card – preparing for our club’s second Fall Mixer (at Chase Bank on Lincoln Avenue at Minnesota in Willow Glen, 6:30-8 pm on 10 November), and other upcoming activities.  It arrived today!

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2009-2010

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Soybeans from China

My brother Peter has been studying the Mandarin language for several years and, when he heard that I am now working for Huawei, he strongly recommended The Search for Modern China by Jonathan D. Spence (1999, 2nd edition). I love history books and this is one of the best I have ever read. I am still working my way through and enjoying every page.

I was particularly interested in the story of James Flint, a trader who in 1759 tried to do business with Imperial China. The Spence passage which intrigued me was:

The East India Company tried to enlarge the scope for China trade and negotiation in 1759 by sending James Flint, a company trader who had learned Chinese, to present complaints to the Qing court concerning the restrictions on trade in Canton and the rampant corruption there. By dint of tenacity and a certain amount of bribery, Flint, sailing first to Ningbo and then to Tianjin in a small 70-ton vessel, the Success, was able to have his complaints carried to Peking. The emperor initially seemed to show flexibility, and agreed to send a commission of investigation to the south. But after the Success, sailing back to Canton, was lost at sea with all hands except for Flint (he had traveled south independently), the emperor changed his mind. Flint was arrested and imprisioned for three years for breaking Qing regulations against sailing to northern ports, for improperly presenting petitions, and for having learned Chinese.

This is the first I have heard that learning Chinese was historically illegal.  I searched the net to learn more about James Flint and found
“History of Soy – Introduction of Soybeans to North America by Samuel Bowen in 1765”
by Theodore Hymowitz and J.R. Harlan.

According to the “History of Soy”, Samuel Bowen was a seaman aboard the Success who was also imprisoned in China and, like Flint, returned to London by 1763 to claim compensation from the Court of Directors of the East India Company. In 1764 Samuel Bowen turned up in Savannah, in The Colony of Georgia, where he planted seeds which he had brought to America from China. The seeds were from soybeans – which Samuel Bowen is credited with introducing as an American crop.

Samuel Bowen and James Flint seemed to have continued to have business dealings with each other.  Samuel Bowen’s two sons were named James Flint and Samuel Flint.  The older James Flint was also connected with the ever-curious Benjamin Franklin who wrote a letter in 1770 about the food we now call tofu. In the letter, he refers to Mr. Flint.

I was thinking about all of this when I saw the billboard pictured below near where I live in Willow Glen (San Jose, California). We Americans are taught from a very young age about foods from the Americas which now feed the world: potatoes, tomatoes, and corn. I was interested to learn that one of our own staple food crops originated in China.

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Image Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

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Mochi Balls

My 18-year-old son Paul is enjoying his first quarter at Foothill College. Today, he went to his clay art class.  Paul is creating a large sculpture of Hedwig the owl. He took his first college math test yesterday. We celebrated by going out to Yuki Sushi on Lincoln Avenue in Willow Glen. Paul ordered gyoza and California rolls, with strawberry Mochi ice cream for dessert. One of his  favorite meals!

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Images by Katy Dickinson Copyright 2010

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We Bought a Fire Hydrant

Saturdays are a good time to see what our Willow Glen neighbors have for sale. Garage and yard and estate sales are advertised with brightly colored hand-made signs on street corners, with arrows pointing the way. I often buy flower pots, small antiques, baskets, kitchen stuff, plants, tools, and holiday decorations.

Today, we bought a fire hydrant from a neighbor on Willow Street. It looks old, is very heavy, and says “Greenberg San Francisco” on the top. (I just learned that Morris Greenberg was the inventor of the “California” wet barrel fire hydrant. Learn more at Greenberg fire hydrants.) I plan to put the hydrant in my cactus garden. Here is a picture:

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The neighbor had a pigeon feeder in his orange tree. Every time we came too near, there was a great whoosh as the flock flew onto his roof to safety. The birds would wander around on the roof for a minute, then line up on the edge to see when we would move away from their seed.

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

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Visiting Katydid

When I was little, one of my Grandfather’s nicknames for me was “Katydid”, after the long-horned grasshoppers or crickets (in the family Tettigoniidae). Last week, I noticed a bright green insect half as long as my finger wandering around on the top of our laundry room door here in Willow Glen (San Jose, California). The katydid seemed as interested in me as I was in her…

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

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Lions’ Fundraiser, “Hot San Jose Nights” Car Show

From 7-11 am this morning, the Willow Glen Lions Club served 220 pancake breakfasts during the first half of its two-day charity fundraiser at the Hot San Jose Nights vintage and historical car event (Santa Clara Fairgrounds).  We gave away free helium balloons and made balloon lions for the little kids. All proceeds will go toward this summer’s camp scholarships for the Diabetes Society (in Willow Glen).  The Willow Glen Lions are also collecting eyeglasses to be recycled – given to needy people at no charge.

The car show features a huge variety of vehicles, including a historic Kenworth truck, sports cars from many eras, a red 1957 Chevrolet, a tank, and a huge motorcycle, the world’s largest, said to cost $300,000.

Here are some pictures from today:

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Images by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher, Copyright 2010

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