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Medicare For All via H.R. 676
January 4th, 2008

Change is about policies-not speeches and symbolism
January 4th, 2008

Home Country
December 26th, 2007

Home Country
December 19th, 2007

Home Country
December 12th, 2007

Home Country
December 5th, 2007

Home Country
November 28th, 2007

Policing Corporate Pricing Policies
November 27th, 2007

Purchasing Fresh Christmas Trees Online
November 23rd, 2007

Home Country
November 21st, 2007

Home Country
November 14th, 2007

Waterboarding Republicans vs. Supporting Our Troops
November 9th, 2007

We Want More!
November 7th, 2007

Home Country
November 7th, 2007

Picking A Democratic Winner For President
November 4th, 2007

The Nonviolent Army
September 23rd, 2007

Bush Speech on Iraq and Democrats on Impeachment
September 16th, 2007

UF Student Alumni Association Gains National Attention
September 8th, 2007

Alachua County Highlighted in Report
August 30th, 2007

Florida To Subsidize European Raid on Florida Forests
August 29th, 2007

Home Country
August 29th, 2007

Thoughts on Fasting
August 26th, 2007

Home Country
August 22nd, 2007

Karl Rove: Democratic Secret Weapon
August 16th, 2007

Riverkeeper Sues JEA
August 16th, 2007

More

Home Country

Home Country

Slim Randles

Some things aren't allowed to go away, no matter how much a person might want them to, and no matter how much sense it makes to do away with them. It was that way with Doc's golf tournament.

Last fall, to raise money for coats for kids who needed them, Doc talked two farmers out of the use of their pastures and set up the only 18-hole golf course in history that was created in an hour and a half. Each of the 18 holes had a hole (personally dug by Doc with a shovel) and a flag by the hole (a steel t-post personally pounded in by Dud) and a tee-off spot (personally tee-off by Herb Collins). But that was all the course had. If there was grass on the fairway, it was because the cows missed a bite. The whole course was hazard. The tenth hole alone had two rock piles and a manure sump to negotiate. The second hole required people to clear a prairie dog town or lose the ball forever to the abode of confused and terrorized rodents.

Well, everyone had fun, and the whole thing was won by Delbert Chin, owner of the Gates of Heaven Chinese restaurant, who came in with the low score of 312.

Doc wasn't really excited about doing it again, but first one, then another of our locals pestered him until he relented and set out a whole new course this year that included the elementary school playground and the town's sewage treatment lagoons.

Twice as many people signed on to play this year, and Doc admits that next year's course might have to take in the gravel quarry just east of town.

"The hardest part about this tournament," he told the boys down at the Mule Barn truck stop, "is figuring out what par should be."
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Brought to you by "Ol' Slim's Views from the Porch," available at http://www. unmpress.com and wherever cowboys are celebrated.

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