Pubdate: Sun, 21 Jul 2002 Source: Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal (MS) Copyright: 2002 Journal Publishing Company Contact: http://www.djournal.com/djournal/site/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/823 Author: Tim Wildmon LET'S TALK: 'CRAZY' DRUGS, SILENT LETTERS I try not to let things I can't control bother me. I think most of us take this approach as we grow older. Idealism often turns to conformity, doesn't it. But then, there are the things I don't understand. I still haven't given up on the quest for knowledge when it comes to things I don't understand. I don't spend a whole lot of time in this pursuit, mind you, but my curiosity is still there. I'm not necessarily talking about things that are complex, I'm talking about things that don't seem to make sense but are supposed to make sense. Take the craze over crystal methamphetamine for example. No, it's not an exotic island in the Caribbean - it's a drug. It is a powerful central nervous system stimulant. Did you read the story in the Daily Journal about this last Sunday? If you didn't, you need to. The people who are addicted to this stuff - and their numbers are growing - are not your garden variety drug addicts, let me tell you. These people are nuts. This substance is a potent combination of - are you ready for this - over-the-counter cold and asthma medications containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, red phosphorous, hydrochloric acid, drain cleaner, battery acid, lye, lantern fuel, and antifreeze. You read that right. These people put into their bloodstream the same thing you and I put into our automobile. And someone sat around and thought this up, folks, that's what amazes me. It wasn't enough to mix battery acid and lye with lantern fuel. No sir. Hold on, wait a minute, got to put some antifreeze in it. On a less serious note about things I don't understand, how about the roadside signs that tell us how much weight a given bridge will withstand. I don't know about other states, but do you know where we Mississippians put these signs? That's right. Two feet before you actually are on the bridge. My question is, why do we even bother to put these signs up at all? Have you ever even once seen a truck stop before crossing a bridge so the driver can read the sign? No, you haven't. And neither have I. And even if the driver does stop, 90 percent of these drivers have no idea how much weight they are carrying behind them anyway. Many, when asked, would just answer, "A lot." Where are the yellow airplanes? How about those yellow airplanes painted on highway 78 between Tupelo and Memphis? What ever happened to those gems? Anyone ever figure out what they were there for? Made me real nervous the first few times I saw them. I kept ducking while driving and looking out my window for a plane. I asked many northeast Mississippians and no one could ever tell me for sure what their purpose was. I got answers like, "I think it means crop dusters can land there if an emergency arises," to, I suppose, a more legitimate explanation like, "It means your speed is being detected by a highway patrol plane." One fellow told me, in something that would work for Jay Leno, they were painted there to, "Show airplanes how to get to Memphis." Much like the unexplainable circles carved into farm fields in the middle of Iowa - some say by aliens - these yellow airplanes on highway 78 remain a mystery. And finally, here today, I would like to discuss something that I have never, ever understood, and that is the purpose of silent letters. I am trying to explain this to my kids now, who ask me about it when learning to spell words. I just have to say, "I don't know why that letter is there but you don't sound it out son. Say that makes no sense? Well, you are right, it doesn't. Why this is you ask? Your guess is as good as mine. May have been alcohol induced or a practical joke by those who created the English language just to throw people off for the ages." Who started this and who decides which words can have a silent letter and which can't? For instance, why is there an "s" in the word Illinois? Many southerners are prone to go ahead and pronounce the "s" in Illinois anyway and I can't really argue with them. But then many southerners are also prone to throw an "r" into the word Chicago as well. "Chicargo," they say. I guess some folks operate under the theory that if one letter must be silent, another letter must be heard somewhere in the alphabet universe to make up the difference. I know what you are thinking. You are thinking, "They mix lantern fuel with what?!!" Tim Wildmon is a resident of Saltillo. He is a host of Today's Issues on American Family Radio. His column is published every other week. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens