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The Sadness of Old Buildings
By Gary E. Anderson


Id Card Software
Each and every day there might be numerous visitors walking into the reception area of your organisation. All of these visitors need to be registered within your system and they`ll have to given visitor id cards. This process has been made simpler by the introduction of Id Card Software. New packages are available to install that can become the digital answers to the paper log books of old. Visitor management and Id Card Software can help you to simplify the registration process. It will speed up traffic in your foyer and can be used to record all types of activities. You can use the Id Card Software to maintain logs of who is in the building. Moreover you can print perfect id badges that can be given out to visitors and they can wear them when they are on the premises. Some of the systems come with self-registration options and complete bundles are available that include a number of items. Not only is the Id Card Software provided, you get a badge printer, a usb camera for taking images and a host of other useful supplies. With so many visitors in your building at any given time it could be wise to invest in this helpful software.


From the book No Smooshing!
Gary E. Anderson
www.abciowa.com

For years, I?ve carried on a not-so-friendly debate with some of my artist friends from the West Coast about their ideas of what constitutes a good subject. We seem to be able to agree on certain things, like apples and oranges?and even certain landscapes. But when it comes to their paintings of dilapidated old farm buildings, we part company.

Some folks see rundown farmhouses and caved-in barns as romantic. Artists paint pictures of buildings with weathered boards, leaning at impossible angles?and people take those paintings home and hang them on their walls.

But for me, I see those same abandoned farmsteads as unspeakably sad. After all, each one of those boarded up farmhouses represents the death of someone?s hopes and dreams for the future of their children and themselves.

I get the same sad feeling whenever I pass through a small town that was once a thriving place, full of life and activity, but now sits empty and lifeless, slowly crumbling back into the black earth from which it sprang. Last week, I was lost on some back road (not an unusual situation for me) when I came across just such a ghost town.

There was no name that I could see, but there were three buildings, huddled next to each other against the prairie wind, and I could still make out some faded letters above their doors. The first one had been a general store, the second a garage, but it was the third building that captured my imagination. On its side was printed the word ?Hotel.?

Hotel? The word seemed so incongruous. After all, what could have been the attraction in this little town that would have warranted a hotel? There didn?t seem to be anything of interest in the area, and if any place in the world could have been said to be in the middle of nowhere, this little town was it!

And how did people get to this village in order to stay in this mysterious hotel? I saw no railroad tracks, and there?s only one road running through town.

The garage implied the town was still alive when cars came into general use, but cars have been around a long time, and that still didn?t explain the need for a hotel in a town with only two other buildings.

Perhaps that?s why my artist friends find old buildings and farmsteads so intriguing. There?s definitely a sense of mystery about them?stories that will never be known. On that much, we can agree. But no one can convince me those lonely scenes are picturesque.

I can hardly look at old towns like that without being overcome with a sadness that?s difficult to explain. What are the stories of those forlorn storefronts? Why did people come to that little town and stay in their little hotel? What about the rusty skeleton of a combine on the edge of town, its bones bleaching in the sun?

I don?t know, and I never will?and ghosts don?t talk. Just don?t try to tell me that such a scene is something I?d want to hang on my wall and look at every day.

© 2004. Gary E. Anderson. All rights reserved.

For more information about this article and/or the author visit http://www.abciowa.com

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