At his sentencing, Saginaw County (Mich.) Judge Gary McDonald made it clear that this was “not the mandatory natural life imprisonment sentence” and said that if Rodriguez was a “model prisoner,” McDonald would recommend release in 10 years. A life sentence would make him parole-eligible in 10 years.
In 1977 he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, and the judge gave him a choice: A sentence of 15 to 30 years would probably mean parole in 12.
“I just blew a fuse,” Rodriguez says now of killing Cuellar. As part of an ongoing family feud, someone - Rodriguez believed it was a man named Robert Cuellar - had shot at Rodriguez’s mother and brother. Reynaldo Rodriguez was 19 with a young son, a good job and no criminal record when he shot and killed a man. He also writes the Art Seen feature.An inmate in handcuffs prepares to walk out for a parole board hearing at the New Hampshire State Prison for Men on July 2. Oh, joy and jubilation! Jeepers creepers! Jiminy crow!Įdgar Allen Beem has been writing The Universal Notebook weekly since 2003, first for The Forecaster and now for the Phoenix. Trissino’s soft J phoneme christened the savior of the modern world. Up until 1524, Jesus Christ was known by the Hebrew Yeshua or Greek Iesus. In fact, the birth of the letter J has been pinpointed as 1524, the year Italian Renaissance soft G grammarian Gian Giorgio Trissino, the Father of the Letter J, established the soft J sound. I, J, V, U, and W were all added during medieval times. The Latin root of the English language had but 23 letters, 21 of them borrowed from the Etruscan alphabet. Called a tittle, the j dot is a jaunty jot for an extraneous letter. While other more worldly languages sport judicious umlauts and jocular accents, cedillas, and tildes, the only diacritical marks in English are the jaded dots above the lower case i and j. I’m as big a fan of bodkins, codpieces, and jerkins as the next man, but in this day and age of puffers and jeggings, who really needs “justaucorps,” a close-fitting, knee-length jacket that replaced the doublet in the 17 th century? I mean who needs “jequirity,” a kind of Indian licorice? And how often do you have to conjure up “jinn,” a spirit that influences humans for good and evil? Use it in a sentence? Putin seems to have gotten into the jinn, or rather the jinn seems to have gotten into him. In my jaundiced view, the vast majority of the J words are expendable. That’s far more than X (400), Y (985), or Z (nearly 700), but far fewer than the popular letters like M (more than 6,100) or R (about 14,500). Approximately 1,400 of those words begin with the letter J. The Random House Dictionary of the English Language that stands beside my desk is 50 years old and says it contains 260,000 words. The average English speaker, by way of comparison, knows between 20,000 and 40,000 words. Chinese boasts more than 50,000 pictograms, but they are closer to words than letters and, anyway, most Chinese people only use about 8,000 of them.
The Russian Cyrillic alphabet has 33 letters, while the Khmer alphabet of Cambodia has 74. The Rokotan language of Papua New Guinea, from what I read on the internet, has but 12 letters, and the 4,000 residents of the island of Bougainville who speak Rokotan jabber along quite nicely.Īlphabets are all over the board when it comes to variety. There is, after all, nothing sacred about 26 letters. But then what to do about CH words like champ, chump, or chicken? That’s why I’d begin my alphabetical housecleaning by jettisoning the J. Of course, we could also easily replace most C words with a K or an S. Why in the world do we need 26 letters if several (like J and X) can easily be replaced with existing letters? Every time I scratch off a letter to reveal a jerkwater J, I complain to my lovely wife Carolyn that we would all be better off without the J. It has been my experience that you cannot win with a card that has a J on it. My J animus began with Maine State Lottery crossword scratch cards. Unless your name is Jack, Jim, Jennifer, or Jill, you probably could care less whether I am successful in consigning the letter J to the junkyard of history, but Gennifer and Gillian would likely appreciate streamlining the alphabet a bit.
#SENTENCE FOR JETTISON FULL#
George, Geoffrey, German, giraffe, ginger, gentle, genius – need I go on? The English language is full of words that begin with a so-called “soft G.” That being so, why do we need J at all?