I received news today that our one remaining vehicle to drive is on death's door. It's not worth fixing and it could go kaput any day. It's been two months since ice fell onto our other vehicle and it's finally being worked on, but it's probably a week away (plus any inevitable delays) from being back and driveable. So that's where we are, two grown-ass adults with grown-ass jobs operating as if we're 18 year olds with no car. Fun, right? But it's just the most visible example of how nothing works anymore. I sit at work in my office sometimes with no heat because the failing boiler has been turned off for the summer. And I don't need to tell you bloggers about how the blog roll isn't functioning. It takes a good 2 to 8 hours -- sometimes never -- for the latest blog update to appear in reader or along the blog roll. I'm publishing this in the early afternoon in hopes it will see eyes by sometime this evening. But thank goodness for ...
On a post a couple weeks ago, cards as I see them showed off his signed autographed cards from the 1978 Topps set. He has a whole bunch -- more than 500 of them -- which is terribly impressive. That inspired me to see how many autographs I own from the 1975 Topps set, as like gcrl's 1978 Topps set, it is the one that kicked off my collecting journey. I knew that it would be far, far less than 500. My collection pursuit has never been about autographs. It's been a side-dabbling at best, mostly restricted to my early blog days. But I figured that if there was one set that would yield the most autographed cards, it would be 1975. Maybe I'd have 10 cards from 1975 signed, I guessed. Maybe a little less than that. Eight? Seven? Try five. Ooof. But they're all impressive in their own right. That Bill Buckner doubles as an entry in my '75 buyback collection. So, yeah, word scribbles aren't exactly my thing. But which set does have the mo...