LEXICON

The House of the Rising Sun Lexicon


Date of this document: 10/16/2001
The tags [UPDATED] and [NEW] are changes within 60 days of 10/16/2001
Current number of entries: 1052
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sonny-bee
Polite usage of "son of a bitch".
Sonora
For Camp people, Sonora is the big time. Originally a mining town, Sonora has remained a vital city by being a magnet location for stores and services for the area. Sonora hosts movie theaters, department stores, fast food restaurants, and other businesses that are few and far between in the foothills. This, therefore, became the natural destination for most weekends for staff members looking for a high time on the town, or just wanting to catch the new movies.
Spag Fag
The Old Spaghetti Factory, okay pasta at reasonable prices throughout Sacramento and the Bay Area.
the spins
A condition brought on by drinking to the point that your brain can no longer process messages from the inner ear correctly, causing equilibrium problems. This is most noticed when a person is trying to go to bed. The only solution to the spins is to get up or risk booting. Mixing alcohol with a session of talking to Bob increases the risks of getting "standing spins" which nearly always result in vomiting.
spliff
A mixture of marijuana and regular tobacco. This makes for a smother smoking, longer lasting joint (or so we hear).
spook-ed
Spooky. See boogie. Usually as "hella spook- ed".
Spooky Joe
1) Brendan's next-door neighbor who shared the same backyard as Brendan back at the Ivy house. Spooky Joe and his family were strongly Chico white-trash, but somewhat understanding neighbors.
2) Chicoite given the same name, one of the fraternity brothers.
Square-D
Gas station with convenience store within easy walking distance from The Cherry. Sold somewhat cheap beer on special. Square- D became a destination usually in emergency situations.
squirrely
Losing traction while driving, usually by fishtailing. In a broader sense, anything that is out of control or erratic.
sta-wag
Station wagon.
State Net
Former employer of Charlie Bill, Big Dave, Greg and a host of other misfits as well as the current employer of same. state Net is a "legislative and regulartory tracking service covering all 50 states and the US congress" as employees regularly relate. Their flexible schedule and downtown location make it popular as a place of employment amongst college students and downtown musician types.
Steinbecked
To be stored in a manner that is usually undoable and neigh-on hard to repeat. Hank has some magic method of getting things in the rafters so they can not be retrieved.
Steve & Jen
Steve & Jen are what your parents wished you'd turned out to be, rather than the raging alky that you are today: They both hold excellent jobs, own a lovely home together down in the Pocket area and own an adorable rottie mix. It's amazing that Charlie Bill has such wholesome friends. Steve & Jen are both TCR alumnus, having met at a Coffee In Ten at Shellie's house in Davis.
"Stick it in my butt"
Yelled by a neighbor in a fit of ecstasy the morning after the first major House party. This event earned our landlord, who lived across from us and most likely the other party in this event, the title "Iron Dick".
Stingers
One of the two closest bars to the CSUS campus, this one runs alternately hot and cold with the local Greek crowd. It was, at one time, listed as the go-to bar by Playboy, the magazine which single-handedly altered the perception of CSU Chico for the better part of a decade.
Stinky
Tom's pet name for Hank. For a while they were spending a great deal of time off alone by each other, allegedly working out and SCUBA diving, though these activities could never quite be verified, arousing the suspicions of both Bill and Patti. There was some talk that perhaps their relationship was not exactly platonic. This was furthered by the fact that Tom commonly asks for Henry on the phone by his pet name for Hank, "Stinky". Henry, so far, hasn't related his pet name for Tom.
Stoney Inn
A very unlikely bar in the heart of Del Paso Heights. The bar is amazingly cozy inside and has a wonderful patio area that is an oasis from the blight outside its door. The Inn regularly has guest cooks who come in and provide food free to the bars patrons. This place became something of a hangout when Mo, Roy, Hank and Charlie Bill were attending auctions across the street.
stop and rob
Generic convenience store. A play on the fact that many of these businesses have "stop" in their names: "Stop and Shop", "Quick Stop", "Stop and Go".
stoplight
Evil concoction of drinks colored green (Midori), yellow (likely Galliano), and red (a mixture of cranberry juice and a shitload of Tabasco). The drinks are lined up like a stoplight before the drinker, who usually is not allowed to see the preparation of the drink. If the consumer is any sort of serious drinker, (s)he'll knock them back one-two-three, with a rude surprise awaiting them on the third drink. This is not a good way to start an evening of drinking nor end it nor even have it in the middle. The red light will sit in your stomach bubbling for the rest of the evening. This is usually reserved for 21st birthdays. Reily's was the usual stop for such things in Chico.
storm door
An area of high pressure traditionally sits smack dab in the middle of Northern California during the late fall and early winter months, driving the jet stream of moisture-laden air from the Pacific primarily to the north. Storms will pour in from the tropics but will never touch ground in the northern part of the state until, at some point, the pressure drops and allows them through. Local meteorologists refer to this as "the storm door" as once it's open it'll stay open for the rest of the season.
straight-edge
Way back about a million years ago their existed a punk rock genre which went somewhat against the mainstream "I hate you, me, and everything in-between." Bands in the genre played songs with more positive messages, through the intensity was just as great. The hallmark of the straight-edged movement was the complete abstinence from the drugs, alcohol, and in some cases sex that were the hallmark of punk society. The term, used amongst the House clan denotes an abstinence particularly from alcohol, that being their drug of choice.
stumble-up window
A take-out window at a fast food restaurant with the pedestrian in mind. The Taco Bell in Chico sparked the genesis of this term, where most of the population seems to be drunk and craving cheap Mexican food.
Suave
Originally Chico Sauve, named after that one-hit wonder Rico Suave. Darren, as his business fellows call him, originally often arrived with the Gnome until the Gnome became persona non grata with the Chicoites. Soon thereafter he was rechristianed. Suave was also a camp person, but not at Wolfeboro. On several occasions he tried to drag various folks off to his camp the summer he was in charge. Suave is very much a mover-and-shaker, or at least appears to be, which is good in his current job as a lawyer.
"suck it, suck it, suck it, you BITCH!"
Common greeting between Nish and Charlie Bill. Originally from the Fishbone groove "Junkies Prayer"
Sudwerk
Local area brew-pub minichain. Sacramento's is the weaker of the two, but makes up for it on Pint Nights, having quality beer at chow beer prices. The fact that Roy and Dave lived across the street from here in 97-98 didn't hurt any either.
Sugarpine
Camp's "neighboring" Girl Scout Camp down the road near Arnold. Sugarpine was the target of a number of Camp pranks, including the regular theft of a number of their camp signs. Sugarpine is mentioned in the Camp song "Patsy-ory-ory-ay" as the destination for the year "1899". Becky and Hilary worked there once, giving staffers an "in" to the promised land (we, of course, were after similarly aged counselors, not the campers).
suicide lane
In California and a number of other states, the center lane from which one may turn into either to make a left hand turn across traffic or to wait for a hole when making a left hand turn from the opposite side of the street where one would have to cross both directions to make it across. As cars are whizzing by in both directions, as well as entering and leaving this particular center lane, it's name is apt.
Summer Concert Series
If you are downtown in Caesar Chavez plaza and not listening to the Summer Sammies, you must be listening to the Summer Concert Series. After several years of the Sammies' success the Downtown Partnership, a mostly business-oriented coalition in the area, decided that they wanted in on the action in 1998. At first it looked like they would win out and the Sammies would be no more. In the end, they both decided to hold concert series (with a bit of overlap in the booking to boot). The twin series now run a ridiculous 20 weeks from early May to late September. The layout in the SCS is radically different than the Sammies, giving far more weight to the beer garden.
Summer Sammies
Weekly concert series in the Downtown Plaza. The series became popular enough that the downtown business association decided to hold their own, which also are generically termed "Summer Sammies". The event was originally intended to showcase musicians who'd won or were in the running for a Sammie, the News and Review's "Sacramento Area Music" award (probably stolen heavily from the Bammies of the Bay Area).
sun
Name for the ubiquitous $15 halogen torchiere lamps that everyone owns in the 90s. Henry had a 500 watt bulb in his lamp in the landing that when turned off approximated a rapid setting of the sun. That one light positioned in the loft could light the living room area below to a level sufficient for reading or light surgery.
surly bastard
Standard label slapped upon any growly member of the crowd. Since most of the crowd is fairly growly, this ends up being a case of the pot calling the kettle black most of the time.
Sutter's Fort
In the heart of Sacramento sits Sutter's Fort, a reconstruction of John August Sutter's original outpost in the Sacramento Valley. The wide, white adobe walls sit on a small rise in the middle of a state park. The park regularly features hosts in period costumes reenacting early pioneer life. In a turn for the ironic, Sutter's Fort is also the site of the somewhat laughable State Indian museum.
Suzy's
Adult store at the intersection of Florin and Franklin roads in Sacramento, the original supplier of the Beer Tits. Suzy's is about the size of the typical American convenience store in size and is less cool than Goldie's.
The Swallow
Another of Chris' couches. This one had the tendency to grab you in your sleep and drop you through the back of the couch.
Swillery
Swillery
The Distillery, a local grill and dive bar near where Charlie Bill works. It's proximity to the office and reasonable prices make it the premiere after-work hangout.
swirlie
This is an oft-threatened attack, but one never actually seen or heard of happening. The victim would have his head stuck in a toilet bowl while the toilet was flushed, reportedly giving the victim's hair a swirl--hence the name.
Taco Tuesday
Pet name of Bill and at one time Big Dave's coworker Peter. Peter is in his mid-30s and works at one of the lower paid hourly jobs. Peter is a very, well, eclectic fellow. Some would say that this is the result of years of recreational drug use taking its toll. He's a harmless enough guy, but scares some people at first. One of his well known habits, the one that earned him this name, was going around and asking everyone if they wanted tacos from the local fast Mexican food joint: "hey everybody, It's taco Tuesday, two tacos for a dollar. You want in?" This dialogue was constant for months. When he got laid off as part of the red tide, he re-applied the next season and immediately started hitting people up for taco orders.
Tacos Cortez
Tacos Cortez
Taco joint where one can get a big old chimichanga, sour cream, guacamole, beans and rice, all for less than $3.50. TC can be found at the turn of HWY 32 in Chico. Very few people could ever stomach a full dinner from TC. It makes great party leftovers. Being right around the corner from The Duplex, it was a common stop.
tag
1) To hit, usually upside the head. Ex: did you see that guy tag that car with his motorcycle?
2) To write one's name or handle graffiti-wise. Charlie Bill regularly tagged his High School with a number of his cohorts with the name that would later become his TCR handle.
Tahoe
The term "Tahoe" usually defines a loose area surrounding the mighty lake of the same name and the surrounding towns. Tahoe is a mecca for lake people, gamblers, skiers, rock climbers and all other manner of outdoor recreation types. The north shore of Lake Tahoe is in Nevada and hosts a several block strip of high-class casinos with attendant smaller casinos down the road a ways. The nightlife provided on the North Shore and the daytime recreation provided around and on the lake draw people from all over Northern California and the state. The demographic here is usually younger and middle class--the diversions here are expensive and not for the slower set.
talking to Bob
Smoking marijuana. The Bob in question being Marley.
Tam
Hilary's high-energy dog. Tam is extremely smart, and far too energetic for his own good. Tam has a number of tricks, and identifies by name several objects with a fair degree of success (our names, not his). At one point, Tam had an account on TCR.
tar-zhey
In Northern California's suburban sprawl, the only budget-oriented department store worth half a shit is Target. Pronounced as if French to disguise its proletarian nature. Target has recently started opening Greatlands in the area, which are fucking enormous.
-tard
Much like the root, tard, this denotes a particular state of being tardish and is used often by Charlie Bill. Ex: So then, in full Hank-tard mode, he stepped through the screen door. Bill originally picked it up when he found a CD for the local band the Motards while shopping with Mo. Mo was not amused by this.
tard
Diminutive of "retard". This insult was huge in the early-80s amongst our age group, but its use is pretty rare these days. Charlie Bill decided that it is his mission to bring it back into vogue.
Tatonka
Henry's cousin Jodi's really cute friend from Redding. During Henry's graduation, the two women rampaged through Sacramento's bar scene, ending up at the Rage. Tatonka looked like "Stands With a Fist" from Dances With Wolves, but in our inebriated state, all we could remember from the movie was "Tatonka", the word for buffalo.
TC
See Tacos Cortez. Often as "TC for me!"
TCR
The Compass Rose. A BBS where Charlie Bill met a whole bunch of people, thanks to Hillary. Before the Internet and IRC, a similar setup existed on individual computers across the country. TCR was based in Davis and Sacramento, the two systems linking at night. The board(s) featured a large chat area, with sometimes as many as forty people together in one place.
Teddy
Teddy
Part of Shavor's Bay Area inner circle. Teddy is a member of our United States Air force but the experience hasn't seemed to color him much. Teddy can often be found behind the bar at Shavor's parties in Walnut Creek.
"tee hee!"
This is an expression of ignorance and innocence within several factions in orbit around the House, but it is unclear if the differences are divergent or convergent. Henry often will put his hand to his mouth, schollgirl-stylee but the head-tilt hair-flip (whether real or pantomimed) is also quite popular.
tekillya
Another name for tequila, especially when in the midst of a bender.
Telegraph
Telegraph Ave in Berkeley, CA. A number of odd stores, an ongoing street bazaar, and numerous gutter punks make Telegraph Ave the east Bay's answer to Height-Ashbury. Hippie-esque, but far more diverse than Height-Ash.
tent explosion
Camp term describing what happens when the contents of a sidewall tent spill out and onto the ground.
teriyaki Spam
For those of you who may be reading from Mars, Spam is a nasty concoction of pork products and is slightly less salty than the Bonneville Salt Flats. A normal "serving", like two or three small slices, has enough sodium to account for two day's intake. Henry, striving to turn himself into a pillar of salt, decided to marinate the Spam in teriyaki sauce, primarily soy and pineapple sauces. Soy sauce is also salty as hell. The only way he could have gotten more sodium in there was to lodge blocks of it in the Spam. Bill was incredulous that Hank could actually eat a thing, but he was in the minority.
"That'd be the butt, Bob"
Reportedly the answer given to Bob Eubanks during a "Newlywed Game" show. The alleged question was "Where's the strangest place you and your wife made whoopie." Eubanks has continuously refuted this, offering $10,000 to anyone who can prove it true. The phrase is oft used anytime the posterior region is mentioned.
That's ass
An expressionp that indicates both disgust and exasperation at a particular object or event. Ex: "I can't believe that she just ditched you at the party. That was so ass."
"That's spiel, not schpiel"
As part of camp training, staffers were required to watch a portion of the film "In Search of Excellence," the show from which the Goofy influences came. During the segment where they are discussing Disneyland they cover the Jungle Boat Ride, and how it is a carefully scripted spiel. They use the term "spiel" to hearken back to the days of carnival barkers, not "schpiel" to mean a fast-sell, and they make a very heavy-handed point of that.
"That's the smell of guilt"
A memorable phrase from Rhonda when she and Hank got back to the House after a prolonged post-party absence and discovered that Charlie Bill had been cleaning with pine disinfectant, thereby odorizing the House with a pleasant forest odor--if forests had been designed by Lysol.
"There's plenty of carbonation"
What Pappa Chima declared after tasting a beverage that Chris that he felt was flat and was pouring out. Pappa Chima, seeing his profits literally slipping down the drain, ran over to protest. The phrase worked its way into the common lexicon after multiple retellings of the story devolved into a simple caricature of Pappa Chima with beard net exclaiming this.
"there's two things that smell like fish"
..."and one of them's fish". Needless to say, the other isn't fish.
thermal inversion layer
One of the reasons the Sacramento valley gets so damned hot and stays hot is because of a thermal inversion layer, a much ballyhooed term used whenever a weather forecaster is about to throw out the fact that good Sacramentans should carpool the next day, or at least feel guilty about driving. Essentially what happens is the point at which hot air can rise and become cool air gets lower, leaving no place for new hot air to go but outwards or back downwards in ever-heating cycles. The only thing that really saves us is the delta breezes.
they'll take it out on you, and you don't deserve
A phrase from the film version of In Search of Excellence, a mid-80s look at American business. A portion of the film containing this phrase detailed Disneyland and was required watching for camp members (see Goofy Head). It is a very true condition that a person often becomes the target for issues that aren't of the person's making (Freud called this transference).
"They're magically delicious"
The LtCmdr, in his early hypericy days, was spied eating Lucky Charms. Now, for such a hardcore individual, the image of him eating a sugary kids cereal proved somewhat amusing. Someone asked: "Lucky Charms Jeff?" He froze, and locking the asking party in a steely stare replied in monotone: "they're magically delicious". No one was sure if it was okay to laugh or not.
The Thing
Brendan's VW Thing. A vehicle bred for adventure, and adventure it provided. Originally a hand-me-down from his elder brother, it was disposed of after it became to costly to maintain. It was eventually replaced by The Volvo. The Thing was the only car to have its own song, set to the tune of "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang".
Thrill Killer
Serial killer who terrorized Sacramento for a few weeks in 1992. The Thrill Killer would pick a store or restaurant with three people inside and proceed to shoot them executioner-style. By the third week, police coverage of the stricken neighborhood was thick and people tended not to go out in groups less than four people. The suspect was caught in fairly short order, though, and the killings stopped. Another random criminal for Sacramento.
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