FREE WHITEWATER

Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS

4.3 Beats 35

There’s a story over at the Janesville Gazette about the budget for UW-Whitewater:

WHITEWATER – Gov. Scott Walker’s proposal to slash funding to state universities could drain as much as $4.3 million from UW-Whitewater’s 2011-12 base budget, college administrators estimate.

See, Walker plan could cut $4.3 million from UW-W — GazetteXtra.

The story comes despite a recent Walker Administration proposal for tens of millions in new construction on campus.

Here one sees the limitation of new construction, when matched against loss in revenue, and restrictions in labor rights. Long after students and faculty grow tired of the novelty of a few buildings, they will remember – and experience daily -the disappointment of higher costs, lower salaries, and a downcast workplace.

Looking at the Walker Administration’s approach to labor relations, it’s an understatement to say that they can’t see the fundamental importance of a happy workforce, and the greater importance of relationships between people over capital spending.

That’s why, for the most part, reductions in labor costs should fall first and foremost on leaders, with others coming only afterward.

In any event, capital spending will prove inadequate to offset the social and political irritation that budget shortfalls and changes in labor relations will inflict.

Whitewater’s Innovation Center: ‘The die is cast’

It was Caesar, in Suetonius’s account, who said of his fateful crossing into Italy that ‘the die is cast,’ the Latin of which comes out as ‘alea iacta est.’  There’s scholarly debate about the saying, but this is how most have come to know it — that a small game-piece has slipped from one’s hand, the result now beyond one’s control.

So it is, mostly, with Whitewater’s Innovation Center: the venture’s success or failure, like the landing of a die, will take a course apart from easy alteration. The principal design of the project will determine its future. Some are sure of its success; I am equally sure against it. Some are certain this was the right use for these millions; I am equally sure it was not.

And yet, and yet… it will be years from now, when the rhetoric for or against the public project is long forgotten, before one will know whether it has, after all, produced those thousand new jobs promised.

Perhaps ten years from now, when we are all older and grayer, we’ll see what has become of this.

When we look back, from that time to this, there will be more than a single building to consider. We will then be able to ask ourselves if, after all, a beautiful but struggling community felt this project’s influence.

Daily Bread for 5.5.11

Good morning.

It’s a mild day ahead for Whitewater, with a high of sixty-two degrees, and a chance of afternoon showers.

Today will be the third in a series of either groundbreaking ceremonies or openings for the Innovation Center.  For posts about that project, see Innovation Center/Tech Park. After these many months, a building with tens of thousands of square feet now has about 780 square feet rented for a private concern (and even then, one that has some workers with publicly-paid work elsewhere).

That’s 97-98% public, but only 2-3% private, in a town with a dozen greater, more urgent needs.

The truth about how all this will turn out, though, isn’t to be found in the contemporary commentary on the project, but in a pithy remark from a long-dead Roman.  More on that later today.

Over at Science News, there’s a video map of the earth’s gravitaional field — it’s not all uniform, but irregular —

Gravity varies from place to place because of many factors, such as the presence of mountain ranges, the bulge around Earth’s equator, and the moon’s gravitational influence. The new snapshot comes from the European Space Agency’s GOCE satellite, launched in 2009 to map the geoid. GOCE dances along at the top of the atmosphere, using six special accelerometers to measure, many times a second, how the Earth’s gravity tugs on the spacecraft.

Via A Matter Of Gravity – Science News.


PLANETARY PULL from Science News on Vimeo.

Bollywood vs. Bin Laden: Why radical Islam fears pop culture





Here’s the description accompanying the Reason.tv video:


Even before Osama Bin Laden was killed by U.S. soldiers, his brand of anti-modern, anti-pleasure Islam was under attack by Bollywood, India’s pop culture juggernaut that boasts a global audience of 3 billion people.

As Reason Foundation Senior Analyst Shikha Dalmia explains, Bollywood movies and videos appeal to young men and women in Muslim and Arab countries because they dramatize the sorts of tensions between traditional and modern ways of living. “Who should decide who one should marry – is it the parents or is it the boy and girls themselves?” asks the Indian-born and raised Dalmia. “In the West, in Hollywood movies, it’s not even an issue. But it’s a huge issue in that part of the world and all of Bollywood movies deal with that one central question.”

Dalmia also notes that Muslims are among the most popular – and sexually suggestive – performers in Bollywood productions. “When you have Muslims succeeding in Bollywood as Muslims, it makes them feel, well, we don’t have to give up our religion in order to be modern,” observes Dalmia.
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Daily Bread for 5.4.11

Good morning.

It’s a sunny day in Whitewater’s forecast, with a high temperature of sixty degrees.

This afternoon, there will be a Landmarks Commission meeting in Whitewater. The agenda for the meeting is available online.

Later, at 7 p.m., there will be an informational meeting on possible consequences of Wisconsin’s state budget. Several local officials will speak on that topic, at the Cravath Lakefront Community Center. See, Informational Forum: Potential Local Impacts of the Proposed Wisconsin Budget, Wed., May 4th, 7-9 PM.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that on this day in 1873,

On this date John James Blaine was born in the town of Wingville in Grant County. A politician, governor, and U.S. Senator, Blaine attended public schools in Montfort, and received a law degree from Northern Indiana University. He was admitted to the Wisconsin bar in 1897 and practiced briefly in Montfort before settling in Boscobel.

A Progressive Republican, he served as Boscobel’s mayor for four terms and was elected to the State Senate in 1909. It was there that he gained prominence by leading investigations into the campaign expenditures of Wisconsin Senator Isaac Stephenson, attempting to block Stephenson’s re-election. A zealous advocate of progressivism and the ideals embraced by Robert M. La Follette Sr., Blaine was one of the organizers and vice-president of the Wilson National Progressive Republican League.  After running unsuccessfully for governor in 1914, Blaine was elected state attorney in 1918.

In 1921, he became governor and held this office for three consecutive terms. During his tenure Blaine promoted progressive labor legislation, fostered a campaign to eradicate bovine tuberculosis, and signed the nation’s first law giving equal rights to women. In 1926, he won the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate where he served from 1927 to 1933, becoming one of the leaders in the effort to repeal prohibition. He died on April 16, 1934. [Source: Dictionary of Wisconsin Biography, SHSW 1960, pg. 39]

 


Funding a Leadership Search

Whitewater’s Police Commission is conducting the search for a new chief, and there’s a request before Whitewater’s common council for additional funding. Information on the request may be found in the council agenda packet, and in a story about the search published last week in Walworth County Today. See, Whitewater panel seeks more money for chief search.

It’s worth funding the search more fully, in order to pick a solid and reputable firm.

No search assures a good result, but a poor search makes a good result less likely.

Daily Bread for 5.3.11

Good morning.

Whitewater’s forecast offers up a mostly cloudy day, with a high temperature of forty-nine degrees.

There’s a Common Council meeting tonight, at 6:30 p.m. The meeting agenda is available online.

Lakeview school has a PTA meeting tonight at 6:00 p.m., and at the middle school there will be a 7 p.m. Jazz Band and Show Choir concert.

If you’ve wondered how hummingbirds drink, then wonder no more — Wired has the answer for you.  In a post entitled, High-Speed Video Shows How Hummingbirds Really Drink, readers learn that

To discover how hummingbirds drink, [University of Connecticut ornithologist Alejandro] Rico-Guevara and colleague Margaret Rubega built see-through flowers that allowed them to take high-speed, high-magnification video of hummingbird tongues, which flick into nectar up to 20 times per second.

The video (above) shows that, instead of simply drawing in liquid, a hummingbird tongue’s tubes open down their sides when hitting nectar. When the tongue pulls back, the tubes zip closed, carrying nectar back into the beak.

Hummingbirds need lots of nectar, and here’s one of them in action:



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Eleven Fifty-Nine for 5.2.11

Good evening.

A new month begins, and off to a pretty good start, I’d say: pleasant weather for Whitewater, with rain only in the evening.

We’re only part way through a statewide recount, and one cannot count how many time’s one’s heard questions about ‘whether it’s worth the cost’ or what a burden it is that we ‘have to go through this.’  Many of those times, one’s hearing a double standard.  The right is sure that Wisconsin needs ballot integrity through photo identification, but doubtful that a margin of less than one-half of one-percent needs a recount.  The law allows a recount, as the law would — if modified — require a photo ID.  Yet there’s more worry about a possible change in law than about the exercise of existing rights, both of which are meant to assure sound elections.

Whitewater has a grand opening ahead this week, of a taxpayer-funded Innovation Center, after two previous celebrations.  No better time than this week to catch up on a few points, and review a few more.

I caught a French film, Don’t Look Back (Ne te retourne pas, for those who are particular), and it’s a dark, suspenseful film — thoughtful, too.  There are no special effects by American standards.  Why is that?  It would be wrong to say that the French are more cerebral than we are — their tastes are no less varied than our own, or other people’s.  In part, it’s that these are the expressions of French culture that make it to America — there’s much more that doesn’t.  In part, too, I think, is the difference in scale between American and foreign productions; there’s no studio abroad with a budget for special effects anything close to a Hollywood studio’s budget.  How we built those larger studios is another topic.

From Hollywood, though, one could do far  worse than The Other Guys, with Will Ferrell, Mark Wahlberg, and Eva Mendes.  It’s not a heavy and serious film, but not every film need or should be.  Wahlberg asks, upon seeing Eva Mendes introduced as Ferrell’s wife, “Seriously, who is that?” It’s funny both because Ferrell’s character, absurdly, doesn’t see much in Mendes, but also because there are real situations where one asks the question in disbelief of a seemingly mismatched couple.

Trailer for Don’t Look Backhttp://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi1576011289/

Trailer for The Other Guys:  http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi1253639705/

 

A Victory in the Food Truck Wars

I’ve written before about the anti-consumer battle against food trucks, and efforts to deny consumers convenient access to the popular, varied, and inexpensive fare that food trucks offer. See, Institute for Justice Defends the Rights of Street Vendors.

In El Paso, where that city had tried to zone food trucks away from potential patrons, there’s good news:

….the city of El Paso, Texas, repealed a law that prohibited vendors from operating within 1,000 feet (nearly four city blocks) of any restaurant, grocer, or convenience store. This effectively turned El Paso into a ‘no-vending’ zone, limiting vendors to narrow pockets of the city where customers were sparse. The law also prohibited vendors from stopping and awaiting customers, forcing them instead to endlessly circle the block until customers were waiting at the curb.

These regulations had nothing to do with food or traffic safety – such laws have been on the books for decades. Rather, these regulations existed for one purpose: to protect restaurants from honest competition.

Repeal is a victory for consumers and enterprising merchants. Congratulations go to the Institute for Justice for their efforts in Texas, and thanks to them for their larger, national vendor initiative.

See, Food Truck Wars.

Daily Bread for 5.2.11

Good morning.

It’s a partly cloudy day ahead for Whitewater, with a high temperature of fifty-eight degrees.

In the City of Whitewater today, there will be a Parks & Recreation Board meeting at 4 p.m., and at 4:30 p.m. there will be a meeting of Whitewater’s Community Development Authority.  I’ve linked to the agendas of each meeting.

Like so many Americans, and many billions more throughout the world, I heard of Bin Laden’s death last night.  The president’s speech, announcing Bin Laden’s demise to the nation was, I think, the finest single speech Pres. Obama has delivered (and like Reagan before him, Obama is a gifted speaker).  It’s a speech I’ve heard twice now, and well worth hearing yet again, for its clear expression of America’s fortitude in the pursuit of justice.

Here at home, and over at the Gazette, there’s a good story about one of Whitewater’s hidden treasures, a series of tribal effigy mounds far older than any other human effort in our city:

“Whitewater is one of the best-preserved in that part of the state,” said archeologist Robert Birmingham, who has authored books about effigy mounds in Wisconsin. “(They) really are an archeological world wonder.”

Birmingham estimates Whitewater’s mounds were built between 700 and 1100 A.D. Among them are thunderbirds, “panther-like water sprits,” snakes and a mink.

He said almost all sites were built near natural springs, a representation of life.

Efforts to preserve this site, the hard work of a dedicated group, are particularly commendable.  See, Whitewater hopes to restore historical effigy mounds.

Recent Tweets, 4.24 – 4.30

@bensommer Oh yes – the whole idea’s so nutty it’s fit for the Onion (a fine paper, really)
27 Apr

RT When Wisconsin Watch lists their donors, they’re doing something that Franklin Center/Wisconsin Reporter won’t http://bit.ly/mjHuAE
27 Apr

Libertarian Party’s List of Recent Federal Mistakes | FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/gX0gj0
26 Apr

Why the MacIver Institute’s Not Libertarian | DAILY WISCONSIN http://bit.ly/h4g8d6
24 Apr

RT @dailywisconsin: Milwaukee Community Journal Publishes Pastors’ Easter Greetings | DAILY WISCONSIN http://bit.ly/ht2iw2
24 Apr