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Daily Bread: July 17, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal public meetings scheduled for today — you have an unobstructed path to the weekend.

The Wisconsin Historical Society reports that on this date in 1832, Wisconsin had what might be its first public housing project, so to speak —

On this date General Henry Atkinson wrote General Winfield Scott that he had finished constructing Fort Koshkonong. The fort, constructed of oak logs, was abandoned when the army pursued and defeated Black Hawk at the Battle of Bad Axe in August of 1832. The logs from the fort were then used in the construction of houses in the community now known as Fort Atkinson. By 1840, little of the original fort remained. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride, p. 107]

Here’s a picture of a replica of that fort —

I don’t know if homeowners had to pay for the logs, or if war produced a benefit to some homeowners, perhaps over others — I’ve no idea how the logs were distributed. They were, I’d guess, the homes that Black Hawk built, at least indirectly.

Friedman famously said that war was a friend of the state, and he might have added a friend of those who were friends of the state, too.

Here’s the man who made the log distribution from an abandoned fort necessary possible —

Walworth County Genealogical Society — Ice Cream Social, August 4th

I’ve received the following press release that I am happy to post —

OLD FASHIONED ICE CREAM SOCIAL

The Walworth County Genealogical Society will meet Tuesday, August 4, 2009, 7:00 PM, for the Annual Ice Cream Social at the Community Centre, 826 E. Geneva Street, Delavan.

Members will bring a variety of toppings for and the Society will furnish the ice cream and beverages.

There will be free items from the Walworth County Genealogical Library to give away such as genealogy newsletters, magazine and books. Attendees may bring genealogical and/or quality craft items to sell.

The monthly Society meetings are open to the public. Anyone who would like to know more about their ancestors is encouraged to attend. There are several members of the Society that can help you get started on your family tree.

For additional information, please call the Society’s Vice President at 275-2426.

Daily Bread: July 16, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There’s a Whitewater-University Tech Park Board meeting today at 2:00 p.m. There’s no agenda available online.

The Wisconsin Historical Society reports that on this date in 1941

….the Horicon National Wildlife Refuge was established after a 20 year struggle by conservationists. The refuge is over 21,000 acres, encompasses the Horicon Marsh, the largest freshwater cattail marsh in the United States, and is home to over 223 species of birds and other wildlife. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride, p. 6 and Horicon National Wildlife Refuge]

Here’s today’s almanac —

Almanac
Thursday, July 16, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:30 AM 08:30 PM
Civil Twilight 04:56 AM 09:04 PM
Tomorrow 05:31 AM 08:30 PM
Tomorrow will be: 1 minute shorter
Amount of sunlight: 15h 0m
Amount of daylight: 16h 08m
Moon phase: Waning crescent

more >>

People (and Cats) Licking Ice Cream Cones: The Inappropriate Behavior That Threatens Us All!

 

Shocked?   

I’ve heard people espouse all sorts of rules of conduct, of propriety.  One will hear that people should not chew gum, talk about religion or politics at table, etc.  It’s always a lecture about what’s appropriate, proper, civilized. 

Often, it’s about what’s not appropriate, from a scold’s point-of-view — there’s often someone to out-Victorian the Victorians.  Prissy, starched, lifeless, and as such, contemptible as a distortion of the natural and unaffected.  Many times, the people who insist on these rules are a pretentious lot.  

Worse, It’s not enough for some people to lived cramped lives; they cannot bear that you’ll not do the same.  That’s the problem with Mrs. Kravitz, from Bewitched.  

Sometimes, the busybody’s sense of proper and improper is laughable, and should be embarrassing to him or her. 

Sometimes that sense reveals an odd preoccupation.  Consider the notorious (and they are notorious) views of Leon Kass, former chairman of the President’s Council on Bioethics from 2001 to 2005, on ice cream cones.  Kass was more than a physician and bio ethicist; he had views on appropriate human behaviour, right down to the objectionable tendency of some to enjoy licking ice cream cones. 

Here are Kass’s original remarks, from 1994, in which he complains about people licking ice cream cones: 

Worst of all from this point of view are those more uncivilized forms of eating, like licking an ice cream cone –a catlike activity that has been made acceptable in informal America but that still offends those who know eating in public is offensive. 

I fear I may by this remark lose the sympathy of many reader, people who will condescendingly regard as quaint or even priggish the view that eating in the street is for dogs. Modern America’s rising tide of informality has already washed out many long-standing traditions — their reasons long before forgotten — that served well to regulate the boundary between public and private; and in many quarters complete shamelessness is treated as proof of genuine liberation from the allegedly arbitrary constraints of manners….But eating on the street — even when undertaken, say, because one is between appointments and has no other time to eat — displays in fact precisely such lack of self-control: It beckons enslavement to the belly. Hunger must be sated now; it cannot wait. Though the walking street eater still moves in the direction of his vision, he shows himself as a being led by his appetites. Lacking utensils for cutting and lifting to mouth, he will often be seen using his teeth for tearing off chewable portions, just like any animal. Eating on the run does not even allow the human way of enjoying one’s food, for it is more like simple fueling; it is hard to savor or even to know what one is eating when the main point is to hurriedly fill the belly, now running on empty. This doglike feeding, if one must engage in it, ought to be kept from public view, where, even if WE feel no shame, others are compelled to witness our shameful behavior.”

 
(Hat tip — www.classicalvalues.com) 

If it’s disagreeable to Kass that people enjoy ice creams cones, because it reminds him of a cat’s tendency to lick things, I am not sure what Kass would think of a photograph of an actual feline, licking an ice cream cone.  Less offensive, because it’s just an animal, or more so, because the cat-like behavior comes from the very animal, delivered as satire?  I’d say less offensive, but then, perhaps he’d not appreciate the satire.      

Ice cream cones, though?  They’re much a part of America, aren’t they?  They’re just not part of Leon Kass’s America, I’d guess.  

Well, that’s Whitewater, isn’t it?  The idea that some things are just wrong, improper, inappropriate.  No one should do them, because to a few, they seem wrong, disgusting, revolting.  Even if they’re commonplace elsewhere in America, they should be unacceptable, in Whitewater, Wisconsin, because some small-town grandee is sure that no one should be doing that.  

Not in public!

Daily Bread: July 15, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There’s a Community Development Board of Directors Meeting scheduled for today at 4:30 p.m. today. The agenda is available online.

Here’s today’s almanac —

Almanac
Wednesday, July 15, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:29 AM 08:31 PM
Civil Twilight 04:55 AM 09:05 PM
Tomorrow 05:30 AM 08:30 PM
Tomorrow will be: 2 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 15h 2m
Amount of daylight: 16h 10m
Moon phase: Waning crescent

more >>

Cats: Super Smart

There’s story, entitled “Cats ‘exploit’ humans by purring” on the BBC website.  The study to which the BBC refers, one conducted at the University of Sussex, contends that 

Researchers at the University of Sussex have discovered that cats use a “soliciting purr” to overpower their owners and garner attention and food. Unlike regular purring, this sound incorporates a “cry”, with a similar frequency to a human baby’s. The team said cats have “tapped into” a human bias – producing a sound that humans find very difficult to ignore.

 There’s a video on the BBC site of Pepo the cat purring in the way researchers contend is distinctively designed for humans.  

Candidly, it sounds like any ordinary cat’s purr to me.  That hardly discredits the British research; if anything, it suggests that the cats may be even smarter than the reserchers understand, if an ordinary domestic shorthair can convince a British Ph.D. that a conventional purr is a special one.  It didn’t even take a Siamese, or Rex, or Persian to dupe these reseachers; any cat would do.  

I’m not surprised. I’ve always had a particular admiration for cats, even more than for dogs.  (Plus, the British are way, way over-rated.) 

Cats are very American, too — both cities and towns have cats aplenty, and no farm would be complete without a few. Lincoln is reported to have liked cats, as did Twain, and countless other Americans.  

Why am I writing about cats?  Because in a later post, I’ll contend that dislike of cats and their habits is odd, fussy, and that the dislike of feline behavior is also a fitting metaphor for much of the fussiness, the insistence on the ‘appropriate,’ etc., that afflicts my hometown, Whitewater, Wisconsin.   

Daily Bread: Bastille Day Edition

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no municipal, public meetings scheduled for Whitewater today.

Here’s today’s almanac —

Almanac
Tuesday, July 14, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:28 AM 08:32 PM
Civil Twilight 04:54 AM 09:06 PM
Tomorrow 05:29 AM 08:31 PM
Tomorrow will be: 2 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 15h 4m
Amount of daylight: 16h 12m
Moon phase: Third Quarter

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Writing Your Memoir: Wednesdays through August 26th

I received the following press release that I am happy to post –


Writing Your Memoir

Day and Time: Wednesday 12:15 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. 

Where: at the Whitewater Senior Center, Starin Park. 

Fee $25 for 8 weeks or $4 per drop in class. 

8-week class: July 8 through August 26 

Contact: Lynn Greene, 262-495-8771, 262-728-3424, ext 110 (work) 

You’ve lived it, now write about it! Everybody has a story to tell and this class will get you started or keep you writing. Practice with framing a story, catching a reader’s attention, building tension, and being truthful in a non-threatening way.

We’ll discuss and demonstrate ways to enrich your writing, including the use of similes, metaphors, and dialogue. Learn how to put your ideas, experiences and memories into print. Bring a notebook and a pen and one of your stories (if you have one) to get started.

Your facilitator is Lynn Greene, an award-winning journalist, who was recently recognized with a national award for best feature writing. This class will culminate with a celebration and reading of our work (date and location to be announced).

Daily Bread: July 13, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There is one public meeting scheduled for the City of Whitewater today, a meeting of the Irvin Young Memorial Library board, at 6:30 p.m. The agenda is available online.

Here’s today’s almanac —

Almanac
Monday, July 13, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:28 AM 08:32 PM
Civil Twilight 04:53 AM 09:06 PM
Tomorrow 05:28 AM 08:32 PM
Tomorrow will be: roughly the same as today
Amount of sunlight: 15h 4m
Amount of daylight: 16h 13m
Moon phase: Waning gibbous

more >>

Daily Bread: July 10, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

There are no public meetings scheduled for the City of Whitewater today. You have a clear path to the weekend…

It’s a sad day today, but a happy one in commemoration, also — Wired reports that on this day in 1999, “Aaron S. “Bunny” Lapin, the inventor of pressure-can whipped cream, dies at age 85.” Here’s the scoop story:

Lapin started out as a clothing salesman, but saw some opportunity during World War II food rationing, when heavy cream for whipping was hard to get. He mixed light cream and vegetable oil to concoct Sta-Whip as a suitable substitute.

He also devised a refillable aerating gun for commercial use by bakeries and restaurants. This he called the Fount-Wip, and he was on the road to gastronomic greatness.

But Lapin knew that everyday homemakers needed something a little easier to use than the clumsy, messy Fount-Wip….

He put good, old-fashioned, postwar real cream (no more need for the vegetable oil) into the new aerosol cans. Then he enlisted delivery milkmen (remember them?) to sell it in his hometown of St. Louis. He called the stuff Reddi-wip….

Time magazine in 1998 selected Reddi-wip in its cream-of-the crop roundup of the 20th century’s top 100 consumer items, right up there with color TV, the home dishwasher, the paper clip, the pop-top can and Spam (the food, of course).

Impressive American ingenuity — just one of the many, many reasons to love America.

Common Council Meeting for July 7, 2009: Any Basis at All

 It was a relatively brief Common Council meeting on Tuesday, July 7th.  About a half-hour into the meeting, as at last session, the Common Council considered changes to Whitewater’s regulations affecting sidewalk cafés for some establishments near the Cravath lakefront. 

I wrote about that meeting in a post entitled, Whitewater, Wisconsin’s Café Scene”.    Removal of these restrictions was sound, and hardly a threat to community order: 

It’s odd to listen to the discussion, because so much of it sounds like so much of Whitewater — overly-regulatory, with objections based on supposedly raucous behavior, but without a willingness to discuss how to manage or prevent that behavior (should it occur), short of prohibition.  Prohibition is the dumbing down of policy, the lazy man’s way to try to prevent a problem, all the while ignoring the other problems prohibition causes.

Last session, there were two proposed changes to the ordinance: (1) remove a requirement that establishments with café have a minimum of 30% food sales to be eligible to operate a café, and (2) that the required plans for the cafés — the arrangement of tables, etc. — be simpler, less elaborate.   

The proposed amendments — including eliminating any food requirement — passed first reading, on a vote of 6-1.   Now, one session later, on a second reading, the Common Council brought back a 20% food requirement, on a 6-1 vote in favor.  

Only one vote stayed the same between both sessions.  Why the change?  One cannot answer to behind the scenes lobbying. 

There may have been none — the longer I write about Whitewater the more ineffectual I find efforts to persuade between sessions.    

There were, however, two principal reasons, stated in Council, in support of the change to bring back a food sales requirement — on the question in, part, of whether this would be a café or a bar ordinance?  It’s funny — too funny, really — that for the brief time the cafés will be open, it really matters to our local politicians how much alcohol, as against food sales, an establishment has.   

Is there any claim — supported by any proof, whatever — that the 20% food requirement will provide for our safety where no requirement would not?   Of course not — there’s nothing to support this percentage, as a prof of safety — except the insisetence that there should be food, ust has to be, for safety, propriety, semantics, whatever. 

Semantics — hard to imagine how really stupid that justification is — rationalism so narrow it’s irrational.  It’s a café ordinance, not a bar ordinance — as though a café cannot serve drinks alone, or nearly so.  

Did you know, by the way, that God spelled backwards is Dog?  It’s true!  Yet, knowing it, what diffrence would it possibly make to your theology?  The same questions of being, of existence, will still await you.  (If, however, the transposition of these letters changes your views, then I’m afraid you’ve no views worth changing, in any event.)  

No one doubts that Council can swing from view to view, from reading to reading — it’s wholly lawful. It’s laughable, though, and without a serious basis (what did Council really learn on July 7th that it did not know before, on June 16th?).   

But here we are, with the requirement back in. May I ask (I’m merely being polite to soothe the sensibilities of the City Manager, of course I may ask!) where’s the administration in all this? 

Did not the City Manager, just last session, want the removal of the food requirement?  I watched those proceedings, from mid-June, and I very much thought that he did. Here’s what he said, on June 16th, in favor of no food requirement, and eased planning requirements: 

….We just want to, we want to make it a little easier for these permits to be gained….

That’s my transcription, as I was able to hear the audio.  See and hear for yourself, though, at about 35 minutes into the recording: 

 

So, where was Kevin Brunner on July 7th?  Not literally, of course — he was in the room.  Yet, he made no remarks, that I heard, in support of the removal of restrictions that he advanced only a few weeks ago.  

No one, having watched our local administration, should be surprised.   

It might as well be theater, and bad theater, at that.    more >>

Daily Bread: July 9, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

Here’s today’s almanac —

Almanac
Thursday, July 9, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:25 AM 08:34 PM
Civil Twilight 04:50 AM 09:09 PM
Tomorrow 05:25 AM 08:34 PM
Tomorrow will be: roughly the same as today
Amount of sunlight: 15h 9m
Amount of daylight: 16h 19m
Moon phase: Waning gibbous

more >>

Wisconsin State Journal – Audit: States Using Stimulus Just to Stay Afloat

The federal stimulus – countless billions for almost everything – is supposed to stimulate something, after all. It’s not only slow in arriving, but reaches less needy communities, and is often used as a budget fill-in rather than a true catalyst.

The Government Accounting Office audit is available at Recovery Act: States’ and Localities’ Current and Planned Uses of Funds While Facing Fiscal Stresses.

See, Audit: States Using Stimulus Just to Stay Afloat more >>

Daily Bread: July 8, 2009

Good morning, Whitewater

In Wisconsin history on this date, the first, but perhaps not last, time someone in Wisconsin considered himself a king:

1850 – James Jesse Strang Crowned King

On this date James Jesse Strang, leader of the estranged Mormon faction, the Strangites, was crowned king; the only man to achieve such a title in America. When founder Joseph Smith was assassinated, Strang forged a letter from Smith dictating he was to be the heir. The Mormon movement split into followers of Strang and followers of Brigham Young.

As he gained more followers (but never nearly as many as Brigham Young), Strang became comparable to a Saint, and in 1850 was crowned King James in a ceremony in which he wore a discarded red robe of a Shakespearean actor, and a metal crown studded with a cluster of stars as his followers sang him hosannas. Soon after his crowning, he announced that Mormonism embraced and supported polygamy. (Young’s faction was known to have practiced polygamy, but had not at this time announced it publicly.)

A number of followers lived in Walworth County, including Strang at a home in Burlington. In 1856 Strang was himself assassinated, leaving five wives. Without Strang’s leadership, his movement disintegrated.

[Source: Wisconsin Saints and Sinners, by Fred L. Holmes, p. 106-121]

Here’s today’s almanac —

Almanac
Wednesday, July 8, 2009 Sunrise Sunset
Official Time 05:24 AM 08:35 PM
Civil Twilight 04:49 AM 09:09 PM
Tomorrow 05:25 AM 08:34 PM
Tomorrow will be: 2 minutes shorter
Amount of sunlight: 15h 11m
Amount of daylight: 16h 20m
Moon phase: Waning gibbous

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