FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 3.19.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Thursday in town will be mostly cloudy with a high of fifty-one. Sunrise is 6:58 and sunset 7:06, for 12h 07m 52s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 1.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 2003, in the evening, Pres. George W. Bush ordered the start of the Iraq War. The New York Times reported the next morning on the start of hostilities:

WASHINGTON, Thursday, March 20— President Bush ordered the start of a war against Iraq on Wednesday night, and American forces poised on the country’s southern border and at sea began strikes to disarm the country, including an apparently unsuccessful attempt to kill Saddam Hussein.

Mr. Bush addressed the nation from the Oval Office at 10:15 p.m. Wednesday night, about 45 minutes after the first attacks were reported against an installation in Baghdad where American intelligence believed Mr. Hussein and his top leadership were meeting. ”On my orders, coalition forces have begun striking selected targets of military importance to undermine Saddam Hussein’s ability to wage war,” the president said.

Speaking deliberately, with a picture of his twin daughters visible behind him, he added, ”These are opening stages of what will be a broad and concerted campaign.”

Mr. Bush sought to tamp down expectations of a quick victory with few casualties by warning that the battles in the days ahead ”could be longer and more difficult than some predict.” [Transcript, Page A20.]

The cost of the war in expenditures alone is estimated now, these may years later, to have been well over a trillion dollars.

Here’s the Thursday game in Puzzability‘s Green Party series:

This Week’s Game — March 16-20
Green Party
We’ve minted some new questions for jaded solvers. In this St. Patrick’s Day trivia quiz, the answer to each day’s question is a name or title that includes a shade of green.
Example:
For what 1978 movie did director Michael Cimino suggest that little-known Meryl Streep write her own lines to flesh out her underdeveloped role?
Answer:
The Deer Hunter
What to Submit:
Submit the name or title (as “The Deer Hunter” in the example) for your answer.
Thursday, March 19
What major Walt Whitman poetry collection had a heavy influence on the TV showBreaking Bad, including the lead character’s name, Walter White?

On School Board Candidate Kelly Davis

Whitewater invites people to choose the city, to live here, and to commit to our community’s civic life.  We offer our way of life to others, hoping that they will join us in the improvement of our schools, public institutions, and neighborhoods. 

Into our small city now comes a talented and educated woman who seeks political office.  Kelly Davis has not been here for decades, but she, her husband, and their children have more than enough years in Whitewater for a strong understanding of our schools & community.   

Supporting her candidacy is an easy decision: smart, well-read, active, and principled should (and in Kelly Davis’s candidacy easily does) carry the day.

(As with the other candidates in the race, a statement of her views may be found online at http://www.lwvwhitewater.org/elections.html.)

Mrs. Davis has both distinguished educational credentials and experience by profession in tax policy.  Her professional work makes her particularly well-suited to the school board’s tasks ahead. 

I’ve read her online candidate statement, listened to her speak, and found the positive opinion so many hold of her to be well-justified. 

I’m also familiar with her volunteer civic commitments, as she has been active in Whitewater. (To write about Whitewater as I have is to watch and observe civic life closely, even if one does not write about every group or organization.  The best observations, in fact, come without becoming a distraction while one observes.  Observation and reflection are quiet undertakings.) 

Mrs. Davis has a record of successful support for our schools, for prominent Whitewater charitable and athletic events, and of her church in town.  That’s a well-rounded portfolio, so to speak.  Needless to say, it requires an energetic person to do so much, and do it so well. 

Now, I do not contend that Mrs. Davis and I share the same politics, or that she’s likely to agree with my own views on civic life.  I do contend, and always will, that agreement on partisan views is unnecessary. 

It’s a commitment to honest, principled policy, diligently pursed with integrity whatever one’s ideology, that will advance and uplift our community. Facts are to be advanced, data are to be presented honestly, values are to be professed truly & faithfully: that’s a good path for anyone. 

It’s a path Kelly Davis ably walks in Whitewater. 

Consider these words, of her own choosing and emphasis, from her candidate statement:

I think it is important to regard a budget as a moral document that shows what we value and consider to be the district’s priorities.

In the end, the only sadness one has about reading her remarks is in wishing that one heard similar sentiments in our public life more often. 

Having listened to her speak extemporaneously, and answer questions, it’s clear to me that Kelly Davis will work cooperatively, speak clearly and forthrightly, with regard to all the community.  No doubt many others have seen these same traits.     

I support Kelly Davis for school board, and I hope you will, too.

Previously: On the Whitewater Schools.

Tomorrow: On School Board Candidate Dan McCrea.

Daily Bread for 3.18.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Midweek in the Whippet City will be partly cloudy with a high of forty-eight. That’s cooler than recently, to be sure, but there’s something to be said for crisp temperatures. Sunrise is 7:00 and sunset 7:05, for 12h 04m 56s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 5.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1925, America experiences a severe tornado strike:

The worst tornado in U.S. history passes through eastern Missouri, southern Illinois, and southern Indiana, killing 695 people, injuring some 13,000 people, and causing $17 million in property damage. Known as the “Tri-State Tornado,” the deadly twister began its northeast track in Ellington, Missouri, but southern Illinois was the hardest hit. More than 500 of the total 695 people who perished were killed in southern Illinois, including 234 in Murphrysboro and 127 in West Frankfort.

A tornado is a dark, funnel-shaped cloud containing violently rotating air that develops in climate conditions that, in the United States, are generally unique to the central and southern plains and the Gulf states. The rotating winds of tornadoes can attain velocities of 300 mph, and its diameter can vary from a few feet to a mile. A tornado generally travels in a northeasterly distance at speeds of 20 to 40 mph and usually covers anywhere between one and more than 100 miles.

The Tri-State Tornado of 1925–which traveled 219 miles, spent more than three hours on the ground, devastated 164 square miles, had a diameter of more than a mile, and traveled at speeds in excess of 70 mph–is unsurpassed in U.S. history.

On this day in 1954, employees of Parker Pen get a bit more:

1954 – Parker Pen Employees Win Wage Increase
On this date employees of Parker Pen in Janesville won a 5-cent-an-hour wage increase in contract negotiations. After the raise, male employees made a base pay of $1.95 an hour while their female counterparts were paid $1.62 an hour. [Source: Janesville Gazette]

Puzzability‘s green-themed series continues with Wednesday’s game:

This Week’s Game — March 16-20
Green Party
We’ve minted some new questions for jaded solvers. In this St. Patrick’s Day trivia quiz, the answer to each day’s question is a name or title that includes a shade of green.
Example:
For what 1978 movie did director Michael Cimino suggest that little-known Meryl Streep write her own lines to flesh out her underdeveloped role?
Answer:
The Deer Hunter
What to Submit:
Submit the name or title (as “The Deer Hunter” in the example) for your answer.
Wednesday, March 18
Who won a Best Actor Oscar for playing Idi Amin?

On the Whitewater Schools

Today is the first of a series of posts about the upcoming, contested WUSD board elections.  Three candidates are running for two seats: Kelly Davis, Dan McCrea, and Jim Stewart.  In today’s post, I’ll summarize some of my own views.

(I’ve been direct these last several years; it makes sense to state one’s convictions plainly, so that readers will know my perspective.) 

Each of the candidates responded to an election survey, and my remarks will mostly follow the ten questions the candidates received.  It’s easier to compare everyone’s views if there’s a similar order to their remarks.  (The candidates’ replies may be found online at lwvwhitewater.org/elections.html.)

One’s Motivation.  Writing is one of many diverse social obligations from which someone may choose.  It is its own thing, neither prelude nor postscript to other activities. 

To write occasionally about education is not to write about it enough; that one spends less time than one might hope on the subject shouldn’t preclude writing as often as one can. 

Philosophy of the School Board’s Role.  It is enough to oversee the daily work of a broader curriculum diligent and fairly.  This can be done without exaggeration, and where the main subjects of discussion are students over adults, teachers over principals, principals over administration, and administration over the board. 

A good rule by which to live: The higher the position, the greater the obligation, and the lower the entitlement.

There is no virtue in ceaselessly announcing oneself.  It’s a vulgar, disgusting habit.

School Board’s Relationship to the Community.  Treat all people as equals.  We are in a community with vast numbers of very sharp people, as is true in any community. 

It’s a proud delusion to believe that only a few are capable.  Delusion makes for poor policy; pride is a sin.

Some people are disadvantaged, and rightly deserve special consideration. Policymakers and commentators are not among them; they’ve no claim to special needs or entitlement.   

Experience with Budgets.  Libertarians (as I am) believe in less spending not as an end in itself, but as a path to smaller government.  We don’t want less for the sake of penny-pinching – we want less government so that there may be more liberty (believing as we do that a large government makes little room for liberty).

It’s individual liberty that matters to us, and to protect it we seek less of government; to seek less of government is to feed it less. 

Some programs, however, are more worthy than others.  To believe in less overall is not to doubt the need for priorities.

In this community, for example, I’d rather see money for schools than a single dime for some dishonest WEDC white-collar program.   (We’re wasting hundreds of thousands – millions in total – on those projects, as we did on the East Gate project, or any number of other unneeded schemes.)

That’s not our choice, now: these education cuts are statewide in scope.  It’s not if,  but how.  

A consistent philosophy shapes budgets, and assures fidelity to fundamental principles. The fragile deserve protection over the robust, and leaders should take less before workers take less.  I’ll advance particular suggestions when the district budget team issues its proposals.

Attracting Teachers.  It’s a market economy – one will have to stay at the market rate.  That sounds trite, but it’s anything but: no one in this community can counteract the broad competitive forces that draw teachers to one place over another.  Prospective employees are not children – they’ll take their best opportunities. 

(I would never have curtailed public-sector unionization, by the way – anyone should be able to organize peacefully against government.  To the extent that Act 10 has made employees less satisfied, we’ve reduced freedom of association, burdened public employers with a less motivated workforce, and made ourselves less attractive compared to public employers in other states.)

Conflict Resolution.  Whitewater’s key problem isn’t conflict, but rather an imposed, mediocre consensus.   Our forebears did not found this beautiful republic so that we might become a country of quivering mice. 

No one wants a brawl; everyone deserves more than a mediocre go-along-nice-and-quietly consensus.  We should be as talented as the country in which we happily live. 

Most Important Issue.  The budget looms largest, but we should be honest with ourselves that we are not an affluent community.  There are many struggling families with children in Whitewater.  We simply can’t budget the way that Cedarburg does, for example.  We have more children in need by percentage in Whitewater than an affluent community would.

Losing sight of this plain truth would be wrong. 

One’s Strengths.  It’s enough to work hard each day, assessing where improvement can and should be made.  One should be one’s hardest critic.  There’s no time for selling oneself. 

Common Core.  I’ve mentioned a need to discuss the curriculum, but that’s not a criticism of Common Core.  I’ve no objections to it; it seems plain to me that teaching is more than adopting Common Core or an alternative. 

Keep Common Core (by whatever name), but recognize that a set of standards is only useful if embraced with relish, with a taste and commitment and excitement.   Learning’s not a syllabus, nor even a book.  It’s the teaching of the book, so to speak, with understanding and excitement. 

The obsession with testing and measuring every last part of teaching does not impress.  It’s an ignorant person’s idea of being learned, by substituting crude measurement for deeper comprehension.

Be clear, though: there’s every reason to be critical of the flacking of scores, such as ACT scores, for political or economic gain.  A properly-educated person does not owe others their manipulations, exaggerations, or schemes for political advantage.  Funny, that it might happen concerning a school system, a place that should advance the honest use of data.

Education is more than a shabby PR scheme.  Those who take that course deserve not deference, but a rigorous critique.

An agenda, a set of testing standards, even a book is a poor substitute for being well-read, for being properly educated. 

Our Charter School. I’m a strong supporter of our charter school, and charter schools generally.  An inquiry school, for example, can offer a good education for children. 

There we are.

Tomorrow: On School Board Candidate Kelly Davis.    

Film: Elgin Park

There’s a creative beauty in model-builder Michael Paul Smith’s Elgin Park, but lacking the beauty (or ugliness) of actual people, it’s an artificial beauty —

Daily Bread from 3.17.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day. In Whitewater, the day will be increasingly sunny with a high of forty-four. Sunrise is 7:01 and sunset 7:03, for 12h 02m 00s of daytime. We’ve now a majority of the full day in daylight. The moon is a waning crescent with 12.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

Common Council meets tonight at 6 PM.

Long before a holiday celebrated even in the New World, there was a man in the Old World:

Saint Patrick (Latin: Patricius; Proto-Irish: *Qatrikias;[2] Modern Irish: Pádraig…. [3] Welsh: Padrig[4]) was a 5th-century Romano-British Christian missionary and bishop in Ireland. Known as the “Apostle of Ireland”, he is the primary patron saint of Ireland, along with Saints Brigit and Columba.

The dates of Patrick’s life cannot be fixed with certainty but, on a widespread interpretation, he was active as a missionary in Ireland during the second half of the fifth century.[5] He is generally credited with being the first bishop of Armagh, Primate of Ireland.

According to the Confessio of Patrick, when he was about 16, he was captured by Irish pirates from his home in Britain, and taken as a slave to Ireland, where he lived for six years before escaping and returning to his family. After becoming a cleric, he returned to northern and western Ireland. In later life, he served as an ordained bishop, but little is known about the places where he worked. By the seventh century, he had already come to be revered as the patron saint of Ireland.
Saint Patrick’s Day is observed on 17 March, which is said to be the date of his death.[6] It is celebrated inside and outside Ireland as a religious and cultural holiday. In the dioceses of Ireland, it is both a solemnity and a holy day of obligation; it is also a celebration of Ireland itself.

Here’s the Tuesday game from Puzzability:

This Week’s Game — March 16-20
Green Party
We’ve minted some new questions for jaded solvers. In this St. Patrick’s Day trivia quiz, the answer to each day’s question is a name or title that includes a shade of green.
Example:
For what 1978 movie did director Michael Cimino suggest that little-known Meryl Streep write her own lines to flesh out her underdeveloped role?
Answer:
The Deer Hunter
What to Submit:
Submit the name or title (as “The Deer Hunter” in the example) for your answer.
Tuesday, March 17
What autobiographical 1952 Charlie Chaplin movie features the only joint appearance of Chaplin and Buster Keaton on film?

The Whitewater School Board Candidates

In a community that sees too few contested races, in a time when educational policy is under debate across Wisconsin, the Whitewater Schools have three candidates contesting two open school board seats. 

I’ve been following this election (as longtime readers would expect), and I’ll post about all three candidates – Kelly Davis, Dan McCrea, and Jim Stewart – this week.  

At the least, I’ll have four election-related posts this week: a quick summary of my own views (candid policy declarations are a virtue), and then longer posts on each of the three candidates.

Here’s my planned order of presentation:

Tuesday: Summary of Views.

Wednesday: Post on Candidate Kelly Davis.

Thursday: Post on Candidate Dan McCrea.

Friday: Post on Candidate Jim Stewart.

These initial posts may be followed by others; this outline is a floor, not a ceiling. 

Readers will find that, to my eyes, there are clear choices in this race.  Having written directly on Whitewater subjects for nearly eight years (and sure to write for decades to come), I’ll be forthright in my remarks. 

Eligible voters in the direct may vote for two of the three candidates, and there are two candidates who seem, to me, especially good choices. 

More on all this, beginning tomorrow. 

Daily Bread for 3.16.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Monday will be partly sunny with a high of seventy. Sunrise is 7:03 and sunset 7:02, for 11h 59m 04s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 21.4% of it visible disk illuminated.

Sometimes a videographer is in the right place at someone else’s wrong time, as was true for someone who recorded Pastor Maldonado’s crash at the 2015 Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix:

(Maldonado was unhurt.)

On this day in 1926, Robert Goddard successfully launches a liquid-fueled rocket:

Robert Hutchings Goddard (October 5, 1882 – August 10, 1945) was an American engineer, professor, physicist, and inventor who is credited with creating and building the world’s first liquid-fueled rocket,[1][2] which he successfully launched on March 16, 1926. Goddard and his team launched 34 rockets[3] between 1926 and 1941, achieving altitudes as high as 2.6 km (1.6 mi) and speeds as high as 885 km/h (550 mph).[3]

Goddard’s work as both theorist and engineer anticipated many of the developments that were to make spaceflight possible.[4] He has been called the man who ushered in the Space Age.[5]:xiii Two of Goddard’s 214 patented inventions — a multi-stage rocket (1914), and a liquid-fuel rocket (1914) — were important milestones toward spaceflight.[6] His 1919 monograph A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes is considered one of the classic texts of 20th-century rocket science.[7][8] Goddard successfully applied three-axis control, gyroscopes and steerable thrust to rockets, to effectively control their flight.

Although his work in the field was revolutionary, Goddard received very little public support for his research and development work. The press sometimes ridiculed his theories of spaceflight. As a result, he became protective of his privacy and his work. Years after his death, at the dawn of the Space Age, he came to be recognized as the founding father of modern rocketry.[9][10][11] He not only recognized the potential of rockets for atmospheric research, ballistic missiles and space travel but was the first to scientifically study, design and construct the rockets needed to implement those ideas.[12]…

Goddard launched the first liquid-fueled (gasoline and liquid oxygen) rocket on March 16, 1926, in Auburn, Massachusetts. Present at the launch were his crew chief, Henry Sachs, Esther Goddard, and Percy Roope, who was Clark’s assistant professor in the physics department. Goddard’s diary entry of the event was notable for its understatement:

March 16. Went to Auburn with S[achs] in am. E[sther] and Mr. Roope came out at 1 p.m. Tried rocket at 2.30. It rose 41 feet & went 184 feet, in 2.5 secs., after the lower half of the nozzle burned off. Brought materials to lab….[13]:143

His diary entry the next day elaborated:

March 17, 1926. The first flight with a rocket using liquid propellants was made yesterday at Aunt Effie’s farm in Auburn…. Even though the release was pulled, the rocket did not rise at first, but the flame came out, and there was a steady roar. After a number of seconds it rose, slowly until it cleared the frame, and then at express train speed, curving over to the left, and striking the ice and snow, still going at a rapid rate.[13]:143

The rocket, which was later dubbed “Nell”, rose just 41 feet during a 2.5-second flight that ended 184 feet away in a cabbage field,[51] but it was an important demonstration that liquid propellants were possible. The launch site is now a National Historic Landmark, the Goddard Rocket Launching Site.

Puzzability begins a new weekly series today, for St. Patrick’s week, focused on green:

This Week’s Game — March 16-20
Green Party
We’ve minted some new questions for jaded solvers. In this St. Patrick’s Day trivia quiz, the answer to each day’s question is a name or title that includes a shade of green.
Example:
For what 1978 movie did director Michael Cimino suggest that little-known Meryl Streep write her own lines to flesh out her underdeveloped role?
Answer:
The Deer Hunter
What to Submit:
Submit the name or title (as “The Deer Hunter” in the example) for your answer.
Monday, March 16
What Oscar-winning actress retired at age 26 to marry a prince, prompting Alfred Hitchcock to say that he was very happy she found herself such a good part?

Daily Bread for 3.15.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Sunday will be breezy with a high of sixty-three. Sunrise is 7:05 and sunset 7:01, for 11h 56m 09s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 30.2% of its visible disk illuminated.

When a stressed-out badger temporarily blockaded a Stockholm hotel, who was to blame: the badger or the hotel? In Friday’s FREE WHITEWATER poll, 1/3 of respondents blamed the badger, but 2/3 of respondents said it was the hotel’s fault.

On this day in 1783, Gen. Washington puts down discord among some Continental officers against Congress in the Newburgh Conspiracy:

On the morning of March 10 an unsigned letter began circulating in the army camp. Later acknowledged to be written by Major John Armstrong, Jr., aide to General Gates, the letter decried the army’s condition and the lack of Congressional support, and called upon the army to send Congress an ultimatum. Published at the same time was an anonymous call for a meeting of all field officers for 11 a.m. the next day.[21]

Washington reacted with dispatch. On the morning of the 11th in his general orders he objected to the “disorderly” and “irregular” nature of the anonymously called meeting, and announced that there would be a meeting of officers on the 15th instead. This meeting, he said, would be presided over by the senior officer present, and Washington requested a report of the meeting, implying that he would not attend. On the morning of the 12th a second unsigned letter appeared, claiming Washington’s agreement to a meeting as an endorsement of the conspirators’ position.[24] Washington, who had initially thought the first letter to be the work of individuals outside the camp (specifically citing Gouverneur Morris as a likely candidate), was compelled to admit this unlikely given the speed at which the second letter appeared.[25]

The March 15 meeting was held in the “New Building” or “Temple”, a 40 by 70 foot (12 by 21 m) building at the camp. After Gates opened the meeting, Washington entered the building to everyone’s surprise. He asked to speak to the officers, and the stunned Gates relinquished the floor. Washington could tell by the faces of his officers, who had not been paid for quite some time, that they were quite angry and did not show the respect or deference as they had toward Washington in the past.[26]

Washington then gave a short but impassioned speech, now known as the Newburgh Address, counseling patience. His message was that they should oppose anyone “who wickedly attempts to open the floodgates of civil discord and deluge our rising empire in blood.”[27] He then produced a letter from a member of Congress to read to the officers. He gazed upon it and fumbled with it without speaking. He then took a pair of reading glasses from his pocket, which were new and few of the men had seen him wear them. He then said: “Gentlemen, you will permit me to put on my spectacles, for I have not only grown gray but almost blind in the service of my country.”[28] This caused the men to realize that Washington had sacrificed a great deal for the Revolution, just as much as any of them. These, of course, were his fellow officers, most having worked closely with him for several years. Many of those present were moved to tears,[29] and with this act, the conspiracy collapsed as he read the letter. He then left the room, and General Knox and others offered resolutions reaffirming their loyalty. Knox and Colonel Brooks were then appointed to a committee to draft a suitable resolution. Approved by virtually the entire assembly, the resolution expressed “unshaken confidence” in Congress, and “disdain” and “abhorrence” for the irregular proposals published earlier in the week.[30] Historian Richard Kohn believes the entire meeting was carefully stage-managed by Washington, Knox, and their supporters.[30] The only voice raised in opposition was that of Colonel Timothy Pickering, who criticized members of the assembly for hypocritically condemning the anonymous addresses that only days before they had been praising.[31]

Daily Bread for 3.14.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Saturday in town will be mostly sunny with a high of forty six. Sunrise is 7:07 and sunset is 7:00, for 11h 53m 13s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 41.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

It’s Pi Day today, and not just any Pi Day, but a particularly impressive one:

Saturday is Pi Day.

But not just any Pi Day.

It’s the mother of all Pi Days. Pi Day of the Century. Heck, Pi Day of the Millennium.

It’s 3-14-15 — as any good geek knows, a date that corresponds with 3.1415, the first five digits of the infinite number pi. That calendar coincidence has math fans practically wriggling with glee, not to mention those who just appreciate the whimsy of celebrating a number that sounds like pastry.

You might say that’s irrational. Mathematicians would agree.

And therein lies the delight of Pi Day.

You probably remember pi from grade school, but here’s a quick refresher: Pi is the number that approximates the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter. In other words, if you divide the circumference of any circle by its diameter, you always get pi, an irrational number that starts with 3.1415 and goes on forever. It shares its name with the 16th letter of the Greek alphabet.

The idea of celebrating Pi Day on March 14 — coincidentally, Albert Einstein’s birthday — started in the 1980s. The first large-scale celebration was organized in 1988 at the Exploratorium museum in San Francisco, and Pi Day got a boost two decades later when the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution supporting its celebration in 2009….

Delicious.