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Daily Bread for 4.27.14

Good morning.

We’ve a forty-percent chance of scattered showers today (with a hundred-percent chance tonight). Otherwise, Sunday will be cloudy with a high of fifty-two.

What was spring break like in the 1950s? Here’s how Chevrolet depicted it:

On this day in 1963, Dave Brubeck plays Beloit:

1963 – Dave Brubeck Performs at Beloit College
On this date jazz legend Dave Brubeck brought his quartet to Beloit College for a concert in the field house. [Source: Janesville Gazette]

Here’s Brubeck’s Bossa Nova U.S.A. from At Carnegie Hall, recorded in ’63:

Daily Bread for 4.26.14

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of fifty-six. Sunrise is 5:56 AM and sunset 7:50 PM. The moon is a waning crescent with only eight-percent of its visible disk illuminated.

In yesterday’s FW poll, Friday Poll: Brewers – Good or Lucky?, 50% of respondents weren’t sure, 29.17% said good, and 20.83% said lucky.

In Underlapse, French filmmakers Claire & Max show what the world would look like in time-lapse, if one viewed the passing scene while upside down. They call their work an ‘antigravity visual experience’ —

On this day in 1954, significant medial trials begin:

…the Salk polio vaccine field trials, involving 1.8 million children, begin at the Franklin Sherman Elementary School in McLean, Virginia. Children in the United States, Canada and Finland participated in the trials, which used for the first time the now-standard double-blind method, whereby neither the patient nor attending doctor knew if the inoculation was the vaccine or a placebo. On April 12, 1955, researchers announced the vaccine was safe and effective and it quickly became a standard part of childhood immunizations in America. In the ensuing decades, polio vaccines would all but wipe out the highly contagious disease in the Western Hemisphere….

Friday Poll: Brewers – Good or Lucky?

180px-Milwaukee_Brewers_Logo.svg

Now at 16-6 (.727), with about a month on the season – are the Brewers a good (and so much improved) team, or just lucky?

April is sometimes an uncharacteristically strong month for Milwaukee, with the rest of the season descending from there. Still, I’ll say good and improved, with a solid chance to be a competitive team in ’14.


Daily Bread for 4.25.14

Good morning.

Friday will become increasingly sunny, with a high of sixty-four.

On this day in 1990, America places the Hubble Space Telescope in orbit:

The crew of the U.S. space shuttle Discovery places the Hubble Space Telescope, a long-term space-based observatory, into a low orbit around Earth.

The space telescope, conceived in the 1940s, designed in the 1970s, and built in the 1980s, was designed to give astronomers an unparalleled view of the solar system, the galaxy, and the universe. Initially, Hubble’s operators suffered a setback when a lens aberration was discovered, but a repair mission by space-walking astronauts in December 1993 successfully fixed the problem, and Hubble began sending back its first breathtaking images of the universe.

Free of atmospheric distortions, Hubble has a resolution 10 times that of ground-based observatories. About the size of a bus, the telescope is solar-powered and orbits Earth once every 97 minutes. Among its many astronomical achievements, Hubble has been used to record a comet’s collision with Jupiter, provide a direct look at the surface of Pluto, view distant galaxies, gas clouds, and black holes, and see billions of years into the universe’s past.

(The video lists the Hubble’s orbit as beginning on 4.24.1990, but it was not released from the Discovery until 4.25.)

On this day in 1996, Gov. Thompson signs welfare reform into law:

1996 – W-2 (Wisconsin Works) Signed Into Law
On this date Governor Tommy Thompson signed the W-2 (Wisconsin Works) program into law, making Wisconsin the first U.S. state to replace a benefits-based welfare system with a requirement that recipients work to get aid. W-2 formed the basis for national welfare reform.[Source:Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Tommy G. Thompson Center]

Puzzability concludes its Mark Antonyms series with Friday’s game:

This Week’s Game — April 21-25
Mark Antonyms
We’ve searched high and low for this week’s opposites. For each day, we’ll give definitions of two words that, using different meanings, are antonyms of each other.
Example:
Strange / smooth
Answer:
Odd / even
What to Submit:
Submit the antonym pair (as “Odd / even” in the example) for your answer.
Friday, April 25
Jump from surprise / coat of lacquer

The Whitewater Schools’ Budget Cuts

Whitewater, and many other public schools, this spring find themselves cutting local budgets, and reducing employment to do so.  Neither state reductions to collective bargaining nor successful local spending referenda in Whitewater and other communities were able to offset the need for subsequent cuts.

A few remarks on policy and politics:

1.  The Center Fails Again.  When Democrats controlled state government, Republicans were sure that it was wrong to regulate all the state from the capitol building; now that the GOP runs state government, they’ve forgotten their former opposition to central control, and it’s Democrats who have embraced that line of criticism.

Part of the rationale for restrictions in union benefits for public school employees was to create a new equilibrium in which reductions in bargaining power imposed throughout Wisconsin from Madison would assure that local districts would find a new status quo of reduced compensation in exchange for stable employee rosters.

It hasn’t happened; a plan so sweeping and general never will.

2.  State Spending is Still High, but Redistributed.  It’s not true that state government is spending less – state government is spending more than ever, but on different priorities.  Consider our current state budget:

New figures from the state’s Legislative Fiscal Bureau (LFB) show that the 2013-15 budget approved by the Joint Committee on Finance (JCF) would spend $4 billion (6.2%) more than was authorized in the 2011-13 state budget. Since final spending figures for 2012-13 are not in yet, we compare the proposed state budget to 2011-12 and 2012-13 amounts authorized two years ago.  The JCF budget proposes to spend $68.3 billion in 2013-15 compared to $66.1 billion during 2011-13.

Those are huge sums, greater even than the previous biennial budget – spending’s up, and simply redistributed to different priorities

Update, 12:50, to be clear: Wisconsin’s not out of money – changes from the last state administration to this one are redistributions among options. The real question: on what will any given state administration spend taxpayer revenue (schools, roads, tax reduction, etc., and in which proportions to other items)?

3.  Disequilibrium is the New Normal.  These fiscal conditions will persist for years to come, in which there will be continual gaps between revenue and expenses.  In fact, the claim that Wisconsin has solved a problem of structural budget deficits (a budgetary shortfall that persists for multiple budgets) is overly optimistic

Finally, LFB figures show the JCF budget would mark the return of structural imbalances—but on a smaller scale than for budgets approved during 1995-2011. During those years, first-year structural imbalances ranged from $589 million to $1.3 billion. The 2011-13 budget created a structural surplus heading into this budget. However, if the JCF budget is approved, lawmakers would face a $202 million first-year imbalance heading into the 2015-17 biennium.

4.  The Politics of It All.  There’s gain in showing that districts are willing to take steps to balance budgets without additional debt-spending. 

There’s a risk in this, however, for any organization that commits to regular staff reductions to make budget (just as there would be to regular program cuts, building closures, etc.): people are naturally wary of organizations or companies that seem in disarray or decline. 

That’s the damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t dilemma for district officials: neither frequent use of debt measures nor frequent staff cuts are reassuring.  (One recourse or the other is bound to upset some significant number of residents.) 

We’re a society that expects growth, and quick rebounds from bad times – it’s why the sluggish recovery has been so unsettling to so many. 

In these conditions, the best posture toward the community is not one of confident declarations, nor of discussions of cuts alone, but of a repeated discussion of programs and fiscal cuts, together.  (See, on this point, Lead Substantively, Support Fiscally.)

This should be a combined discussion repeated so often that no one expects any other approach: here’s what we’re doing programmatically day-in, day-out, here’s what we’re reducing by necessity, here’s why we’re reducing, here’s what those reductions mean.

It’s neither good policy nor good politics to separate ongoing work (many continuing programs) from costs or expense reductions in these topics – bifurcated discussions will prove a mistake, working a cumulative erosion of a community’s confidence.

One should expect, really, these fiscal conditions – and discussions about them – to persist in Wisconsin, for years to come. 

Daily Bread for 4.24.14

Good morning.

Whitewater will have an even chance of afternoon showers today, with a high of fifty-eight.

The Tech Park Board meets today at 8 AM.

On this day in 1800, the Library of Congress is born:

…legislation to appropriate $5,000 to purchase “such books as may be necessary for the use of Congress,” thus establishing the Library of Congress. The first books, ordered from London, arrived in 1801 and were stored in the U.S. Capitol, the library’s first home. The first library catalog, dated April 1802, listed 964 volumes and nine maps. Twelve years later, the British army invaded the city of Washington and burned the Capitol, including the then 3,000-volume Library of Congress.

Former president Thomas Jefferson, who advocated the expansion of the library during his two terms in office, responded to the loss by selling his personal library, the largest and finest in the country, to Congress to “recommence” the library. The purchase of Jefferson’s 6,487 volumes was approved in the next year, and a professional librarian, George Watterston, was hired to replace the House clerks in the administration of the library. In 1851, a second major fire at the library destroyed about two-thirds of its 55,000 volumes, including two-thirds of the Thomas Jefferson library. Congress responded quickly and generously to the disaster, and within a few years a majority of the lost books were replaced.

After the Civil War, the collection was greatly expanded, and by the 20th century the Library of Congress had become the de facto national library of the United States and one of the largest in the world. Today, the collection, housed in three enormous buildings in Washington, contains more than 17 million books, as well as millions of maps, manuscripts, photographs, films, audio and video recordings, prints, and drawings.

On this day in 1977, Whitewater loses an establishment:

1977 – Morris Pratt Institute of Spiritualism Moves to Waukesha
On this date the Morris Pratt Institute, dedicated to the study of Spiritualism and Mediumship, moved from Whitewater to Waukesha. Founded in 1888 and incorporated in 1901, it was one of the few institutes in the world that instructed spiritualists. These were people “who believe as the basis of his or her religion, in the communication between this and the Spirit World by means of mediumship and who endeavors to mould his or her character and conduct in accordance with the highest teachings derived from such communication.” [Source: Morris Pratt Institute]

Here’s Puzzability‘s Thursday game:

This Week’s Game — April 21-25
Mark Antonyms
We’ve searched high and low for this week’s opposites. For each day, we’ll give definitions of two words that, using different meanings, are antonyms of each other.
Example:
Strange / smooth
Answer:
Odd / even
What to Submit:
Submit the antonym pair (as “Odd / even” in the example) for your answer.
Thursday, April 24
Flatland / quite like

The Nuttiness from the Janesville Schools (and what it says about Janesville’s culture)

Over at the Gazette, there’s a story about that city’s latest public school program: enticing fee-paying foreign students to study in the Janesville public schools.  Not content with attracting Chinese students, Superintendent Karen Schulte traveled to see if she could learn a few multicultural insights in Abu Dhabi.

Yes, that’s the one-and-only Abu Dhabi, of the United Arab Emirates.  

(See, subscription required, Janesville School District exploring more partnerships abroad.)

There’s so much talk about how Schulte used mostly non-taxpayer funds, and traveled on her vacation time.  I’m sure that’s true, but it’s still a profoundly misguided effort.

Problems abound:

1.  The Program.  Almost every element of the program to bring foreign students (Chinese students in particular) to Janesville has been touted much and first, but considered little and afterward.  (See, Janesville Schools’ Reckless Plan.)

2. Undistinguished.  Honest to goodness, there’s no ready evidence that Superintendent Schulte is notably distinguished in thinking or composition.  Under those circumstances, it’s far better for her to stick to the basics. 

3.  Misunderstanding Waste.  When Janesville’s superintendent insists that her trip was funded (principally) with private funds, on her own time, she misses the point of the true cost of her trip – it’s not merely what was spent, but all those things she might have done instead.

Rather than travel about a hereditary Arab monarchy, looking at the ruling family’s petrodollar kingdom, she might have thought at least a little about practical projects for Janesville’s academic improvement.

If she wanted to see something lovely from that part of the world, she could have waited for my 4.22.14 post,  Film: Welcome to Doha for three minutes, fifty seconds of video of Doha, Qatar. 

Note to Superintendent Schulte:  You’re welcome. 

4.  Worried Witless.  How desperately scared for the future are Janesville’s residents that at least a few of them entertain these asinine projects?  

It’s a diluted concoction of vile elements, when the community deserves a healthful, tried-and-true medicine. 

An American community deserves better than a contemporary equivalent of dark, dank, nineteenth-century English hucksterism. 

5.  Bad Examples.  Other communities would emulate this approach only at risk, most especially to any foreign students not supported and nurtured properly. 

These are not shipments of consumer electronics and plastic toys – bringing large numbers into our area for extended periods deserves more care than a flitting bureaucrat’s yet shown.  This is no established, laudable foreign-exchange program – it’s a flimsily constructed project with minor children as a commodity. 

Americans do and should welcome exchanges with friendly peoples from around the globe, in education, science, art, and free trade.  Those positive encounters are far removed from a cobbled-together program.  

The only example this sets for our community is a bad one: to look at this, and make sure we don’t do the same. 

Janesville may be bigger than Whitewater, but in politics, in understanding of a sound political economy, and in education, that city’s leading figures are increasingly confused or wrong. 

Daily Bread for 4.23.14

Good morning.

Wednesday in the Whippet City will be increasingly cloudy with a high of fifty-five.

Whitewater’s public meetings today show the gap between existing independent businesses and government-backed (and wasteful) efforts to manipulate the local economy to the advantage of insiders’ preferred projects.

Downtown Whitewater’s Board meets at 8 AM, and later today at 3:30 PM the Community Development Authority’s Seed Capital ‘Screening Committee’ meets, followed by a CDA board meeting at 5 PM.

On this day in 1934, a crook gets away:

1934 – FBI rousts Dillinger from Little Bohemia Lodge
On this day the FBI raided the Little Bohemia Lodge in Manitowish Waters, Vilas Co. They had been tipped off that gangster John Dillinger was hiding at Little Bohemia, but during their raid an innocent Civilian Conservation Corps worker was killed and Dillinger escaped.

Twenty years to the day later, something much better:

1954 – Aaron Hits First Big League Home Run
On this date Hank Aaron, playing for the Milwaukee Braves, hit his first major league home run. Twenty years later he broke Babe Ruth’s career home run record of 714. Aaron ended his career with 755 home runs, a record that stood until 2007. [Source: Sporting News]

Here’s Wednesday’s Puzzability game:

This Week’s Game — April 21-25
Mark Antonyms
We’ve searched high and low for this week’s opposites. For each day, we’ll give definitions of two words that, using different meanings, are antonyms of each other.
Example:
Strange / smooth
Answer:
Odd / even
What to Submit:
Submit the antonym pair (as “Odd / even” in the example) for your answer.
Wednesday, April 23
Acknowledge applause / forbiddingly serious