Public Meetings
Library Board
by JOHN ADAMS •
Recent Tweets, 9.8 to 9.14
by JOHN ADAMS •
The Creative, Cheesy Solution to Icy Roads | FREE WHITEWATER http://t.co/ciTUnGqjJv
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 14, 2013
"A shield law for journalists might seem like a good idea, but it isn’t — it’s actually a terrible idea" http://t.co/L8SiYAuxfv
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 13, 2013
"Why The NSA Must Be Reined In — For Democracy's Sake" http://t.co/QyqYkhXcTg
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 13, 2013
Alternative headline: Agrees w/ Most Americans 'Paul Ryan opposes Obama plan on #Syria' http://t.co/okrX3r9kaW
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 11, 2013
Anti-Customer Airlines Are Going Broke – http://t.co/XzOrpTSUfy
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 10, 2013
Obama's Case for Syria Didn't Reflect Intel Consensus http://t.co/9kkFMfJS0B
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 10, 2013
Harry Reid Delays #Syria Test Vote In Senate http://t.co/F09JAGXbr4
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 9, 2013
27 Reasons The Great Lakes Are Actually The Greatest (PHOTOS) http://t.co/aj46zvTo2j
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 9, 2013
Nanny city: D.C. Council Worries You Aren’t Thinking Enough About That Tattoo, Wants You to Wait a Day – http://t.co/Ck8sYYMoP4”
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 9, 2013
World's Largest Cave, Son Doong in Vietnam, Prepping For First Public Tours http://t.co/VblgSDYCE9
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 9, 2013
Little Rock school district to make teachers wear underwear http://t.co/DuQY6lRjUL
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 9, 2013
Whip Count: Obama's Syria war resolution headed for defeat | United Liberty | http://t.co/ZAUua22ygN
— John Adams (@DailyAdams) September 8, 2013
Animation, Film
Sunday Morning Animation: Sunset
by JOHN ADAMS •
SUNSET from cento lodigiani on Vimeo.
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 9.15.13
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
We’ll have rain today in the Whippet City, with a high of fifty-nine. We can expect between a quarter and a half inch of rain.
Server upgrade: Over the night, my sites saw their second server upgrade in a year, to keep up with traffic. FREE WHITEWATER, Daily Wisconsin, and Daily Adams now have a spiffy new server, replacing an earlier upgrade from 2012.
Everything’s working properly. I owe it all to the very fine people who host these sites, who have always provided the best care one could find. They’ve stood behind me for years, and I with them. Many thanks, Annette.
On this day in 1914, combatants begin digging trenches along the front lines during World War I:
In the wake of the Battle of the Marne—during which Allied troops halted the steady German push through Belgium and France that had proceeded over the first month of World War I—a conflict both sides had expected to be short and decisive turns longer and bloodier, as Allied and German forces begin digging the first trenches on the Western Front on September 15, 1914.
The trench system on the Western Front in World War I—fixed from the winter of 1914 to the spring of 1918—eventually stretched from the North Sea coast of Belgium southward through France, with a bulge outwards to contain the much-contested Ypres salient. Running in front of such French towns as Soissons, Reims, Verdun, St. Mihiel and Nancy, the system finally reached its southernmost point in Alsace, at the Swiss border. In total the trenches built during World War I, laid end-to-end, would stretch some 25,000 miles—12,000 of those miles occupied by the Allies, and the rest by the Central Powers.
On this day in 1832, a treaty with the Ho Chunk is inked:
1832 – Ho-Chunk Treaty Signed
On this date a a treaty was signed between the Ho-Chunk and the United States that stipulated that the Ho-Chunk cede lands lying to the south and east of the Wisconsin river as well as lands around the Fox river of Green Bay. [Source:Oklahoma State University Library]
Agriculture, Good Ideas
The Creative, Cheesy Solution to Icy Roads
by JOHN ADAMS •
Here’s a creative way to make use of Wisconsin’s prodigious cheese production:
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 9.14.13
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
We’ll have a sunny Saturday with a high near seventy and southwest winds of 5 to 10 mph.
On this day in 1875, one of Wisconsin’s finest scientists passes away:
1875 – Increase Lapham Dies While Fishing
On this date Increase Lapham died of a heart attack while fishing in Oconomowoc. Lapham served Wisconsin as a geologist, meteorologist, historian, archivist, anthropologist, and scientist.He helped found the State Historical Society and served on its board for 22 years. He helped establish the National Weather Service and worked to preserve Native American burial mounds, as well as the forests and prairies of Wisconsin. He also helped establish hospitals for the blind, deaf, and mentally ill in Milwaukee and to start two women’s colleges, Carroll College and Milwaukee-Downer College. [Source: Badger Saints and Sinners; by Fred L. Holmes, p.330-344]
Of science, one reads that an artist, using data from the European Southern Observatory and NASA, has created a rendering of the Milky Way galaxy:

“We find that the inner region of our Galaxy has the shape of a peanut in its shell from the side, and of a highly elongated bar from above”, adds Ortwin Gerhard, the coauthor of the first paper and leader of the Dynamics Group at MPE [3]. “It is the first time that we can see this clearly in our own Milky Way, and simulations in our group and by others show that this shape is characteristic of a barred galaxy that started out as a pure disc of stars.”
Beautiful, almost hauntingly so.
Cats
Friday Catblogging: Cat Treadmill
by JOHN ADAMS •
Poll
Friday Poll: World’s Smallest Dog? I’m not so sure about that….
by JOHN ADAMS •
One reads that Milly is the world’s smallest dog by the Guinness Record Book’s estimation:

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico can now boast it is home to the world’s smallest dog – at least when it comes to height.
The brown Chihuahua named Miracle Milly is shorter than a soup can, standing at 3.8 inches (9.65 centimeters) tall when measured from backbone to paw, Guinness World Records announced Thursday.
She is nearly 2 years old, weighs roughly 1 pound (half a kilogram) and is known for often sticking out her tiny tongue when someone takes her picture.
“She knows how to pose,” owner Vanesa Semler told The Associated Press.
Miracle Milly dethroned Boo Boo, a long-haired Chihuahua from Kentucky that stands 4 inches (10.16 centimeters) tall.
Guinness also has a second category for world’s smallest dog when measured by length. That title is held by Heaven Sent Brandy, a Chihuahua in Largo, Florida, that measures 6 inches (15.24 centimeters) long.
So, here’s the question (and my second-consecutive dog-related poll): Is Milly really a dog, or do you think she’s actually some kind of smaller animal merely posing as a dog (e.g., rat, hairless squirrel, extraterrestrial creature, Russian science experiment gone wrong)? I’m going with extraterrestrial creature.
What do you think?
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 9.13.13
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
It’s a beautiful and sunny Friday for Whitewater, with a high of sixty-three. Lovely.
On this day in 1814, during the War of 1812, Francis SCott Key writes a poem later that becomes our national anthem:
…Francis Scott Key pens a poem which is later set to music and in 1931 becomes America’s national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The poem, originally titled “The Defence of Fort McHenry,” was written after Key witnessed the Maryland fort being bombarded by the British during the War of 1812. Key was inspired by the sight of a lone U.S. flag still flying over Fort McHenry at daybreak, as reflected in the now-famous words of the “Star-Spangled Banner”: “And the rocket’s red glare, the bombs bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.”
After one of Key’s friends, Dr. William Beanes, was taken prisoner by the British, Key went to Baltimore, located the ship where Beanes was being held and negotiated his release. However, Key and Beanes weren’t allowed to leave until after the British bombardment of Fort McHenry. Key watched the bombing campaign unfold from aboard a ship located about eight miles away. After a day, the British were unable to destroy the fort and gave up. Key was relieved to see the American flag still flying over Fort McHenry and quickly penned a few lines in tribute to what he had witnessed….
Branford Marsalis offers a jazz version of the anthem:
Scientific American offers a trivia question about sound, whether of jazz or anthems or anything else (clicking the question link leads to the answer):
Rhetoric, Writing
Totally like whatever, you know?
by JOHN ADAMS •
It’s a great help, as Taylor Mali contends, to be clear and to speak with conviction.
Enjoy.
Anderson, Cartoons & Comics
Honey
by JOHN ADAMS •
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 9.12.13
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
We’ll have a sunny Thursday with a high of seventy-eight. Sunrise is 6:32 AM and sunset 7:10 PM.

On this day in 1940, remarkable cave paintings are discovered in France:
Near Montignac, France, a collection of prehistoric cave paintings are discovered by four teenagers who stumbled upon the ancient artwork after following their dog down a narrow entrance into a cavern. The 15,000- to 17,000-year-old paintings, consisting mostly of animal representations, are among the finest examples of art from the Upper Paleolithic period.
First studied by the French archaeologist Henri-Édouard-Prosper Breuil, the Lascaux grotto consists of a main cavern 66 feet wide and 16 feet high. The walls of the cavern are decorated with some 600 painted and drawn animals and symbols and nearly 1,500 engravings. The pictures depict in excellent detail numerous types of animals, including horses, red deer, stags, bovines, felines, and what appear to be mythical creatures. There is only one human figure depicted in the cave: a bird-headed man with an erect phallus. Archaeologists believe that the cave was used over a long period of time as a center for hunting and religious rites.
The Lascaux grotto was opened to the public in 1948 but was closed in 1963 because artificial lights had faded the vivid colors of the paintings and caused algae to grow over some of them. A replica of the Lascaux cave was opened nearby in 1983 and receives tens of thousands of visitors annually.
On 9.12.1892, UW-Madison opens some new schools:
1892 – UW-Madison Schools Open
On this date the School of Economics, Political Science and History at UW-Madison opened under the leadership of Professor Richard T. Ely. [Source: University of Wisconsin-Madison]
For Thursday, here’s a Scientific American trivia question about bears. (Clicking the question below takes you to the answer on the SciAm website.)
Restaurant, Review
Review: Taco Fresco
by JOHN ADAMS •

Whitewater has a few Mexican restaurants, and now has another: Taco Fresco, at 175 W Main Street. For those who are wondering whether Whitewater can have too many Mexican restaurants, I’ll suggest that the answer’s no, as long as the restaurants are good ones.
Taco Fresco is a new one, and happily a good one.
Someone at a public meeting remarked a few month ago, I think, that Taco Fresco’s fare was “pretty good.” No need for the limiting modifier: it’s simply good.
I found myself really enjoying the fish taco, with fresh ingredients, including a notably pleasant use of mango salsa. The menu lists market fish, and mine was tilapia. That’s a fish that can be cheaply bought and so may be risky, but not here: the selection was perfectly good, and properly served. I’d easily recommend it – you’ll be pleased, I’m confident.
The chef proudly recommended his guacamole on my first visit, and he was right to do so: it is as advertised, “traditionally made, delicious and fresh.” Guacamole can be an acquired taste, but it only needs acquiring if it’s been made in vast batches and left to sit, as though it were Miracle Whip in a jar. One often has to visit a half-dozen restaurants before finding a tasty preparation.
There are none of those unfortunate concoctions at Taco Fresco: this was some of the best guacamole I’ve had anywhere, including older and more established restaurants. It’s easily the best in Whitewater.
You’ll find on the menu a few starters (queso, guac, ceviche), tacos (fish, pork among them), fajitas, burritos, Mexican soda, beer, and flavored water. The menu board on my visits didn’t seem to list desserts, but ask and you’ll likely find something agreeable on offer.
This is a new restaurant, with the sparse furnishings of many new places starting out, and perhaps on a budget. Forget all that – it’s a simple and functional dining room, of a restaurant that serves well-prepared tacos and other Mexican dishes with an obvious respect for fresh food.
While there, you’ll probably see people arriving for take-out. They know a good thing when they’ve found it.
Taco Fresco lives up to its promise: “a modern taco place, classic recipes with modern twists.”
Yes, and happily so.
Recommended. Go and have some of these attentively-prepared, lively offerings.
Enjoy.
LOCATION: 175 W Main St Whitewater, Whitewater, WI 53190 (262) 458-2167.
OPEN: Hours most days 10 AM – 9 PM, and closed Sunday.
PRICES: Main dish and a drink for about $7.
RESERVATIONS: Unnecessary.
DRINKS: Domestic and Mexican sodas and beer, flavored water.
SOUND: Light, from a small dining room.
SERVICE: Friendly and attentive.
VISITS: Three (Twice for supper, once for lunch).
RATING: Recommended.
RATING SCALE: From one to four stars, representing the full experience of food, atmosphere, service, and pricing.
INDEPENDENCE: This review is delivered without financial or other connection to the establishment or its owner. The dining experience was that of an ordinary patron, without notice to the staff or requests for special consideration.

