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Friday Poll: Civet Coffee

Over at the Huffington Post, there’s a story about a taste test of civet-poop coffee. Civets eat coffee beans, but digest them only imperfectly:

It comes from a bean that’s been swallowed and partially digested by a civet, a mammal native to parts of Asia and Africa that looks a bit like a cat but is more closely related to the mongoose.

The civet has a reputation for climbing trees to eat the best, hardest to reach coffee berries. At some magical, undocumented point in history, a truly disturbed person picked out the partially digested beans from the animal’s poo, and found that it was fermented to perfection in the varmint’s alimentary canal.

Now, farmers are harvesting these beans for big bucks. And, of course, we use the word “harvesting” to be polite.

But is it worth $55 or more for roughly two servings? Editors at The Huffington Post tested Doi Chaang Coffee Company’s civet coffee, and pitted it against Starbucks and 7-Eleven to see which hot drink is the crappiest (video above).

Taste-testers at the Huffington Post found the coffee delicious.

Would you try it?

I’ll say yes, I would. How about you?


Daily Bread for 7.19.13

Good morning.

One last day of consecutive temperatures in the nineties for Whitewater: a high of ninety-one with a one-third chance of early afternoon thunderstorms.

The European Space’s Agency’s satellite, Mars Express, offers sharp and stunning pictures of that planet’s surface:

On 7.19.1799, a profound discovery:

512px-Rosetta_Stone

On this day in 1799, during Napoleon Bonaparte’s Egyptian campaign, a French soldier discovers a black basalt slab inscribed with ancient writing near the town of Rosetta, about 35 miles north of Alexandria. The irregularly shaped stone contained fragments of passages written in three different scripts: Greek, Egyptian hieroglyphics and Egyptian demotic. The ancient Greek on the Rosetta Stone told archaeologists that it was inscribed by priests honoring the king of Egypt, Ptolemy V, in the second century B.C. More startlingly, the Greek passage announced that the three scripts were all of identical meaning. The artifact thus held the key to solving the riddle of hieroglyphics, a written language that had been “dead” for nearly 2,000 years.

Puzzability‘s current series, Switch Hitters, concludes today.

Switch Hitters
There are some changes in this week’s lineup. For each day, change a letter in each of the two words given and move the space to get the name of a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Example:
TOSS WAVER

Answer:
Tom Seaver

Here’s the puzzle for Friday:

ASK ALICE

Daily Bread for 7.18.13

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be sunny and hot, with a high of ninety-two.

There are comets, and then there are sungrazing comets:

In Wisconsin history, on 7.18.1865, some Wisconsin soldiers end their service to the Union:

1865 – (Civil War) Four Wisconsin regiments muster out
The 3rd and 18th Wisconsin Infantry regiments and the 1st and 6th Wisconsin Light Artillery batteries mustered out. For details on their service, see the Civil War Regiments page.

Puzzability‘s current series, Switch Hitters, continues its July 15-19 run.

Switch Hitters
There are some changes in this week’s lineup. For each day, change a letter in each of the two words given and move the space to get the name of a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Example:
TOSS WAVER

Answer:
Tom Seaver

Here’s the puzzle for Thursday:

CRY SUNG

Common Council Session of 7.16.13

A few items from a long Common Council session —

Council chose an appointee to fill the open Aldermanic District 1 seat. After an initial 3-3 vote between Philip Frawley and Tiiu Gray-Fow, Council selected Philip Frawley. The process – as with the one used last December – was a good one. Applications, speaking in open session, a vote: that’s open and informative, both. Best wishes to Mr. Frawley in the term ahead.

The East Gate Project. It’s lovely, and (sure enough) it will cost millions. It’s like a homeowner’s too-pricey remodel (only with public money): one can spend what one wants, but the expense will not be recouped.

The CDA’s proposed purchase of hundreds of acres of Whitewater’s public land for a dollar. There are two aspects to this proposal: those of policy and those of law. So far, there’s been principal discussion of it twice in Council (6.4.13 and last night, 7.16.13) and once at the CDA (6.27.13).

The proposal will go back to the CDA after last night’s review and direction session.

My take after a first review of what’s now transpired, including the discussion from last night: the policy claims in favor of the sale are diverse but sometimes contradictory (depending on which member of the CDA is advocating for it) but more significantly the legal due diligence required for the sale seems incomplete.

There’s time enough to organize all of the public videos and memoranda on the proposal (including last night’s video), and post on both aspects of it. It’s not that it can’t be done, but rather how it can be done, that matters (even if setting aside the policy question of whether it should be done).

All in all, a long summer evening that went about how one might have expected.

Daily Bread for 7.17.13

Good morning.

Wednesday brings a high of eighty-nine with a heat index of ninety-six. We’ve a one-in-ten chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm.

If people have been teasing you because you’ve never seen a video of foxes on a trampoline, then a single mouse click should improve that unfortunate situation:

On this day in 1955, a California theme park opens:

Disneyland, Walt Disney’s metropolis of nostalgia, fantasy, and futurism, opens on July 17, 1955. The $17 million theme park was built on 160 acres of former orange groves in Anaheim, California, and soon brought in staggering profits. Today, Disneyland hosts more than 14 million visitors a year, who spend close to $3 billion.

In Wisconsin history on 7.17.1995, a huge merger:

1995 – Scott Paper and Kimberly-Clark Merge
On this date, after months of negotiations, the merger of Scott Paper and Kimberly-Clark companies was announced. The $9.4 billion merger created a Fortune 100 global consumer products company with annual revenue of more than $13 billion. [Source: KimberlyClark.com]

Puzzability‘s current series, Switch Hitters, is at the middle of its July 15-19 run.

Switch Hitters
There are some changes in this week’s lineup. For each day, change a letter in each of the two words given and move the space to get the name of a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Example:
TOSS WAVER

Answer:
Tom Seaver

Here’s the puzzle for Wednesday:

HONK SWAGGER

Film: Free Showing of Honor Flight, Sunday, July 21st at 2:30 p.m.

20130716-123252.jpg

This Sunday, July 21st, there will be a showing of the film Honor Flight at 2:30 p.m. at Mulberry Glen, 1255 W. Main Street, Whitewater. It is being shown courtesy of Mulberry Glen and Capri Senior Communities.

The showing is free and open to the public.

Information regarding this film is available at the Internet Movie Data Base @ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2329758/.

Many of our local veterans that went on the Honor Flight would be interested in this film.

The viewing of this film last summer at Miller Park broke the Guiness World Book record for a movie premiere attendance!

20130716-123322.jpg

The CDA’s Possible Purchase of Hundreds of Acres of Whitewater’s Public Land for a Dollar

Council’s scheduled to address the possibility of selling hundreds of acres of public land to the Community Development Authority for a dollar ($1.00). (It’s Item C-9 on tonight’s agenda.)

The proposal’s been kicked around for months, but I’m curious if there’s been any positive headway since an April memo from the CDA’s Patrick Cannon, and discussions at Common Council and the CDA in June.

It’s an understatement to say that what’s been discussed so far presents questions both of policy and of permissible transfers under law.

Well worth hearing more about what’s being proposed.

On the East Gate Project

Whitewater’s administration proposes renovating the area on the east side of the city, through which commuters and visitors arrive in Whitewater. I’ve posted on the project before. (See, About that story on Whitewater’s East Gateway Proposal: What’s Missing?)

A few remarks:

1. The design is undeniably beautiful.

2. It would have been better to include the price prominently and initially in documents about the project. As for anyone outside the city, publicizing the project without asking and publishing an answer about the price is grossly negligent. Why bother reporting about municipal government if one simply acts as an agent of that government? (I well understand that’s the effectual truth, sadly.)

3. I’ve estimated the cost, based on the design, as well above a million dollars, and likely an appreciable multiple of a million. I’m confident that I’m right.

4. Whitewater will never get a measurable return on the East Gate investment. One may simply declare that the beautifcation was worth the cost of millions, but no one – no one in all the city – can show that millions for beautifcation paid for itself.

“If you build it, they will come” is a fine line from a baseball fantasy, but it has failed this city each time it’s been tried: Tax Incremental Districts, an Innovation Center, a Generac Bus, or WEDC grants.

They’ve all been gross wastes of money, and not one of them has performed as touted.

In fact, the actual fiscal condition of both our Tax Incremental Districts and Innovation Center is far worse than anyone in the city administration or among their reflexive boosters cares to admit. Concealing the truth is bad policy, and treats the public as trespassers to their own government.

5. If big projects have failed us (and they have), there’s still a better approach available to Whitewater: an improvement of relations between government and residents and government and businesses.

Latisha Birkeland, Director of Neighborhood Services, is the contact for the East Gate project. Someone was bound to have that role, and this project has been kicked around for years, long before Ms. Birkeland’s arrival.

We’ve not met, and it’s probably an understatement to say that she’s lost nothing by not having met me. (Truly, the substitution of personality for independent policy critiques of Whitewater’s municipal affairs has done us enormous harm.)

This city’s big-ticket investments have failed because they’ve been too big, ill-considered, and often simply grant grabs with the only real produce from them being grand headlines.

But I’d venture this claim: the modernization of Neighborhood Services that Ms. Birkeland’s achieved since her arrival has been genuine, and of more value to this city than the big-ticket items I’ve listed above.

Our success depends not on more of the same, but on something different: a change in the city government’s relation to others.

East Gate’s an attractive proposal, but we’ll not gain meaningfully from it, and certainly not at the price.

Daily Bread for 7.16.13

Good morning.

We’ll have a sunny and hot day in Whitewater, with a high of ninety, a heat index of ninety-six, and a ten percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms.

Common Council meets tonight at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1945, the first atomic bomb was successfully tested in New Mexico:

…at 5:29:45 a.m., the Manhattan Project comes to an explosive end as the first atom bomb is successfully tested in Alamogordo, New Mexico….

Finally, on the morning of July 16, in the New Mexico desert 120 miles south of Santa Fe, the first atomic bomb was detonated. The scientists and a few dignitaries had removed themselves 10,000 yards away to observe as the first mushroom cloud of searing light stretched 40,000 feet into the air and generated the destructive power of 15,000 to 20,000 tons of TNT. The tower on which the bomb sat when detonated was vaporized.

On this day in 1941, Wisconsin adds a wildlife refuge:

1941 – Horicon National Wildlife Refuge Established
On this date 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]

Puzzability‘s current series is Switch Hitters, running from July 15-19.

Switch Hitters
There are some changes in this week’s lineup. For each day, change a letter in each of the two words given and move the space to get the name of a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Example:
TOSS WAVER

Answer:
Tom Seaver

Here’s Tuesday’s puzzle:

ROUGE BRIG

About those four (or five) Common Council applicants

Tomorrow night, Whitewater will choose between four (or perhaps five) qualifying applicants for an appointment to an open council seat for Aldermanic District 1.

There are two quick points worth making.

First, there were five applicants, but only four written submissions received by the clearly-stated deadline. (The fifth application helpfully advised, in the would-be politician’s handwritten words, “I’m sorry I didn’t get this to you sooner, I was out of town on vacation.”) Oh, brother. Best to choose, truly, from among the four applicants who filed on time.

Second, about these candidates: what do you think matters most? Setting aside the minimum requirements of age, residency, etc., is it not what they believe – what they profess to do — that matters most?

It’s a loss to this city that publication of their candidacies on the Web and (even worse) in a local newspaper is simply a plain recitation of names, addresses, employers, past service, and membership in clubs and local organizations. (It says much about local newspaper coverage that reporting amounts to no more than listing the same information available on an application form, with not a single question about what an applicant’s ambitions might be.)

There’s some value to that plain list, but there’s more value still in asking what a would-be council member wants to do, what he or she would like to accomplish.

It’s the answer to that relevant and material question that matters most, and that should guide Council’s selection on Tuesday night.

‘The Sweetest Comeback in the History of Ever’

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Americans may love a winner, but that definition also includes, I think, those who bounce back from adversity.

Twinkies are back, in stores across the country, at a list price of $2.98 for a box of ten.

(If they seem smaller, and have an even longer shelf life, the new owners insist it’s the result of changes the pastry’s former owners made just before entering bankruptcy in 2012.)

What are they like? Having tried two – it would be unsound to sample just one — I can assure readers that they taste just how you remember them to have tasted, however that may have been.

Posted also @ Daily Adams.