supporters of

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Support The Web Site

Every one should quickly click on the following link and purchase this book. Come on show the love. You deserve the best so don't settle for the $7,000 2nd hand version.



Who doesn't want to learn more about Chemical Shifts and Coupling Constants for Silicon-29. Some people say this book is too commercial but for the month of February you get FREE SHIPPING.

Just look at what other readers had to say about this amazing offer.
First off, wow....just, wow. I used to think that my life was going nowhere, but I don't think I am going too far when I say that this book is a literary orgasm. I know, I know, you've read everything there is on Amazon and all you gained was 200 pounds, but this book changes everything; my sister tried to read the table of contents and her head exploded. True story

****************
Now Granted, some people chide this epic for being "too commercial," calling it the "Harry Potter of Chemical Shifts and Coupling Constants for Silicon-29," but let me assure you, the depth and scope of Gupta's insight is a blessing on all of mankind. I divorced my wife of 38 years the moment I opened the shrink wrap on this bad boy, for this book provides all the emotional and physical sustenance you will ever need. $8,539 for complete, unadulterated companionship? You win, Mr. Gupta, put me down for six.

In short, move over, Joyce, and dunk your head in the toilet, Tolstoy, there's a new sheriff in town.
*************
I had to install a new shower in my bathroom , but I never used silicon caulk before. So I bought this "User Manual" for silicon 29 and boy what a mistake. You always hear that construction projects, even small ones, go way over budget but this one takes the cake. Oh sure, the shower came out fine, but for the same cost I could've had the entire bathroom renovated by a pro.

When Cults Collide

Al Gore cries

From the Daily Telegraph
Recycling could be adding to global warming rather than reducing it, a key [UK] government adviser on waste management has said. Peter Jones suggested that an "urgent" review of Labour's policy on recycling was needed to make sure the collection, transportation and processing of recyclable material was not causing a net increase in greenhouse gases. Mr Jones, a former director of the waste firm Biffa and now an adviser to environment ministers and the London Mayor, Boris Johnson, also dismissed kerbside recycling collections in many areas as "stupid" because they mixed together different materials, rendering them useless for recycling. He suggested that much of the country's waste should simply be burnt to generate electricity.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Stimulus, Illustrated

From Suitably Flip

The smallest part of the package is the money tagged for infrastructure and energy efficiency, you know the stimulative part.

Budget Workshop

The budget workshop for 2009-10 will be held following the regular board meeting next Monday, Feb.2nd. The workshop was canceled Wednesday due to the weather related closing of schools.

Great School Rankings

High School Rating TPS
Wilson High School 9 16
Wyomissing Area Junior/Senior High School 9 13
Boyertown Area Senior High School 8 17
Schuylkill Valley High School 8 14
Brandywine Heights High School 7 14
Governor Mifflin Senior High School 7 15
Muhlenberg High School 7 17
Oley Valley Senior High School 7 15
Twin Valley High School 7 14
Conrad Weiser High School 6 15
Exeter Township Senior High School 6 17
Fleetwood Senior High School 6 14
Hamburg Area High School 6 17
Daniel Boone Area High School 5 17
Kutztown Area Senior High School 5 13
Tulpehocken Junior/Senior High School 5 13
Antietam Middle School/High School 2 12
Reading Senior High School 1 21


Source: Great School
Ratings: In calculating these ratings, GreatSchools analyzed the 2007-2008 Pennsylvania System of State Assessments (PSSA) reading, writing and math results for the school and compared them to the PSSA results for all Pennsylvania schools with the same grade levels.
TPS:This shows the number of students per full-time equivalent (FTE) teacher. A low student-teacher ratio is not the same as a small class size. Some schools have teachers who teach specialized subjects with smaller classes. Other schools hire extra teachers to free up class preparation time for their core teaching staff. Both of these possibilities lower the overall student-teacher ratio but not the average class size.

Note that student-teacher ratios based upon FTE teachers can be exceedingly high for schools that have a large number of part-time teachers. If, for example, a small school has four part-time teachers at 25%, the student-teacher ratio at this school would be calculated based upon one teacher instead of four (because four teachers at 25% is equal to one full-time teacher). This in turn will make the student-teacher ratio appear higher than it really is. If your school has an exceptionally high student-teacher ratio, check with your school principal for an explanation.



Change

We can’t drive our SUVs and, you know, eat as much as we want and keep our homes on, you know, 72 degrees at all times, whether we’re living in the desert or we’re living in the tundra and then just expect every other country is going to say OK, you know, you guys go ahead keep on using 25 percent of the world’s energy, even though you only account for 3 percent of the population, and we’ll be fine. Don’t worry about us. That’s not leadership. - Candidate Obama May 2008.

"My children's school was canceled today, because of what? Some ice," Obama said, and all at the table started laughing.

"As my children pointed out, in Chicago school is never canceled," he continued. He said that in their old hometown, "you'd go outside for recess in weather like this. You wouldn't even stay indoors."

The President said he would have to bring "some flinty Chicago toughness" to Washington.

Asked if he was calling Washingtonians wimps, Obama responded: "I'm saying that when it comes to the weather, folks in Washington don't seem to be able to handle things."- President Obama Jan 2009

Jan. 28, 2009 New York Times
WASHINGTON — The capital flew into a bit of a tizzy when, on his first full day in the White House, President Obama was photographed in the Oval Office without his suit jacket. There was, however, a logical explanation: Mr. Obama, who hates the cold, had cranked up the thermostat.

“He’s from Hawaii, O.K.?” said Mr. Obama’s senior adviser, David Axelrod, who occupies the small but strategically located office next door to his boss. “He likes it warm. You could grow orchids in there.”

Thursday, January 29, 2009

A History Lesson Fron The 1980's

We may not have the flying car but you can read a newspaper by a computer at least while they are still in business.

Guess they should have reconsidered that statement about not being in it for the money and maybe they should have put some ads in the download. The rotary phone was the strangest contraption shown.

The George And Bill Show

41 and 42 take their act on the road.

Taxpayer Help

Rep. John Carter, a Texas Republican, has introduced a new bill for helping taxpayers who are behind in their payments.

"Rangel Rule"

All U.S. taxpayers would enjoy the same immunity from IRS penalties and interest as House Ways and Means Chairman Charles Rangel (D-NY) and Obama Administration Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, if a bill introduced today by Congressman John Carter (R-TX) becomes law.

Carter, a former longtime Texas judge, today introduced the Rangel Rule Act of 2009, HR 735, which would prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from charging penalties and interest on back taxes against U.S. citizens. Under the proposed law, any taxpayer who wrote “Rangel Rule” on their return when paying back taxes would be immune from penalties and interest.

Nuclear checkout

Berkeley's public library will face a showdown with the city's Peace and Justice Commission tonight over whether a service contract for the book check-out system violates the city's nuclear-free ordinance.
About time those nuclear proliferating enabling public libraries were held accountable for their actions. They risk world peace just for the luxury of self checkout. The checkout devices may not be using any nuclear material but 3M the company that services them refuses to sign a nuclear-free disclosure form. What is Big Tape hiding? Now if they would only go after hospitals and dental offices who are constantly nuking innocent citizens, including the children.

When is this area going to stop worrying about mundane issues like taxes and form our own Peace and Justice Commission?

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Happy Birthday Mozard

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born on this date in 1756. Mozart died in December, 1791 - not even surviving to reach his 36th birthday.

Coach Fired After A 100 - 0 Win

Seems like the coach pass the thin line between a winner and being a total asshat. Nothing wrong with playing with full intensity but the coach really should have cleared his bench and used the game to give the rest of the team more experience.

The coach of a Texas high school basketball team that beat another team 100-0 was fired Sunday, the same day he sent an e-mail to a newspaper saying he will not apologize “for a wide-margin victory when my girls played with honor and integrity.”

Kyle Queal, the headmaster for Covenant School, said in The Dallas Morning News online edition that he could not answer if the firing was a direct result of coach Micah Grimes’ e-mail disagreeing with administrators who called the blowout “shameful.”…

A parent who attended the game said Covenant continued to make 3-pointers — even in the fourth quarter. She praised the Covenant players but said spectators and an assistant coach were cheering wildly as their team edged closer to 100 points.

Covenant was up 59-0 at halftime.

...

Dallas Academy has eight girls on its varsity team and about 20 girls in its high school. It is winless over the last four seasons. The academy boasts of its small class sizes and specializes in teaching students struggling with "learning differences," such as short attention spans or dyslexia.




Lookybook

When buying a children's book, especially on the web you no longer have to judge it by the cover.
Lookybook posts the full contents of hundreds of children's books on line and.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Adopt A Bubba Dog

The Washington Post on the difficulties of finding a suitable family dog in a northern animal shelter. Seems the neutering program has been such a success that they are actually running out of good stray dogs. Urban northern shelters are overrun with pit bulls along with a high percentage of dogs that have been neglected or abused suffering from canine post-traumatic stress syndrome.

People in the South don't like restrictions on the sex lives of their pets any more than they like zoning laws or gun control. This results in both a higher rate of dogs being euthanize and more family friendly dogs available for adoption. Southern rescue groups are now even exporting dogs for northern suburbanites.

The Family Business

A letter threatening the life of Andrew Jackson has been verified as being written by Junius Brutus Booth. Junius Booth was the father of John Wilkes Booth who 30 years later assassinated Abraham Lincoln. If you name a kid Brutus aren't you just asking for trouble? Since Junius and his son John were both famous and popular actors Mark Steyn has proposed a new slogan for the NRA:

If you pass an act to ban guns, only actors will have guns.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Another Road Paved With Good Intentions

The Reading Eagle today has a good article on the cost of Special Education imposed on local tax payers Special education: Berks school districts want help with huge price tag. The cost mainly born by local property taxes to educate and defend from lawsuits threats the current school system so that every child will be left behind.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Sweet

One of the bailout investments is paying off. As part of the government purchase of AIG the American taxpayer became owners of the Manchester United an english soccer team. At the time of the purchase they were in 14th place now they are No. 1 in their league.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Music From A Different Time

along with pictures and cartoons from the early 1900's. Now this sone would be considered hate speech.




Last night, as I lay sleeping,
A wonderful dream came to me.
I saw Uncle Sammy weeping
For his children from over the sea.
They had come to him, friendless and starving,
When from tyrant’s oppression they fled,
But now they abuse and revile him,
Till at last in just anger he said:

If you don’t like your Uncle Sammy,
Then go back to your home o’er the sea,
To the land from where you came,
Whatever be its name,
But don’t be ungrateful to me!
If you don’t like the stars in Old Glory,
If you don’t like the Red, White and Blue,

Then don’t act like the cur in the story,
Don’t bite the hand that’s feeding you!

You recall the day you landed,
How I welcomed you to my shore?
When you came here empty-handed,
And allegiance forever you swore?
I gathered you close to my bosom,
Of food and of clothes you got both,
So, when in trouble, I need you,
You will have to remember your oath.

If you don’t like your Uncle Sammy,
Then go back to your home o’er the sea,
To the land from where you came,
Whatever be its name,
But don’t be ungrateful to me!
If you don’t like the stars in Old Glory,
If you don’t like the Red, White and Blue,
Then don’t act like the cur in the story,
Don’t bite the hand that’s feeding you!

Positive Article In Today's Readigng Eagle

An excellent turnout last night for the Meet The Superintendent with more than just the usual suspects
If the Brandywine Heights School District's new school superintendent had any doubt that district residents took education seriously, it was erased at a town meeting Thursday night in Topton.

About 300 people jammed the middle school auditorium to discuss the state of the school system with Dr. Martin D. Handler, who's held the top administrative post since August.

"I'm overwhelmed," Handler said. "It's very clear to me that people are looking for information about their schools."

Handler provided an eye-opening look at a school system struggling with difficult decisions on staffing, finances and use of its five school buildings.

On the one hand, Handler said, Brandywine is doing well educationally and has some of the smallest class sizes of any Berks County district.

On the other, it has the second highest tax rate in the county, little industry to generate tax revenue, a declining enrollment and an aging population.

Some Have Not Gotten With The Program

Just days after taking office vowing to end the political era of "petty grievances," President Obama ran into mounting GOP opposition yesterday to an economic stimulus plan that he had hoped would receive broad bipartisan support. - Washington Post

What a difference a few days make. Monday spending a trillion dollars was real money with major concerns on how and if it should be borrowed and spent. On Friday it is just a petty grievance.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Superintendent Meeting Tonight

Dr. Martin D. Handler, Superintendent of the Brandywine Heights Area School District announces an Evening with the Superintendent event to take place on Thursday, January 22, 2009 from 7:00 to 9:00 PM at the Brandywine Heights Middle School Library. Dr. Handler invites any resident of the school district to meet with him to discuss the directions for the school district, suggestions for improvement of the district’s operation, or any relevant topic related to the district’s operation. Concerns regarding specific staff members will not be addressed at this meeting, but can be discussed by making a private appointment with the superintendent.
Dr. Handler is looking for community input regarding the school district. The district faces a very difficult decision regarding budget, staffing, program and facilities. The community should have a voice in addressing these issues.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Change Fest '09

Putting The Fat Back Into Fat Tuesday

GLENDALE, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 12/18/2008 -- IHOP, one of America's favorite restaurants for breakfast, lunch and dinner, has announced plans to serve millions of free pancakes in celebration of National Pancake Day on February 24, 2009. The celebration is designed to bring together friends and family, as well as to raise $1 million for Children's Miracle Network, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping children's hospitals, and other worthy causes.


Combine this with a faschnaut or two washed down with a Bloody Mary to honor Mardi Gras and this could be a real multi-cultural growth experience.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Happy 200th Birthday To Poe

From the WSJ
He invented both the detective story ("The Murders in the Rue Morgue") and the sequel to the detective story ("The Mystery of Marie Roget" and "The Purloined Letter"). An attraction to new technologies and cutting-edge ideas such as hot-air balloons, mesmerism, and cryptography made him a pioneer of science fiction. He could be a savage critic: "I intend to put up with nothing I can put down," he boasted.

Most important, Poe reshaped the horror story into a tool for probing the darkest corners of human psychology and his own disturbing obsession with death. Early detractors failed to share his vision and accused him of merely aping Gothic thrillers penned by German authors. Poe would have none of it: "I maintain that terror is not of Germany, but of the soul -- that I have deduced this terror only from its legitimate sources, and urged it only to its legitimate results," he replied, in a line that neatly sums up his philosophy of fiction.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

A.P. Courses

There was going to be an editorial on here today concerning the value of A.P. courses but why invent the wheel. Hard to beat John Derbyshire on the subject especially when quoting Charles Murray in Short-Changing the Gifted

AP stands for “Advanced Placement.” These are courses taught to the brightest kids in high schools, allowing them to get college credits. Not just in high schools, either: the College Board is independent of the public-education and teacher-union power structures, and anyone can take an AP exam just by signing up and paying the (very modest) fee. AP is therefore a step in the direction of the general “certification” model of libertarian education, as described by Charles Murray in his recent book. AP programs are a Good Thing.
...
Since AP programs are a Good Thing, the cancellation of four of them is a Bad Thing. It’s especially a Bad Thing in the educational environment of today, when more and more public-education resources are devoted to the slower students [Gosh darn it, there I go again—Sorry! Sorry!] in pursuit of No Child Left Behind goals. If no child is to be left behind, teachers can justify giving most of their attention to the stragglers while ignoring the ones who are forging ahead. Something like this has been happening.

Just A Hologram On God's Credit Card

Report in New Scientist on a accidental discovery that could change how physicist look at the universe.
The holograms you find on credit cards and banknotes are etched on two-dimensional plastic films. When light bounces off them, it recreates the appearance of a 3D image. In the 1990s physicists Leonard Susskind and Nobel prizewinner Gerard 't Hooft suggested that the same principle might apply to the universe as a whole. Our everyday experience might itself be a holographic projection of physical processes that take place on a distant, 2D surface.

"Ultimately, we may have our first indication of how space-time emerges out of quantum theory." As serendipitous discoveries go, it's hard to get more ground-breaking than that.


Now researchers in Germany may have accidentally found proof of a basic limit of space-time "the point where space-time stops behaving like the smooth continuum Einstein described and instead dissolves into 'grains', just as a newspaper photograph dissolves into dots as you zoom in.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Hero on the Hudson

A look at the former fighter pilot and air safety consultant who managed to land the crippled plane yesterday. The standard announcements upon departure about seat cushions and life jackets has always been a bit of a black humor in the industry, makes it easier to recover the bodies, since a successful ditching of a passenger plane is very rare if it has ever occurred with no loss of life.

Ralph Nader's Aviation Consumer Action Project has been quoted as claiming (though not offering proof) that a wide body jet would “shatter like a raw egg dropped on pavement, killing most if not all passengers on impact, even in calm seas with well-trained pilots and good landing trajectories.

Wikipedia
has already updated their water landing entry.

Library Boom

A few years ago, public libraries were being written off as goners. The Internet had made them irrelevant, the argument went. But libraries across the country are reporting jumps in attendance of as much as 65% over the past year, as newly unemployed people flock to branches to fill out résumés and scan ads for job listings. More

You Just Have To Love Hippies

An organization for a better world has been running a survey on what president-elect Obama should do on Day One.
In the end, with tens of thousands of Americans participating, we settled on nine user-submitted ideas to restore our standing in the world:

-Pursue The Global Common Good
-Begin to End the War in Iraq
-Commit to Global Nuclear Disarmament
-Fight the Roots of Terrorism
-Reform Foreign Assistance
-Create a Cabinet Level Department of Peace
-Restore Human Rights
-Plant an Organic Victory Garden on the White House Lawn
-Guarantee Women's Rights

And after a final round of voting, it was decided that the number one item for your day one agenda should be the substantive and symbolic gesture of planting an organic Victory Garden on the White House lawn.
All well and good but now they put The One in a real bind. He has to stop global warming and end winter on the same January day.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Colder Than A Well Digger Behind In Idaho

Might be a bit nippy this morning but Berks County is a winter paradise compared to Tok, Alaska at 78 below. There is also a blog site by a newly arrived mom on day to day living in those chilly conditions.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Japanese Weirdness

An education is supposed to teach one to appreciate other cultures but a person would need a very advanced degree from a very prestigious university to appreciate this.

Lola - or Rora - to give her a slightly more Japanese pronunciation - is a beauty and she knows it.

Customers pay by the hour for her company. Usually they just want to stroke her, but as a special treat for favoured clients, she will lie back in a chair, close her eyes and pose for photographs.

Lola is a cat and works in one of the growing number of Cat Cafes in Tokyo. A busy but lonely person can also rent pets. While dogs are the most popular rabbits and even beetles are available for a nominal hourly fee.

someone is not amused by this article.

The best thing about some of the modern trends in Japanese culture is that it makes Californians appear almost sane.

What People Are Talking About

in the topic section
a word cloud courtesy of Wordie

Monday, January 12, 2009

Bet On Your Grades

One Sunday afternoon, Steven and I were sharing ideas, and I mentioned to him that I had an exam the following day and that if I were to study I was sure to get an A. But I was enjoying my Sunday afternoon, and I made it clear to him that I had no intention of studying. That's when, in order to provide me with motivation, we made the following agreement: If I got an A on the exam, he would give me $100, and if I didn't get an A, I would give him $20. We thought every student would like this type of motivation, therefore, we established Ultrinsic Motivator Inc.

Quote For The Day

Soap and education are not as sudden as a massacre, but they are more deadly in the long run.

Mark Twain

Sunday, January 11, 2009

IT IS ABOUT TIME

The Price of Friendship

Burger King has introduced a Facebook application the Whopper Sacrifice where if you drop 10 of your friends you receive a free Whopper. This could prove to be bad for Facebook which was recently valued at $15 billion when Microsoft invested in the company. Jason Kottke at Kottlke.org
worked out the price using the Whopper exchange of friendships to be $12.00. With 150 million current users of Facebook the calculated value of Facebook is only $1.5 billion.

That is all well and good but some of us are still searching for 10 friends so we could have a free lunch.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Nut allergies -- a Yuppie invention?

Some kids really do have food allergies. But most just have bad reactions to their parents' mass hysteria.

LA Times columnist looks at the exponential growth in children with peanut allergies and wonders why it strikes predominately upper income neighborhoods and why it is 10 times more likely in Jewish children in Britain than it is in in Israel with similar genetic and demographics backgrounds. Could it be that the parents in Israel have real worries?

Headline Shocker


The online newspaper has a better outlook.

Friday, January 09, 2009

A Governor from an Alternate Universe

Good way to end the week listening to Shep Smith rag on Gov. Helmet Hair. Stay around for the poem.

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Newspapers are so 20th century

For the first time more people obtain the news from the internet than reading it off of dead trees and is quickly overtaking television.










For those under 30 the internet already equals TV as their main source. The interweb actually surpasses television for real news for those under 30 because their major TV source is Comedy Central's Daily Show and Colbert Report.

Law of Unintended Consequences Strikes Again

To protect children from the dangers posed by lead and certain chemicals used in plastics, congress recently passed the Consumer Protection Safety Improvement Act mandating all articles sold for children be tested. All seems well and good children are protected and government has another way to grow.

However as written this law applies to second hand and thrift stores even to organizations that use garage sales to raise funds. These stores provide a valuable service providing low cost clothing and toys to children and can't afford the testing of all the donated items. Some of those 3 million new jobs promised will include the newly formed Garage Sale Police. Can't wait for the TV show GSP. to replace CSI.

From the Los Angeles Times

Barring a reprieve, regulations set to take effect next month could force thousands of clothing retailers and thrift stores to throw away trunkloads of children’s clothing.

The law, aimed at keeping lead-filled merchandise away from children, mandates that all products sold for those age 12 and younger — including clothing — be tested for lead and phthalates, which are chemicals used to make plastics more pliable. Those that haven’t been tested will be considered hazardous, regardless of whether they actually contain lead.

“They’ll all have to go to the landfill,” said Adele Meyer, executive director of the National Assn. of Resale and Thrift Shops.

The new regulations take effect Feb. 10 under the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, which was passed by Congress last year in response to widespread recalls of products that posed a threat to children, including toys made with lead or lead-based paint.

Lady Logician writes:

I wonder who will save “the children” from starvation or from the elements when their parents can no longer afford food and clothing thanks to their “good intentions”.

Too Big To Fail

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Another major American industry is asking for assistance as the global financial crisis continues: Hustler publisher Larry Flynt and Girls Gone Wild CEO Joe Francis said Wednesday they will request that Congress allocate $5 billion for a bailout of the adult entertainment industry.

... industry leaders said the issue is a nation in need. "People are too depressed to be sexually active," Flynt said in the statement. "This is very unhealthy as a nation. Americans can do without cars and such but they cannot do without sex."

"With all this economic misery and people losing all that money, sex is the farthest thing from their mind. It's time for congress to rejuvenate the sexual appetite of America. The only way they can do this is by supporting the adult industry and doing it quickly."

This proposed aid could be vital in maintaining Rockland and Longswamp as viable early educational centers.

England Discovers A New Tasty Treat

The NY times reports on a new culinary sensation sweeping England, squirrel either traditional red or the new imported gray.

The article is a little lacking as there is no mention of the basic squirrel and dumplings.

From Backwoods Bound
3 squirrels, cut up (All hair and shot removed.)
~ 1 egg
~ 2 cups plain flour
~ 3/4 cup broth
~ 1 teaspoon salt
~ salt and pepper

Boil squirrels in four quarts of water until tender. Remove squirrels from broth, let cool, then remove meat from bones. Set aside.

In large bowl, mix flour, egg and one teaspoon of salt with 3/4 cup of broth and roll into ball.

Strain the broth to remove any stray shot then resume boil. Return meat to boiling broth.

On a floured cutting board, use rolling pin to roll the dough ball to a thickness of 1/16 inch. Cut into 1-inch wide strips and drop strips one at a time into the boiling broth. Gently shake pot after last dumpling is added to prevent sticking.

Cook approximately 10-15 minutes until dumplings are tender. Salt and pepper to taste.



Squirrel is also a great way to start off the day. From Field & Stream

2 squirrels (about 1 pound each), dressed and quartered
2/3 cup flour for dredging, plus roughly 1/4 cup for gravy
5 slices bacon
Salt and freshly ground pepper

Biscuits
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup vegetable shortening, chilled
3/4 cup buttermilk
3 tablespoons butter, melted

1. Parboil the squirrel pieces: Place them in a large pot and add enough salted water to cover. Bring to a simmer and cook until the meat is very tender but still intact-1 to 2 hours. Remove them from the water and set aside to cool.

2. In a large cast-iron skillet or Dutch oven, fry the bacon slices over medium heat until they're crispy and all the fat has been rendered. Reserve the bacon for another use. In a wide, shallow bowl or pan, season 2/3 cup of flour (or more as needed) with salt and pepper. Dredge the squirrel pieces in it, shaking off any excess, and place them in the bacon grease. Reduce heat to medium-low and cook the squirrel until lightly browned on all sides, about 10 minutes per side. You may have to do this in batches; add butter to the pan if the grease seems insufficient.

3. In the meantime, make the biscuits: Preheat the oven to 400¿¿. Mix the dry ingredients in a bowl. Divide the shortening into several pieces and cut it into the dry ingredients until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Make a hole in the center and pour in the buttermilk. Using your hands, fold the dry mixture into the buttermilk until you have a sticky dough. Turn the dough onto a floured surface and fold it over on itself to form layers. Flatten it with your hands until it's about 3/4 inch thick. Using a biscuit cutter or an upside-down glass, cut rounds out of the dough. Transfer the rounds to a sheet pan and brush with melted butter. Bake for 15 minutes until golden brown.

4. When the squirrel pieces are done, remove them to a plate or keep them warm in a low oven. Pour off the excess grease, keeping about 1/4 cup in the pan. Increase the heat to medium-high and add 1/4 cup of flour, stirring constantly and scraping up any browned bits until the mixture turns an oaky shade of brown. Add 3/4 cup of cold water and stir until a thick gravy forms; if it's too thick, add more water. Salt and pepper to taste. Serve the squirrel and biscuits with the gravy on the side.


For a romantic dinner try "Pork Rind-Crusted Fried Squirrel with Molasses Red-Eye Gravy".

4 young squirrels, dressed and quartered
1 yellow onion, roughly chopped
2 stalks celery, roughly chopped
2 carrots, roughly chopped
6 cloves garlic, peeled
1 gallon water
1 cup apple cider vinegar
1-1/2 cups lard
1-1/2 cups peanut or vegetable oil
3 cups all-purpose flour seasoned with salt, black pepper, paprika, onion powder, and garlic powder
2 cups pork rind powder (see recipe headnote)
2 cups milk
3 eggs, lightly beaten
3/4 tablespoon freshly cracked black pepper
Salt, cayenne powder, and Tabasco, to taste

Tasso and Molasses Red-Eye Gravy
1/3 cup tasso or other thick-sliced ham, diced
1/2 cup bacon, diced
1 tablespoon flour
1-1/4 cups beef stock
3/4 cup strong black coffee
1/3 cup Coca-Cola [No you can't substitute Pepsi]
2 tablespoons molasses
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

1. Generously season the squirrel pieces with salt, pepper, and cayenne; allow to sit for 2 hours.

2. Bring water, cider vinegar, onion, celery, carrot, and garlic to a boil, then boil for 15 minutes. Add the squirrel pieces and simmer for 12 to 15 minutes, until the meat is cooked through but not falling apart. Remove the meat. Drain the vegetables in a colander and discard them.

3. Make the red-eye gravy: In a large cast-iron skillet or pan, saut¿¿ the bacon and tasso over medium heat until all the fat is rendered. Whisk in the flour until it's well combined, continuing to whisk over medium heat for 5 minutes. Stir in the beef stock, coffee, Coca-Cola, molasses, and red pepper flakes, bring to a simmer, and whisk constantly until gravy thickens. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

4. In a large cast-iron skillet or Dutch oven, heat the oil and lard to 325¿¿, or until a pinch of flour bubbles in the oil.

5. Whisk together the milk and eggs with a dash of Tabasco. Dust the squirrel in the seasoned flour and set aside. Add the pork rind powder to the remaining seasoned flour and combine well. Dunk the squirrel in the egg wash, then dredge them in the pork rind and flour mixture, shaking off any excess. Fry the pieces until golden brown, working in batches. Drain on paper towels and serve immediately with gravy on the side, and cornbread if desired.

Tomorrow: The Other White Meat




Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Study Your Math

New study on best and worst jobs ranks mathematician as No. 1. Survey seems a bit biased towards sedentary jobs versus ones out in the Big Room.

Now lumberjacks have their own show Ax Men and Monty Python never did a video honoring the hard working statistician.



The Best and Worst Jobs

Of 200 Jobs studied, these came out on top -- and at the bottom:

The BestThe Worst
1. Mathematician 200. Lumberjack
2. Actuary 199. Dairy Farmer
3. Statistician 198. Taxi Driver
4. Biologist 197. Seaman
5. Software Engineer 196. EMT
6. Computer Systems Analyst 195. Garbage Collector
7. Historian 194. Welder
8. Sociologist 193. Roustabout
9. Industrial Designer 192. Ironworker
10. Accountant 191. Construction Worker
11. Economist 190. Mail Carrier
12. Philosopher 189. Sheet Metal Worker
13. Physicist 188. Auto Mechanic
14. Parole Officer 187. Butcher
15. Meteorologist 186. Nuclear Decontamination Tech
16. Medical Laboratory Technician 185. Nurse (LN)
17. Paralegal Assistant 184.Painter
18. Computer Programmer 183. Child Care Worker
19. Motion Picture Editor 182. Firefighter
20. Astronomer 181. Brick Layer

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Young Love

Two star-crossed lovers ran afoul of the law and their parents when they tried to elope. The young German couple discussed their options and sneaked out of their homes before dawn. They were headed for the warmth of Africa and brought along his sister. They made it to the express train to the airport before the 6 and 5 year old couple were nabbed by the Man.

They didn't think they would worry their parents because they didn't intend to be gone very long. The just wanted to get married and stroll along a warm beach. They were prepared packing their swimming attire.

To allay their disappointment at being caught, local police gave them a tour of the police headquarters.

Improving Standarized Test Scores

From a Boston Globe article
If You've ever had to take a test in a room with a lot of people, you may be able to relate to this study: The more people you're competing against, it turns out, the less motivated and competitive you are. Psychologists observed this pattern across several different situations. Students taking standardized tests in more crowded venues got lower scores. Students asked to complete a short general-knowledge test as fast as possible to win a prize if they were in the fastest 20 percent completed it faster if they were told that they were competing against 10 people rather than 100. Students asked how fast they would run in a race for a $1,000 prize if they finished in the top 10 percent said they would run faster in a race against 50 people rather than 500. Similarly, students contemplating a job interview or Facebook-friending contest said they would be less competitive if they expected more competitors - even if "winning" only required finishing in the top 20 percent. The authors conclude that competitiveness was curtailed because the larger the group, the more difficult it is to compare oneself directly to others.
Garcia, S. & Tor, A.,
"The N-Effect: More Competitors, Less Competition,"
Psychological Science (forthcoming).

To improve scores in test like the PSSA the students should take them in groups of 10 with immediate scoring and rewards. That should be easy enough if the test was given on computer instead of filling in circles with the ubiquitous No 2 pencil. Their state wide relative score wouldn't be available but their small group standing would and that according to the study drives increased performance. Study should test the effects when the class brain or two are in a group with some of the duller knives in the drawer. Would anyone bother to try to do their best? Seems for this to work the group should be made up of people with similar potential.

Save On Auto Payments

when you need tips to survive in hard economic times go to the worker's paradise.

Monday, January 05, 2009

Welcome Back

A new year what could possibly go wrong.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

The Devil Must Be Wearing Ice Skates

because the Huffington Post published an article yesterday demanding an apology from Al Gore on his alarmist rhetoric on global warming.
Mr. Gore has gone so far to discourage debate on climate as to refer to those who question his simplistic view of the atmosphere as “flat-Earthers.” This, too, is right on target, except for one tiny detail. It is exactly the opposite of the truth.

Words On Dead Trees

There are other sources of information other than the interweb. Lifehacker explores the quaint use of books.

Free is always good so maximize your use of the public library.

13 book hacks for cheap or inexpensive sources for books, fun things to do with the ones your have and how to bind your own masterpiece.

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Out in '09 Brandywine Heights Area School District

in Brandywine Heights Area Place For Learning District.

A new £4.7m primary school in Sheffield is facing criticism for dropping the word "school" from its title after governors decided the term had "negative connotations".

The headteacher of Sheffield's Watercliffe Meadow, Linda Kingdon, said the south Yorkshire school, which is due to open on Monday, will instead be called a "place for learning".

"We decided from an early stage we didn't want to use the word 'school'," she told local newspaper the Sheffield Star.

"This is Watercliffe Meadow, a place for learning. One reason was many of the parents of the children here had very negative connotations of school. More

If this is a trend we are so going to have to use much longer buses.

Year In Review

Helping Critters Everywhere

Seeing eye dogs have been around for a long time but now there are a host of animals that give aide and comfort to people. Great article on miniature seeing eye horses(plus they live for 30 years. minus while house trained they still make " pony don't" ever couple of hours) therapy parrots that help talk the owner down from violent psychotic episodes,monkeys to help with panic attacks. For pets that aren't fully trained by answering a few questions correctly,there are web sites that issue official looking cards good enough to cower hesitant store and restaurant owners.

As safety and health concerns grow local ordinances along with transportation rules are coming into conflict with the American Disability Act. Can't be too long till some student wants to bring in his therapy lion to school or somebody sues to bring his comfort great white shark to the next dancing and dipping.

Obama Approved