And why is he such so clueless?
Media Matters knows.
His life, his interests, his sometimes quirky frame of mind in words and pictures. A flyover of my life.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Scenes from a Glassy Summer Evening
Dinner Menu (my choices in bold)
Appetizer
SEARED SASHIMI-GRADE TUNA
Seared rare ahi tuna, niçoise-style potato salad and tarragon-caper aioli
or
GRILLED CAESAR SALAD
Romaine heart, crisp parmigiano reggiano and creamy garlic dressing
or
FARMERS' MARKET SALAD
Mixed greens, seasonal market vegetables, chèvre and balsamic vinaigrette
Entrée
SPICE-RUBBED PORK TENDERLOIN
Marinated and grilled new potato and red curry baby carrot
or
CHICKEN FRESCO
Asparagus, spring pea, butter lettuce, white bean, red onion, campanelle pasta, prosciutto and summer vegetable butter sauce
or
RICOTTA CHEESE GNOCCHI
Housemade ricotta gnocchi, seasonal vegetables and brown butter herb crème
Dessert
GAIL AMBROSIUS DARK CHOCOLATES
Assorted flavors, handmade in Madison
or
SEASONAL FRUIT CRISP
Served with vanilla bean ice cream
or
MINT JULEP CRÈME BRÛLÉE
With caramelized sugar crust
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Architecture: Two Rivers' Hidden Gem
You'll probably miss this building driving through Two Rivers on Wisconsin state highway 42 -- or Washington Avenue as you cruise through the downtown business district. The headquarters of the Hamilton Manufacturing Company, now a part of Thermo Scientific, is located just one block east of Washington Avenue, but Schroder's Department Store blocks the view.
This art-deco classic was built in 1930, just months after the start of the Great Depression. The company was founded in 1880 and was Two Rivers' major employer for many years.
The church where JoAnna and I were married in 1986 is located just one block from headquarters building. The picture below was taken from the south end of the sprawling manufacturing plant.
Among the products manufactured here: dental furniture (1900s), radio cabinets (1920s), "Child Craft" juvenile furniture (1930s), medical examining furniture (1930s), laboratory furniture (1930s), automatic clothes dryers (1930s), automatic washing machines (1950s), mobile tables for school lunchrooms (1950s).
Seagull deposits are threatening the integrity of the roof. The smokestack and water tower can be seen for miles around.
This art-deco classic was built in 1930, just months after the start of the Great Depression. The company was founded in 1880 and was Two Rivers' major employer for many years.
The church where JoAnna and I were married in 1986 is located just one block from headquarters building. The picture below was taken from the south end of the sprawling manufacturing plant.
Among the products manufactured here: dental furniture (1900s), radio cabinets (1920s), "Child Craft" juvenile furniture (1930s), medical examining furniture (1930s), laboratory furniture (1930s), automatic clothes dryers (1930s), automatic washing machines (1950s), mobile tables for school lunchrooms (1950s).
Seagull deposits are threatening the integrity of the roof. The smokestack and water tower can be seen for miles around.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
They Sure Do Grow 'Em Big in Michigan
What can you do with a 10-pound blueberry?
Juice it for a month of breakfasts.
Go into the pie business.
Use it to play volleyball while wearing white clothes just to see how good one of those Tide To Go pens really is.
Juice it for a month of breakfasts.
Go into the pie business.
Use it to play volleyball while wearing white clothes just to see how good one of those Tide To Go pens really is.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Bike Ride for Dane County Boys and Girls Club
JoAnna, Eddie, and I opted for the 30-mile route. We started and returned at Madison's Edgewood College.
JoAnna and Eddie pose after the three of us successfully attached the bicycle rack to the car and then secured the bikes.
JoAnna and Paul are ready to roll.
Eddie and Dad are ready to roll.
And so are the more than 200 riders who chose the 30-mile route.
Rest break at Square Park in the historic mill town of Paoli, the halfway point on the 30-mile route.
Paoli's beautiful St. William Catholic Church. The architectural design is somewhat incongruous, not the architectural style you expect to see on an old-fashioned town square in Wisconsin.
Square Park's little gazebo.
JoAnna reaches the finish line.
JoAnna and Eddie pose after the three of us successfully attached the bicycle rack to the car and then secured the bikes.
JoAnna and Paul are ready to roll.
Eddie and Dad are ready to roll.
And so are the more than 200 riders who chose the 30-mile route.
Rest break at Square Park in the historic mill town of Paoli, the halfway point on the 30-mile route.
Paoli's beautiful St. William Catholic Church. The architectural design is somewhat incongruous, not the architectural style you expect to see on an old-fashioned town square in Wisconsin.
Square Park's little gazebo.
JoAnna reaches the finish line.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Bike Ride: West Side Madison Meander
Temperature: 75
Humidity: 71% (and it felt like it)
Wind: 9 mph from SW, though it started to intensify on the home stretch.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
A View from a Bike Seat
OK. True confessions. I did stop and dismount (twice) to take this series of pictures of the green Wisconsin landscape north of Middleton.
One view shows approximately two-thirds sky; the other two-thirds land. The one above shows three bands of interest, if you will. I have many similar photos (slides, actually) taken during the early 1980s along the country roads north, west, and south of Oshkosh. (Retirement project I've yet to tackle: digitize my slide collection.)
One of the pleasures of biking is having an unimpeded view of your surroundings. No looking through a windshield.
The thing is, I probably wouldn't have taken these pictures if my lazy bum of a son -- which one? does it matter? -- had accompanied me on yesterday's bike ride. I even extended him an invitation.
One view shows approximately two-thirds sky; the other two-thirds land. The one above shows three bands of interest, if you will. I have many similar photos (slides, actually) taken during the early 1980s along the country roads north, west, and south of Oshkosh. (Retirement project I've yet to tackle: digitize my slide collection.)
One of the pleasures of biking is having an unimpeded view of your surroundings. No looking through a windshield.
The thing is, I probably wouldn't have taken these pictures if my lazy bum of a son -- which one? does it matter? -- had accompanied me on yesterday's bike ride. I even extended him an invitation.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Saturday, July 11, 2009
A Perfect Day for a Party
Just waiting for some people to appear in the picture .
The canopy is from Costco. No more renting from A-to-Z RentAlls. Let's just hope it lasts long enough for us to get money's worth. Set-up was a little problematic at first. Our inaugural effort, too many chiefs and not enough Indians, as they used to say. An 8-page booklet provided surprisingly clear and straightforward instruction. Some text even accompanied the pictures.
The canopy is from Costco. No more renting from A-to-Z RentAlls. Let's just hope it lasts long enough for us to get money's worth. Set-up was a little problematic at first. Our inaugural effort, too many chiefs and not enough Indians, as they used to say. An 8-page booklet provided surprisingly clear and straightforward instruction. Some text even accompanied the pictures.
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
P. A. U.
Politics as usual.
From today's New York Times, "Adding Something for Everyone, House Leaders Won Climate Bill".
As the most ambitious energy and climate-change legislation ever introduced in Congress made its way to a floor vote last Friday, it grew fat with compromises, carve-outs, concessions and out-and-out gifts intended to win the votes of wavering lawmakers and the support of powerful industries.