Mark, Sue, David, Bill, Mary K. Anne and Nora
Sunday, June 22, 2008
All Decked Out
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Famous Threes
Friday, June 13, 2008
A Bad Break
Thursday, June 12, 2008
The Nominees Are
Tuesday, June 03, 2008
Empty Nest

Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Coming Soon to a Blog Near You

This is also the first step towards the Italy trip. After all, the trip is a photography class and I hope to become a pretty good photographer by the time I'm done. How can I lose; I'm in Italy
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
My Life in Six Words

My witty meter is on lowlike my gas tank. I blame it on the new job but check out the site above for some very clever and funny "Memoirs"
Back from Hiatus

The Big Scoop

So I went to the grocery the other day; long overdue shopping to be done. New job and all that. Anyway, my favorite store usually has a sale on ice cream every few weeks or so. 3 "half gallons for $9. Can't beat that price when they usually cost almost $6 regularly especially when our gas prices are not the only thing skyrocketing. Food has been on a huge upswing in price these days. So I grabbed the ice cream from the dozens of tubs and types and put it in the freezer next to tub with only a spoonful or two left and I noticed something odd. It was VERY much smaller than the one already there. Not just shorter and fatter but just plain shorter. Turns out companies are not the only thing downsizing these days. Our once almost 1/2 gallon (1.75 quarts) of ice cream is now not even an "almost" but a "once was" at 1.50 quarts. Let me know if you begin to spot other downsized products.
Friday, April 11, 2008
Home Town Boy Makes it Big!

Greg Ganakas is indeed a hometown boy but for the last 25 or so years he's made a huge name for himself. He's directed at the Goodspeed, won the 2007 Helen Hayes award for Caroline or Change, directed Julie Andrews, is affiliated with Radio City and NYU and so much more. Google him and check out his website for detailed information.
We are privileged to get to see his work, right here in East Lansing, without traveling to New York. Greg is directing the MSU production of Babes in Arms so make reservation NOW and Don't miss it!
Eons ago, I had a blast directing Greg as Snoopy in You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown. Of course, he stole the show. And then there was that road trip to New York City. Hmmmm.
Picking a Winner!


People bet on horses based on the jockey, the owners, the trainers, they like the color of the silks, or the horses name, some even bet on the horse that has taken a (how to be delicate?) "dump" right before the race.
Personally, I look at horse names first. I know, so NOT technical! I've devoured a dozen or more horse books so I'm a little familiar with owners, stables, and jockeys so that's my next criteria. I'm partial to Kentucky horses as opposed to those from Dubai. This time around, I got a number of tips so I began betting based on horse speed, money, and wins.
Random observations:
THE BEST TIP OF ALL? Detroit just broke ground this spring on a multimillion dollar race track called Pinnacle scheduled to open for a late July-August opening. I WANT TO WORK THERE!!! No, seriously. So meet me at the track.
A Day at the Races


Race day at Keeneland was spectacular! I lost some, won some but all in all broke even. But along the way I took some real chances, relearned betting lingo, and picked up a few tips from some very nice and patient fans.
Keeneland is one of the most beautiful race tracks in the country thanks to the efforts of Alma Headley Haggin in the late 1930's. She was determined to make Keeneland the most beautiful racetrack. She was most interested about the lives of the race horses once they arrived at Keeneland. She wanted them to have shade so she planted tall Chinese Elms and fast growing maples. She made sure the trees grew upright so horses would not be hurt by low lying limbs. She also wanted the horses to be surrounded by beauty so at the corner of all the stables she panted flowering crab apples, dogwoods, cherry, locust, and magnolias. She also gave instructions to the gardening crew to make sure all horse paths were cleared of fallen fruits or nuts so the horses would not be hurt.
Seventy years later the fruit of her labors is quite evident and spectacular!
Thursday, April 03, 2008
It's Girl Scout Cookie Time!

Of course, one box didn't quite make it home! Yes, I confess, I ate a whole box of thin mints. And it was glorious.
However, I made a monumental discovery- NOT ALL THIN MINTS ARE CREATED EQUAL! These thin mints weren't what I remembered. OK, it was a year ago since my last thin mint and yes, age, mine, may have a tiny bit to do with it BUT these were imposters!
And then there was the shape. The edge had a slightly larger scallop as opposed to a tiny ruffle.
Were they good? YES Were they great? No
I had heard that several bakeries made GS cookies. Hmmm...maybe a different bakery. Some one at Curves said they were made in Chicago and Cleveland. Ok, I'm closer to Chicago. Ann Arbor, and hour south of us, may be geographically challenged and believe they were closer to Cleveland.
In the process I found the cookies locally. Voila! The cookie of my childhood. They hadn't changed the recipe. It WAS the bakery.

The best news? You don't have to know a GS to find the cookies. They're sold outside every big box store in your town. Go forth, and indulge. Celebrate spring!
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Spring Break!!

Monday, March 31, 2008
And They're Off

Sunday, March 30, 2008
A Celebration of Life

Thursday, March 27, 2008
Birthday Girl!
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Friday, March 21, 2008
I'm Just Sayin

Monday, March 17, 2008
Another Incredible Book

Another extraordinary book by Peter Godwin, the author of When a Crocodile Eats the Sun. I was so mesmerized by that book that I read this, his previous book. This tells the story of his growing up in Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) against a background of terrorism and a country beginning to fall apart. A page turning thriller. I can't get enough of this story. I've just requested his third book, the one between these two, called Rhodesians Never Die.
Top O' the Mornin' to Ya
A few jokes for ya and a some interesting facts.
An Irishman and an American were sitting in the bar at Shannon Airport."I've come to meet my brother," said the Irishman. "He's due to

The Doctor was puzzled "I'm very sorry but I can't diagnose your trouble, Mahoney. I think it must be drink. ""Don't worry about it Dr. Kelley, I'll come back when you're sober." "Did you hear that Flanagan invented an invisible deodorant ?" "No, what good is it ?""Well if you use, you vanish and no one knows where the smell is coming from !"
The Doctor was puzzled "I'm very sorry but I can't diagnose your trouble, Mahoney. I think it must be drink. ""Don't worry about it Dr. Kelley, I'll come back when you're sober."
Before invention of the thermometer, brewers used to check the temperature by dipping their thumb, to find whether appropriate for adding Yeast. Too hot, the yeast would die. This is where we get the phrase " The Rule of the Thumb"
In English pubs, ale is ordered by pints and quarts. So in old England, when customers got unruly, the bartender used to yell at them to mind their own pints and quarts and settle down. From where we get "mind your own P's and Q's".
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Firefly Designs

Friday, March 14, 2008
Spring!

Tuesday, March 11, 2008
She's Back!


Saturday, March 08, 2008
What I Learned in "School" Today

Friday, March 07, 2008
A New Earth

Thursday, March 06, 2008
Treating Teachers With Contempt; Sure Way to Fail

Dianna Topper, a Lansing Eastern teacher eloquently laid out the case that there are many factors in the "failing schools" equation. Some of her comments:
Unfortunately it is not schools that fail, it is people.
Teachers fail when:
-they cannot utilize the educational tools they know need to be used because they don't "fit" with one-size-fits-all curricula imposed by the school districts, the state, and the federal government
-they are not allowed to demand excellence from students
School districts fail when they....
-hamstring a teacher's classroom effectiveness by refusing to remove disruptive students
-allow students to ignore policy and parents to circumvent it, all the while holding teachers responsible for enforcing it
-choose not to listen or act upon teacher's concerns and solutions regarding student skills, behavior and attendance
Parents fail when ...
-attitude and behavior are not addressed outside of school
-they do not make sure their child is in school on a regular basis and timely basis
-they keep children home unnecessarily, or when vacations are routinely more important than being in school
Politicians fail when they...
-expect all children to learn exactly the same things in exactly the same amount of time
-expect schools to remedy all the disparities and shortcomings of society
Society fail when it...
-pays only lip service to the importance of education
-focuses attention on what's wrong, only with schools, and students take no ownership of their role in the problem
Students fail when they...
-don't appreciate what a gift education is
-have been raised to expect continuous entertainment, not effort
-have no concept of hard work
-believe that just showing up is enough and not showing up is no big deal
-believe the responsibility for success is not theirs.
Richard Trainor, the president of the Mount Pleasant Education Association writes:
Congratulations to the " dictatorintendent" of the Lansing Public Schools. His plan for your high schools will likely have many consequences. Unfortunately, many of them are likely to be less than positive.
Lansing parents should expect the following "improvements"...
-an exodus of your best young teachers, who read the action and the false statements of the dictatorintendent as a message that Lansing is not the kind of district to which they should commit their lives' work unless they enjoy being thrown under the bus when times are tough
-departure of good senior teachers
-a concerted effort by districts to head hunt those displaced
-students go in distress because their favorite teachers are gone
-teams and clubs are put in turmoil as teachers are shuffled like cards
-buildings end up with administrators who know less about their staff than they do today
No one wants students to succeed as much as teachers. No one does more daily to that end.
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Rabbit Hole

Friday, February 29, 2008
A Must Read

I don't usually blog about the books I'm reading unless they are extraordinary, hard to put down, and something I think about all the time. This is just that kind of book.
So let me share a few words about the book as they appear on Amazon.com
"In this exquisitely written, deeply moving account of the death of a father played out against the backdrop of the collapse of the southern African nation of Zimbabwe, seasoned journalist Godwin has produced a memoir that effortlessly manages to be almost unbearably personal while simultaneously laying bare the cruel regime of longstanding president Robert Mugabe. In 1996 when his father suffers a heart attack, Godwin returns to Africa. As his father's health deteriorates, so does Zimbabwe. Mugabe, self-proclaimed president for life, institutes a series of ill-conceived land reforms that throw the white farmers off the land they've cultivated for generations and consequently throws the country's economy into free fall. There's sadness throughout—for the death of the father, for the suffering of everyone in Zimbabwe (black and white alike) and for the way that human beings invariably treat each other with casual disregard. Godwin's narrative flows seamlessly across the decades, creating a searing portrait of a family and a nation collectively coming to terms with death. This is a tour de force of personal journalism and not to be missed."
This is such a gripping story. It shocks , angers , and uplifts.
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Lansing Teachers to Reapply for their Positions!

One of the most radical steps is to reassign teachers within the three high schools requiring teachers to reapply for their positions! According to the Board member, Hugh Clark, "no jobs will be lost."
The implication, of course, is that the teachers are at fault when students test and fail to make AYP. However, what's missing in this formula, and rarely spoken of in the news are the other major criteria for making AYP: a) the percentage of compliance is raised every year b) required test participation is now at 95% c) required school attendance criteria is set at 85% d) required graduation rates need to be at 80% e) special education students (a proportionately large percentage in Lansing and especially at Everett High School) results are factored into the data for AYP.
The Superintendent also said, "parents are not at fault." Are parents not a factor in expecting their children to attend school? To participate in testing?
What is alarming about NCLB is that now, at the high school level, teachers are spending half their instructional time is spent "prepping for the test." 50% of their time!!!! That means that students are receiving 50% less instruction!
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Under the Tuscan Sun

Maybe posting this will make it "real" and get me motivated. I'm going with a fun group out of Seattle called Archangelo Productions (you can join us too!) and with a friend a local photographer, Jane Rosemont. The trip is a photographic workshop using digital cameras for the skilled and unskilled (that would be me). This photo is the overlook from the place we will be staying, a repurposed monastery.

If you notice a lot of Italy pictures on my blog it's just me getting up the nerve to commit and actually do this.
Adventures in Costa Rica



Katie, our world traveler is off again. This time to Costa Rica for 2 weeks. She's traveling with the World Health Organization through Wayne State Medical School. She leaves tomorrow arriving in San Jose, Costa Rica where they will spend several days running free clinics. From there they will travel to Santa Ana and work on some of the indiginous reserves. Then they get a little Spring Break hitting the gorgeous beaches of Costa Rica for some R & R before she jumps back into the madness that is med school. It'll drive me crazy to be out of touch with her for 2 weeks but I guess if I could survivie a year in Thailand this is nothing. Bon Voyage, Katie! I'll miss you!
Monday, February 18, 2008
Christmas Comes to Thailand

Happy President's Day John

John Adams would be pleased that he was remembered today. He was consumed with yearning desire to be remembered in posterity as much as Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington.
No man who ever held the office of president would congratulate a friend on obtaining it.
...a revolution of government is the strongest proof that can be given by a people of their virtue and good sense.
