Sunday, December 30, 2007

A New Glass to Enjoy a Samuel Adams Beer...umm


"It’s been a personal passion of mine to develop a beer glass that elevates the craft beer drinking experience" said Jim Koch, founder and brewer of Samuel Adams. “We wanted to create a glass that offers beer lovers a full sensory drinking experience by fully showcasing Samuel Adams Boston Lager’s complex balance of malt and hop flavors. This glass achieves that mission."

Tiax, the world-renowned sensory experts, worked closely with Jim to identify and evaluate the functional design features needed in a glass to showcase the key attributes of Samuel Adams Boston Lager®. The key requirements for the perfect glass for Samuel Adams Boston Lager included: delivering sweetness from the malt; maximizing the hops aroma and flavor; maintaining the ideal temperature; supporting a rich and creamy head; and sustaining the right amount of carbonation.
I can't wait to try it!

ABC Lancaster News


I was just talking to friends on Friday about: whatever happened to Appalachian Brewing company (ABC) coming to Lancaster and the Mountville area? They (ABC) even went so far as to publish their menu in the yellow pages, planning to open in Feb. 2007. Well, as 2007 draws to a close, no ABC in Lancaster. In today's, Sunday News, their was an article by Paul Franz about what happened concerning the Mountville location and that ABC still has it's sights set for Lancaster County..... 2008 could see 2 ABC locations in the County. Link:http://local.lancasteronline.com/4/214386

Friday, December 28, 2007

My New Holiday Centerpiece


Catching up on my Reading


I have been reading the special report in Issue #1041, Rolling Stone, Dec. 13, 2007, THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AND $500 Billion: HOW WE LOST THE WAR ON DRUGS.

I highly recommend this article.

The Link:


The link for an interview with the writer of the story, Ben Wallance -Wells:


From the Magazine:

Rolling Stone contributing editor Ben Wallace-Wells lives in Philadelphia, where he writes about politics and culture for the magazine. Slate.com just called his feature on how America lost the war on drugs the "smartest drug story of the year." Read on for a glimpse on how it was put together, and read the entire feature here or in the December 13, 2007 issue of Rolling Stone.

Be Less Than You Can Be


HOW THE PENTAGON SUPPORTED THE TROOPS IN 2007


  • Required the soldiers discharged early because of battlefield injuries repay their enlistment bonuses.

  • Sent the longest serving National Guard unit home after 729 days of combat in Iraq-one day shy of the 730 that the soldiers needed to qualify for education benefits.

  • Omitted 20,000 cases of brain trauma from the official tally of troops in Iraq.

  • Denied medical benefits to 22,000 vets suffering from post-traumatic stress by discharging them for having enlisted with pre-existing personality disorders.

Geek alert-2008 USPS stamps release




A face that will tease you, and please you and perhaps unease you is coming to the post office next year, it's those Bette Davis eyes.

On the 100th anniversary of her birth the great actress will be honored on a commemorative stamp, the 14th in the Legends of Hollywood Series.
A 10-time Academy Award nominee, Davis won twice, for her roles in "Dangerous" (1935) and "Jezebel" (1938).

And speaking of centennials, the same year Davis was born, actor Jack Norworth wrote "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," the song still famed in the seventh inning stretch. Postal officials hope buyers will root, root, root for a stamp based on a 19th-century baseball card recalling that special melody next year.

Also in 2008 the post office will launch a new multiyear Flags of Our Nation series, a 60-stamp set scheduled to include the Stars and Stripes as well as the flags of each state, the District of Columbia and territories.

Ten stamps will be issued in June — the Stars and Stripes and the flags of Alabama, Alaska, American Samoa, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut and Delaware.
Following in the fall will be a set with the flags of the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Guam, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Kansas.
Among the other new postage stamps scheduled for neat year are:
— Year of the Rat in January, marking the Chinese lunar new year. People born in the Year of the Rat are said to be industrious, adaptable and ambitious.
— Charles W. Chesnutt will be honored with the 31st stamp in the Black Heritage series. Chesnutt was a pioneering writer recognized today as a major innovator among literary realists who probed the color line in American life.
— Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "The Yearling" and her memoir "Cross Creek."
— American Scientists: Theoretical physicist John Bardeen, who co-invented the transistor; biochemist Gerty Cori, who made important discoveries that later became the basis for our knowledge of how cells use food and convert it into energy; astronomer Edwin Hubble, whose meticulous studies of spiral nebulae proved the existence of galaxies other than our own Milky Way; and chemist Linus Pauling, who determined the nature of the chemical bond linking atoms into molecules and did pioneering work on protein structure was critical in establishing the field of molecular biology.
— American Journalists: Martha Gellhorn, who covered the Spanish Civil War, World War II and the Vietnam War in a long career that broke new ground for women; John Hersey, whose most famous work, "Hiroshima," describes what happened when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city; George Polk, a young reporter killed covering the strife in postwar Greece; Ruben Salazar, the first Mexican-American journalist to have a major voice in mainstream news media; and Eric Sevareid, a broadcast journalist for CBS.
— Mount St. Mary's University stamped card, commemorating the 200th anniversary of the founding of the Maryland university.
— Frank Sinatra, Oscar- and Grammy-winning singer and actor.
_ reissues of the designs of the two 2007 Wedding Hearts stamps featuring vines that form the shape of a heart. These stamps come in two denominations designed for mailing wedding invitations and RSVPs.
— Minnesota statehood 150th anniversary.
— Love, an annual stamp this time featuring an oversized heart being transported by its owner to convey that a heart filled with love.
— Vintage Black Cinema set based on posters for five early movies.
— The Art of Disney: Imagination, featuring animated characters.
— Olympic Games, to coincide with the Games to be held from Aug. 8-24 in Beijing, China.
I am most excited about this stamp issue:
— Charles and Ray Eames, who made contributions to architecture, furniture design, manufacturing and photographic arts. Among many other things the husband and wife team designed the stackable molded fiberglass chair.

— Artist Albert Bierstadt, featuring his painting "Valley of the Yosemite."
— Latin Jazz, with a tropical evening scene.
— Alzheimer's Awareness, calling attention to the most common form of dementia among older people.
— Nature of America, detailing the flora and fauna of Great Lakes Dunes.
— Four Holiday Nutcrackers stamps picturing Santa, a king, a captain and a drummer.
— Traditional Christmas Stamp featuring a detail of a painting titled "Virgin and Child With the Young John the Baptist" by the Italian master Sandro Botticelli.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

January 22nd 2008 is the Date: Lancaster Science Factory Opens

Jan 22nd: Lancaster Science Factory.....
The Lancaster Science Factory will be opening Tuesday, Jan. 22nd at 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. With construction now completed, and the interior industrial space transformed into a bright, open environment, the former industrial space will become an exciting learning place for all ages. The Lancaster Science Factory, 454 New Holland Ave, Lancaster, PA...crossroads N. Plum St., across from Quips Pub!
www.lancastersciencefactory.com.

Northeast "NELA" Lancaster News



*The City has received a letter from DCED (PA Dept. of Community and Economic Development) stating that our application for funding for the purchase and installation of approximately 12 litter and 12 recycling receptacles in strategic locations in the northeast has been preliminarily approved. This past September, the City submitted an application for the receptacles to LIVE (Lancaster Investment in a Vibrant Economy), who subsequently applied to DCED on our behalf. Once we get final approval, Carol Parrish McCoy, Project admin.,will be working with Mike Devaney, Solid Waste and Recycling Program Manager, on purchase and installation of the streetscape-compliant receptacles, scheduled to take place in the spring.

*Northeast Neighbors Web site coming soon! A domain name has been reserved ( http://www.northeastneighbors.org/) and will be active in the very near future. Carol Parrish McCoy, Project Admin., will be working with the northeast neighborhood revitalization committee on ideas for content. If you have any ideas as to what you would like to see on the site, please let her know.


*We are in need of a "storefront" presence in the community . For the southwest revitalization initiative, we will be taking up Two Dudes Painting on their generous offer of space for a temporary satellite office where we can display the southwest plan. Please let Carol know if you have any ideas for possible northeast locations. We would like to try and stay in the central part of the northeast revitalization area (map of both areas is attached for reference).

*If you haven't already taken a look at the northeast plan, please visit the home page of http://www.cityoflancasterpa.com/. The plan will be available on the new http://www.northeastneighbors.org/ site once it is active. While the goals in the plan won't be implemented overnight, together, with the guidance of the northeast revitalization committee, we will begin working on action steps related to those goals.

The Assassination of Benazir Bhutto


From BBC......Benazir Bhutto followed her father into politics, and both of them died because of it - he was executed in 1979, she fell victim to an apparent suicide bomb attack.


Her two brothers also suffered violent deaths. Like the Nehru-Gandhi family in India, the Bhuttos of Pakistan are one of the world's most famous political dynasties. Benazir's father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was prime minister of Pakistan in the early 1970s.


His government was one of the few in the 30 years following independence that was not run by the army. Born in 1953 in the province of Sindh and educated at Harvard and Oxford, Ms Bhutto gained credibility from her father's high profile, even though she was a reluctant convert to politics. She was twice prime minister of Pakistan, from 1988 to 1990, and from 1993 to 1996.
On both occasions she was dismissed from office by the president for alleged corruption.


The dismissals typified her volatile political career, which was characterised by numerous peaks and troughs. At the height of her popularity - shortly after her first election - she was one of the most high-profile women leaders in the world.


Young and glamorous, she successfully portrayed herself as a refreshing contrast to the overwhelmingly male-dominated political establishment. But after her second fall from power, her name came to be seen by some as synonymous with corruption and bad governance.

Her husband, Asif Zardari has faced numerous corruption charges


The determination and stubbornness for which Ms Bhutto was renowned was first seen after her father was imprisoned and charged with murder by Gen Zia ul-Haq in 1977, following a military coup. Two years later he was executed. Ms Bhutto was imprisoned just before her father's death and spent most of her five-year jail term in solitary confinement. She described the conditions as extremely hard.


During stints out of prison for medical treatment, Ms Bhutto set up a Pakistan People's Party office in London, and began a campaign against General Zia.


She returned to Pakistan in 1986, attracting huge crowds to political rallies.
After Gen Zia died in an explosion on board his aircraft in 1988, she became one of the first democratically elected female prime ministers in an Islamic country. During both her stints in power, the role of Ms Bhutto's husband, Asif Zardari, proved highly controversial.


He played a prominent role in both her administrations, and has been accused by various Pakistani governments of stealing millions of dollars from state coffers - charges he denies, as did Ms Bhutto herself. Many commentators argued that the downfall of Ms Bhutto's government was accelerated by the alleged greed of her husband. None of about 18 corruption and criminal cases against Mr Zardari has been proved in court after 10 years. But he served at least eight years in jail. He was freed on bail in 2004, amid accusations that the charges against him were weak and going nowhere.


Ms Bhutto also steadfastly denied all the corruption charges against her, which she said were politically motivated. She faced corruption charges in at least five cases, all without a conviction, until amnestied in October 2007.

President Pervez Musharraf granted Ms Bhutto and others an amnesty.She was convicted in 1999 for failing to appear in court, but the Supreme Court later overturned that judgement.
Soon after the conviction, audiotapes of conversations between the judge and some top aides of then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif were discovered that showed that the judge had been under pressure to convict. Ms Bhutto left Pakistan in 1999 to live abroad, but questions about her and her husband's wealth continued to dog her. She appealed against a conviction in the Swiss courts for money-laundering.


During her years outside Pakistan, Ms Bhutto lived with her three children in Dubai, where she was joined by her husband after he was freed in 2004. She was a regular visitor to Western capitals, delivering lectures at universities and think-tanks and meeting government officials.
Ms Bhutto returned to Pakistan on 18 October 2007 after President Musharraf signed into law an ordinance granting her and others an amnesty from corruption charges.


Observers said the military regime saw her as a natural ally in its efforts to isolate religious forces and their surrogate militants.
She declined a government offer to let her party head the national government after the 2002 elections, in which the party received the largest number of votes.


In the months before her death, she had emerged again as a strong contender for power.
Some in Pakistan believe her secret talks with the military regime amounted to betrayal of democratic forces as these talks shored up President Musharraf's grip on the country.
Others said such talks indicated that the military might at long last be getting over its decades-old mistrust of Ms Bhutto and her party, and interpreted it as a good omen for democracy.
Western powers saw in her a popular leader with liberal leanings who could bring much needed legitimacy to Mr Musharraf's role in the "war against terror".

Benazir Bhutto was the last remaining bearer of her late father's political legacy.
Her brother, Murtaza - who was once expected to play the role of party leader - fled to the then-communist Afghanistan after his father's fall. From there, and various Middle Eastern capitals, he mounted a campaign against Pakistan's military government with a militant group called al-Zulfikar. He won elections from exile in 1993 and became a provincial legislator, returning home soon afterwards, only to be shot dead under mysterious circumstances in 1996.
Benazir's other brother, Shahnawaz - also politically active but in less violent ways than Murtaza - was found dead in his French Riviera apartment in 1985.


The assassination of Benazir Bhutto is a severe, and potentially crippling, blow to international hopes that Pakistan might emerge into a state of stability. It's shocking, yet it has been expected. The risks of Pakistan imploding have once again increased.


It is a further setback for the US "war on terror", which has as part of its strategy in the region the restoration of democracy in Pakistan to offer an alternative path, away from militancy and extremism. The strategy is very much at risk.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Beer Tree: The Ultimate Christmas Project

Happy Holidays from Tenpints! I totally want to do this Next Year! I better start saving bottles NOW! Cheers!

Friday, December 21, 2007

More News from Lancaster Brewing Company (LBC)




I read in the Ale Street News that a Major Expansion is being planned at LBC. The article noted an interview with director of sales and marketing, John Frantz with Ale Street News having exclusivity in breaking this news.

It seems that LBC bottling will be returning to Lancaster. The beer is currently bottled under contract by Lionshead or Lions brewery in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. LBC is hoping to close on 90,000 sq. feet of warehouse on N. Plum street and Liberty street that was once a Hanover Foods Corp. warehouse. The vision for this new bottling and packaging facility is to have it be "green" or environmentally-friendly. The long term goal is to have the main operation based in this new space by 2010 with the brewpub continuing to produce beer for consumption in house and take away growlers.

The new focus MAY mean that there will be a shift in ownership from the Keares family, who rescued Lancaster Malt Brewing Co. from bankruptcy in 2002, to an ownership group led by Franz and current brewmaster Christian Heim. The article states that they hope to expand distribution into Delaware, NY state, Virginia and perhaps New England.
LBC also plans on bottling Rare Rooster Rye Ale as a summer seasonal release and Franklin's Freedom Fest for year round availability. My hope that Baltic Porter brewing season is expanded.
If I hate my job perhaps I can get a job and walk to work at the Bottling plant just like Laverne and Shirley......One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Schlemeel, schlemazel, hasenfeffer incorporated.....


spring awakening


Lancaster County's own, Jonathan Groff makes ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY'S BEST & WORST 2007 MAGAZINE, issue #971/972, it is a special DOUBLE ISSUE. He's Listed. Jonathan's performance in Spring Awakening is listed as one of the BEST performances of 2007!!!!

Wednesday, December 19, 2007


Victory Baltic Thunder....


Truly a worldly beer. Baltic Thunder represents the Baltic Porter style admirably. Exhibiting the enticing, toffee roast of the British porter that originated the style in the 18th century, and the soothing, subtle fruit nuance of contemporary brews that flourish from Helsinki to Vilnius today, this dark lager honors the Baltic god of thunder. Created by an inspired collaboration of brewers and tempered with a touch of turmoil, Baltic Thunder rolls on to bring you enchanting light as the darkness fades.


COMPOSITION Hops: European whole flower Malts: imported German 2 row and roasted malts ABV: 8.5%
AVAILABILITY Draft for a limited time, 22 oz. bottles by case (of 12) Draft @ THE BREWERY ON DRAFTING ROOM RESTAURANT, EXTON, PA. Starts pouring on Sat., Jan. 5th, 2008! Happy New Year!!!

pricing in our restaurant gift shop

Monday, December 17, 2007

Holiday brews


Here are a sampling of some seasonal brews I am trying to find and try....


Christmas Ale: Sly Fox Beer, Phoenixville and Royersford, PA


Scotch Ale: Ye Olde Kilt Tilter, Middle Ages brewing Co., Syracuse, NY


English Winter Ale: Winter Welcome Ale; Samuel Smith's Old Brewery Tadcaster, Great Britain


Rogue Santa's Private Reserve, Rogue brewing, Oregon

Good Living



  • A recent study found CACAO to be a more effective cough suppressant than codeine.

  • In Ukraine ANIMALS were historically believed to have the power of speech on Christmas Eve.

  • Teddy Roosevelt BANNED THE CHRISTMAS TREE from the White House for ENVIRONMENTAL reasons.

  • More than 70 percent of seafood eaten in the US is imported.

  • The technique used to make CANDY CANES was first written down in a collection of recipes in 13th century Baghdad.

  • Prior to the first World War, Southerns were more likely to set off FIREWORKS on Christmas Day than the 4th of July.

  • Buenos Aires is the home to the only KOSHER McDonald's outside of Israel.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

LBC-Harrisburg


As a Valued Customer and Keares Diner, I signed up for their e-mail list. This week I received this invite. They have waster no time in turning their Doc Holliday's- Harrisburg location into a LBC.....
The Keares Family Cordially Invites You and a Guest to a Preview of
Lancaster Brewing Company Harrisburg to Drop In On Friday, December 21st from 5pm to 9pm,,,,Located at 469 Eisenhower Blvd, Harrisburg, PA 17111....Next to Howard Johnson / Formerly Doc Holliday's. They will be serving samples of their menu and beer tastings!

Friday, December 7, 2007

Quick Notes



  • FRESH PAINT @ URBAN PLACE/Science Factory

  • LBC HAS GONE SMOKE FREE

  • CAR MAX IS COMING TO LANCASTER NEAR PARK CITY MALL

  • STEVE AND BARRY'S IS OPEN @ ROCKVALE OUTLETS

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Iron Hill Brewery is NOW OPEN in Lancaster, PA


From the local paper: Iron Hill Brewery has to opened its $2.8 million restaurant and brewpub today in College Row, the $30 million student housing and commercial complex at Franklin & Marshall College.The 280-seat restaurant at 781 Harrisburg Pike, Lancaster, PA expects to annually brew about 37,200 gallons of beer on site. It will feature six house brands, as well as seasonal beer varieties. House brands are Iron Hill Light Lager, Raspberry Wheat, Lodestone Lager, Anvil Ale, Ironbound Ale, Pig Iron Porter. Dinner entrees will range from $12 to $20 in the restaurant, while lunch entrees will cost $9 to $14. The restaurant will have about 80 employees.The Delaware-based Iron Hill also has locations in Media, North Wales, West Chester and Phoenixville, and in Newark and Wilmington, Del.


Sweet T and I had lunch their last Saturday. We both had the sample tray of beers, which included 9 samples for $7.00. A great price and a great way to sample their brews and seasonal. I am familiar with their brews from their other restaurants but they always have something new. I was delighted with their Pig Iron Porter with Nitro, nice and creamy. Their pints are $ 4.50 and they sell growlers to go. A word of caution to the local beer lovers: They will NOT fill your LBC Growler, only their own. So NO use taking that with you!


The wait staff was friendly and I recognized a few from other local restaurants. I ordered the Angus burger and did not notice the small print: All Meat is cooked well, no pink. I liked my Med. rare to well, so I definitely thought my burger was too dry. Partly my fault and great waiter would have asked me but I will overlook that since the restaurant is so new. However, I cannot over look how over salty my pomme frites were. I think I went in to a sodium coma.

Overall, not too bad for just opening and I will definitely be going back.

Heavy Trash/Forever Landfill


Manifesto

Heavy Trash is an anonymous arts organization of architects, artists, and urban planners, which started in LA. Heavy Trash creates large, disposable art objects that draw community and media attention to specific urban issues. By explaining a particular urban problem and suggesting a solution, Heavy Trash seeks to provoke dialogue among citizens. Lets start on HERE in Lancaster County!! http://heavytrash.blogspot.com/2005/04/manifesto.html

THEIR Next Project was Forever Landfill>>>


LOS ANGELES - In unrelated news, urbanist pranksters Heavy Trash are at it again. This time they're calling attention to the wastefulness of Angelenos who dispose of "940,000 tons of trash annually." And where does the trash go? After the dumpster, we mean. The majority of us have no clue. Heavy Trash wants to make sure you know that there's a place out there for your refuse through the Forever Landfill. [CurbedWire Inbox]


Better Design for the Greater Good

I stumbled upon a really cool web site/network through an Ad in GOOD Magazine....It is called Design 21: Social Design Network.http://www.design21sdn.com/

Are you a socially conscious designer, non-profit, individual organization who believes social change can happen through design?
Welcome Home states the web site, which is designed to engage the power of design and connect to create change.....please check it out and join.

"Never underestimate that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world." Margaret Mead

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

DEC 5th Also NInja Day


It's time for the Annual Day of the Ninja. Forget 'Talk Like a Pirate' Day. This will truly be our chance to show the world what ninja are made of.


As last year (and every year from now on), December 5th is the Day of the Ninja. Plague your co-workers with ninja-ness and wear a ninja mask to work! Got the day off? Run wild in the streets, or dress like a ninja at the mall! Just show the world that YOU ARE NINJA!


I also want you to help me take over the Internet on that day. LiveJournal posts about ninja. YouTube videos. Ninja links on all your websites. Photos of yourself wearing ninja outfits. Whatever. Go Ninja crazy.


Most importantly, tell YOUR friends and get them aboard. The more ninja, the merrier. mailto:aeon@ninjaburger.com?subject=DOTN to let me know you're aboard, and let me know what you plan to do to help celebrate the Annual Day of the Ninja.


Special Note: There are several other websites and movements out there calling this "International Creep Like a Ninja Day" or "Sneak Like a Ninja Day". This site is not affiliated with them, but we support their efforts. Really, as long as we're all doing it on the same day (December 5), you can call it whatever you like.


December 5 - Annual Day of the Ninja

Repeal Day


On December 5th, 1933, Utah, the final state needed for a three quarters majority, ratified the 21st Amendment, repealing Prohibition and restoring the American right to a celebratory drink. While the amendment still allowed for state and local levels of Prohibition, by 1966 there were no state laws banning alcohol.


Why Do We Celebrate?


Repeal Day is not widely celebrated in this country, yet it commemorates the anniversary of the day the United States repealed the Eighteenth Amendment and gave Americans the constitutional ability to consume alcohol.


Here are a few reasons why we think Repeal Day should be a celebrated day in the United States:
It's the perfect time of year.


Conveniently located halfway between Thanksgiving and Christmas — at a time when most Americans are probably not spending time with family — Repeal Day presents a wonderful occasion to get together with friends and pay tribute to our constitutional rights.
We have the constitutional ability to do so.


Unlike St. Patrick's Day or Cinco de Mayo, Repeal Day is a day that all Americans have a part in observing, because it's written in our Constitution. No other holiday celebrates the laws that guarantee our rights, and Repeal Day has everything to do with our personal pleasures.
It's easy!!!


There are no outfits to buy, costumes to rent, rivers to dye green. Simply celebrate the day by stopping by your local bar, tavern, saloon, winery, distillery, or brewhouse and having a drink. Pick up a six-pack on your way home from work. Split a bottle of wine with a loved one. Buy a shot for a stranger. Just do it because you can.
Thanks for reading about what we hope will become a celebrated day in this country. Please help spread the word about Repeal Day, and tell a friend.
Cheers!
The 18th Amendment
Ratified January 16, 1919

Monday, December 3, 2007

Fall Cancelled

I read this and had to pass it on in case you missed it:

BY Op-Ed Columnist....
The People We Have Been Waiting For

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: December 2, 2007

It was 60 degrees on Thursday in Washington, well above normal, and as I slipped away for some pre-Christmas golf, I found myself thinking about a wickedly funny story that The Onion, the satirical newspaper, ran the other day: “Fall Canceled after 3 Billion Seasons”:

“Fall, the long-running series of shorter days and cooler nights, was canceled earlier this week after nearly 3 billion seasons on Earth, sources reported Tuesday.

“The classic period of the year, which once occupied a coveted slot between summer and winter, will be replaced by new, stifling humidity levels, near-constant sunshine and almost no precipitation for months.

“‘As much as we’d like to see it stay, fall will not be returning for another season,’ National Weather Service president John Hayes announced during a muggy press conference Nov. 6. ‘Fall had a great run, but sadly, times have changed.’ ... The cancellation was not without its share of warning signs. In recent years, fall had been reduced from three months to a meager two-week stint, and its scheduled start time had been pushed back later and later each year.”

To read the entire piece:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/02/business/coll02friedman.html?_r=1&n=Top/Opinion/Editorials%20and%20Op-Ed/Op-Ed/Columnists/Thomas%20L%20Friedman&oref=slogin

Friday, November 23, 2007

Favorite Football Game; Hook'em Horns


The following was written by by Mike Craven for the Bleacher Report.....

On Friday, November 23, 2007, the University of Texas football team travels to Bryan-College Station for another matchup with the Aggies of Texas A&M.

I don't want to be guilty of overhyping a game which on paper may not appear to be that good, but I must state that the UT-A&M game is the main course of my favorite week of the year.

Monday through Wednesday may not be that noteworthy, but Thursday through Sunday are the best four consecutive days on the calendar. Thursday consists of turkey and dressing, pumpkin pie, and the Cowboys. Add in the surprisingly important Green Bay-Detroit and Arizona State-USC matchups, and you have the recipe for a great day on the couch.

Saturday and Sunday are always the best days of the week for football fans, but this weekend the games will be even better, with the addition of leftover turkey sandwiches and pumpkin pie.

But for most Texans, ( and AJ) Friday is the day to look forward to. This is year is no different.!!

Can Texas stop A&M's running game, specifically Steven McGee? Can Texas' offense continue their success running the ball? Can Colt McCoy avoid enough mistakes to win?

Texas has separated itself from A&M in terms of talent, but the Aggies always show up to play against their rivals from Austin. As a Longhorn fan brought up in the late 80s and early 90s, I remember the days when UT was the underdog. Because of that, I have an innate fear of A&M's 12th man—see last year for an example.

For A&M, this is a game that can alter their momentum going into an offseason that is sure to be interesting. Many questions are swirling around this team, most having to do with soon-to-be-former coach Dennis Franchione's contract.

As much as Tech fans may disagree, A&M is the number-two football school in the state of Texas. They cannot afford to get beaten in their recruiting efforts in-state by outsiders like LSU and Oklahoma, as they have in recent years.

Until they clearly re-establish themselves as a dominant force in Texas football, A&M will have to settle for just two or three wins a decade against the rival Longhorns.

Oklahoma's recent troubles have made this game interesting. Texas actually has a chance to go to the Big 12 Championship game if the depleted Sooners can't finish the season.

How ironic would it be if OU lost their last two games and let UT skate into the conference championship? Texas would just need to overcome A&M to turn a very weird, up-and-down season into another ten-win year with a shot at a BCS bowl and maybe the Big 12 trophy to boot. Who knows, maybe they get Hawaii, this year's Boise St. in a BCS at large game.
To make it happen, the Longhorns first have to get past lowly A&M. Who now take this game more seriously than the Longhorns. They wouldn't want it any other way—and frankly, neither would I, nor would I!!!!

New Flag


I got a new flag!! Yes, it is my BIRTHDAY, today. Born in the Morning, on a Tuesday, in 1965!

Thanksgiving Drinks


I am not a fan of jellied Cranberries with the traditional Thanksgiving dinner so I decided to try a Sam Adams Cranberry Lambic. A good idea maybe, especially after working 6 hours and then cooking dinner for 2 hours but I did not like the beer, too tart. I switched to a Sam Adams Lager. Hope everyone had a Wonderful Thanksgiving!!

st ides


It's been an interesting few weeks in the neighborhood. Some of our neighbors were forced to move and new neighbors will be moving in both across the street and right next door.....

I have witnessed 3 drug deals and found a brown paper bottle in my front bushes....yummy...malt liquor=st. ides!

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Happy Turkey Day


Thanksgiving is one of my favorite Holidays>>>>Interesting facts......


70 million PIES are sold in grocery stores every year at Thanksgiving.


Wild Turkeys can see 320 degrees without moving their heads.


The Turkey presented on the White House Lawn for a "Presidential pardon" undergoes 4 months of training, including repeated hand feeding, in anticipation of the Thanksgiving Photo opportunity.


Before the mid-1800's Thanksgiving was a celebration of family and community but had NOTHING to do with Pilgrims.

Victory Beer Cake


Golden Monkey Cake......1 (18.25 ounce) package yellow cake mix

1 (3.5 ounce) package instant vanilla pudding mix

1 cup Golden Monkey

1/4 cup vegetable oil

4 eggs
DIRECTIONS
Preheat oven to 350°F, grease and flour a 10 inch Bundt pan.
Combine cake mix and pudding mix in a large bowl. Add Golden Monkey and vegetable oil and mix lightly. Add 4 eggs. Beat at high speed until mixture is thick, creamy and smooth. Pour into greased and floured Bundt pan.
Bake at 350°F for 55 minutes. Cool in pan for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and cool completely. Frost as desired or dust with powdered sugar.
A similar cake can be made with Storm King Stout. Simply swap the cake and pudding mixes with chocolate instead.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Great American Smoke OUT 11/15/07


It’s Never Too
Late to Quit …


Join the Great American Smoke-out on Thursday, November 15!!


People who quit smoking live longer than
those who continue to smoke. Smokers
who quit substantially reduce their risk of
premature death.


The argument that it is too late to quit
smoking because the damage is already
done is untrue.


Quit smoking. We can help.
Call 1-800-ACS-2345
www.cancer.org/greatamericans

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

The Crew


I don't blog much about my work but at a recent meeting of our Regional office, we had our picture taken for the powers to be at Headquarters in Harrisburg. Probably to be posted in some newsletter nobody reads. I thought I would post the photo here, of the crew I work with. I will talk more about work in an upcoming post. This is a recent photo even though the date is set for 2 years ago. (?)

Veteran's day reading

THE LAST WORD by
Anna Quindlen

Not Semi-Soldiers......It's no longer a question of whether women should be in combat. It's a matter of the regulations catching up with the reality.

Nov 12, 2007 Issue of Newsweek

http://www.newsweek.com/id/67917

Please take a moment and read this article.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Hawk Visit


This Saturday morning a Hawk has decided to visit the 500 block of North Plum St. We saw it attack a squirrel but the squirrel got away. The hawk is watching a tree that has a nest in it, I believe, since I hear something in the tree/nest crying.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Iron Hill Brewery News = Lancaster


Well, it does not look like I will be able to celebrate my Birthday (Nov. 23) this year at Iron Hill Brewery in Lancaster. They are looking for an official opening at 5:00 PM on Tuesday, Nov. 27. BUT a lot has to come together before then.... so everyone is keeping they're fingers crossed.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Citiots


The Anger Is Blowing In The Wind
By Roya Wolverson NEWSWEEK
Nov 12, 2007 Issue

For cash-strapped farmers with plenty of open land, wind-energy turbines offer a sorely needed windfall. But "not in my backyard" clashes are arising throughout the East and mid-Atlantic regions, pitting local farmers against "citiots"—people who "buy a second home and affect community decisions by being there two days a week," says Frank Masaino, spokesman for a mid-Atlantic coalition of wind developers.

Citiots say they're just protecting the unspoiled idyll that they paid for. Louis Freedman, a public-policy consultant in Washington, D.C., opposes a project near his second home in Virginia because the land is "sacred" and more valuable than the energy savings. To him, perhaps.
For farmers, one wind turbine can rake in about $5,000 a year in rent, compared with $300 for corn or soybean farming. "These people can't understand that they're living in the middle of my business," says Steven Schwoerer, a dairy farmer from Normal, Ill., whose effort to put a wind farm on his private land has been blocked by part-time neighbors. Such projects, he says, are "good for my community and for my grandchildren, and if you don't like it, go back to town."

I love the word CITIOTS and I am going to start using it in my everyday conversation EVERYDAY! Plus, I really like Wind Turbines, I think of them as beautiful sculptures.

I voted Today


It has been reported that turnout in this election has been very light and may not even be 20% ??? I do not like where I have to go vote ...it is in a private plumbing business/warehouse, which is loud and crowded plus there are not enough machines....almost like a third world country....and I thought I heard gun shots as I was leaving. I am use to voting in a city owned building or in a school or church.

I'm Not There


Todd Haynes' Bob Dylan biopic, I'm Not There, finds his Bobness played by six different actors. Five times that number of artists tackle his oeuvre on this 34-song LP, including Wilco's Jeff Tweedy (''Simple Twist of Fate'') and Antony and the Johnsons (''Knockin' on Heaven's Door''). The pleasures to be gleaned are straightforward, with most musicians offering rarely radical but frequently great covers. And both Dylan himself and Sonic Youth perform the title track — though not, alas, together. DOWNLOAD THIS: Hear Cat Power's ''Stuck Inside of Mobile With the Memphis Blues Again'' This review is from Senior editor Clark Collins of Entertainment Weekly. So far, I have heard the Cat Powers and Jeff Tweedy's covers and I love them. I can't wait to get this double CD and see this Film. Yes, that is Cate as Bob.

I love Maps Too


I read this today in the current issue of Newsweek....and since I love Maps too, I had to share....


By Malcolm Jones NEWSWEEK
Nov 12, 2007 Issue



I love maps. They're useful. They're pretty. And quite often, they're free. I love all kinds of maps—old, new, Mercator, treasure, you name it. And after poring over The Onion’s latest parody, "Our Dumb World: Atlas of the Planet Earth," I've decided that I like funny maps best of all.


The Onion's map of the United Kingdom, for example, shows the burial site of Mother Goose, a literature mine and the world's grayest building. Ukraine's includes the location of a "headless-doll factory." Like any regular atlas, "Our Dumb World" includes lots of facts, or "facts." Wales is the birthplace of the "oldest, longest, least pronounceable language in the world. When spoken, it sounds like a beautiful song, but when written, it looks like the alphabet just vomited."


This is the best parody since the National Lampoon published its phony newspaper, "The Dacron Republican-Democrat," in 1978. But The Onion's atlas is not merely parody. Coupling rage with humor, it transcends its own silliness with Swiftian satire. Take the entry on the Democratic Republic of Congo, which "has endured decades of brutal civil war, in which rebel forces have adopted the gruesome practices of raping women with machetes, decapitating babies, and even … they, they just … with their teeth, they … Jesus f––-ing Christ you don't want to know what goes on here." The Onion's picture of our world is skewed, buffoonish, raging, mocking and often ridiculous. It is not factual, fair or balanced. But it certainly rings true.
© Newsweek, Inc.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

I'm watching cartoons again


As my 42nd b-day approaches later this month I realized today how much I am loving watching cartoons again. I am simply overjoyed that Boondocks is back on the air and so far the new season of South Park is the Best!!


Here is the Wiki link for Boondocks, which I recommend everyone watch. I love the comic strip but it is not carried in any of the daily papers I read unfortunately though I have lobbied for them to carry it but to no avail. So WATCH the series!

This Sunday Clocks Fall Back


This Sunday we turn our clocks back an hour @ 2am on Sunday November 4, 2007. I found this interesting fact today that my man, Benjamin Franklin, in 1784 first mentioned the idea of daylight savings time in his essay" An Economical Project for Diminishing the Cost of Light".

Acid vandal or copy-cat?


Investigators are trying to determine whether 2 acts of vandalism this week in Lancaster, PA were the work of the County's notorious Acid Vandal, a copycat or a Halloween prankster. Brett Hambright worte the following piece in the local paper: Intelligencer Journal: Two cars, one in Manheim Township and the other in Lancaster city, were doused with a corrosive substance that peeled away the vehicles' paint, investigators said.


Lancaster city police say a recent incident on the 200 block of East Lemon Street wasn't consistent with the vandal's ongoing 22-month spree. Meanwhile, Manheim Township police aren't so sure. A car vandalized overnight Sunday on Jackson Street showed similar damage to vehicles targeted during the spree. The victim said Wednesday night that paint on the hood of her Ford Escort "was curling up like potato chips." Paint was stripped to the car's primer in two square-foot blotches, the victim said. Manheim Township police Sgt. Robert Baldwin said the "acid vandal" may or may not be responsible.


"It appeared to have been an acid-like substance, but we don't know" whether it's connected, Baldwin said. The victim, who asked not to be identified in fear of retaliation, said her car was targeted overnight Sunday. The woman said she didn't notice the damage until Tuesday because frost covered the vehicle when she drove it early Monday. "How dare they do that to me?" she said Wednesday.


She isn't the only person outraged.


Since January 2006, more than 400 vehicles in Lancaster city and township have been hit by the "acid vandal." The vandal is described as a skinny, middle-aged white man, according to a city woman who watched him at work in late August.


Sporadic incidents have been reported in Manheim Township. Total damages from the spree likely are nearing $500,000 dollars. The Jackson Street resident said she probably won't get her car repaired at a body shop for "several hundred dollars." On average, repairs cost about $1,000 per vehicle — more if multiple panels are damaged.


"I don't have the money, so I'll probably sand it myself," she said. "The vehicle is not my life."


In Lancaster city, a vehicle in the 200 block of East Lemon Street was vandalized overnight Monday, police said.
The vehicle was damaged by a corrosive chemical, but officials say they are treating the case as a separate incident. "It's not related, but we can't discuss why," Lancaster city police Capt. John Flemming said Wednesday evening. "It's different in several ways." Police have been telling residents to stay alert and watch for anyone suspicious on their block. The Jackson Street woman said her neighbors often do just that. "Usually, we kind of know when somebody strange is in the neighborhood," she said. "Neighbors kind of look out for each other."


Lancaster City-County Crime Stoppers is offering an $18,000 reward for information that leads to an arrest and conviction in the acid vandal case. Tipsters should call (800) 322-1913.
City police can be reached at 735-3300.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

David Rees Rocks

I got this e-mail from David Rees last week and I know I am posting this late...we have missed the lecture but it is too priceless to delete and not read....but it is not too late for the affordable art, if you happen to be in NYC this weekend>>>
From David's email...
I am coming out of retirement for two live performances in celebration of two of my favorite things: AFFORDABLE ART and ISLAMOFASCISM.

1. ISLAMOFASCISM Soft-spoken conservative intellectual David Horowitz has designated October 22-26 as "Islamofascism Awareness Week." (http://www.terrorismawareness.org/)

In case you didn't know, we are fighting World War IV with Islamofascists-- but "the academic left has mobilized to create sympathy for the enemy and to fight anyone who rallies Americans to defend themselves." Horowitz has enlisted voices of moderation like Ann Coulter, Daniel Pipes, and Rick Santorum(?!?) "to oppose these lies and to rally American students to defend their country." I want a piece of that!

So I'm giving a FREE lecture on Islamofascism: DAVID REES LECTURE ON ISLAMOFASCISM:"The More You Know"Friday, October 26Word Bookstore, Brooklyn 126 Franklin St (Greenpoint) http://wordbrooklyn.com/7:30 PM FREE If ever a lecture on the nihilistic evil of Islamofascism could be described as "TOTALLY OFF THE HOOK," this is it! (Afterwards I will be signing copies of Maureen Dowd's "Are Men Necessary?" and Nora Ephron's "I Feel Bad About My Neck")

2. AFFORDABLE ART Brooklyn’s pirate printmakers and cheap-art champions CANNONBALL PRESS will host their second PRINTS GONE WILD art fair next weekend. Artists and printmakers from around the country will convene in a cavernous Williamsburg warehouse to display and sell their prints for LESS THAN FIFTY DOLLARS A POP. It has fallen on me to emcee the opening night's festivities-- which will include rock bands; a raffle; a live interview (any famous celebrities reading this, please contact me so I can interview you); and maybe CRAZY TIMES. I will also be serving as DJ for the event, playing some of my finest thrift-store records! As I always say, "Why pay 99 cents to download one song from the computer when you can buy an entire LP for 50 cents at the Salvation Army?" (Basically, I hope you like “Abandoned Luncheonette” by Hall & Oates, because I will be spinning that sonofabitch for about three hours straight!!!) PRINTS GONE WILD PARTYFriday, November 3Supreme Trading Gallery, Brooklyn213 North 8th St (Williambsurg)http://tinyurl.com/3yq69s 6:00 PM - MidnightFREE
Thanks for your interest,David Reeshttp://www.mnftiu.cc/

October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month


Please tell ten friends to tell ten today! I got this e-mail today so I decided to re-post it here.... The Breast Cancer site is having trouble getting enough people to click on their site daily to meet their quota of donating at least one free mammogram a day to an underprivileged woman. It takes less than a minute to go to their site and click on "donating a mammogram" for free (pink window in the middle).


This doesn't cost you a thing. Their corporate sponsors /advertisers use the number of daily visits to donate mammogram in exchange for advertising.
Here's the web site! Pass it along to people you know.


Opening set for Williams-Sonoma=Lancaster, PA

Williams-Sonoma Store Grand Opening‏ @

Park City Center, 354 Park City Center, Lancaster, PA 17601 (717) 291-1495

Grand Opening On November 10th, 2007 ...With the grand opening of our new Park City Center store on November 10th, we introduce you to Grand Cuisine--where shopping for your kitchen is an exciting new experience in the Williams-Sonoma tradition.

I don't shop too much at "the Mall" but it is nice to see some new stores are coming and I really like Williams-Sonoma, so i will check it out soon before the madding holiday shopping season is upon us.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Iron Hill Brewery=Lancaster

Iron Hill Brewery & Restaurant will soon be serving distinctive, full-flavored, handcrafted beers and new American cuisine, Iron Hill Brewery will soon open its first Lancaster location at the Shops at College Row=781 Harrisburg Pike. Iron Hill was scheduled to open Nov. 1st but the date has been pushed back to late November.

Since I work in the Philadelphia area, I have enjoyed Iron Hill Brewery and Restaurant at their Media, Phoenixville and West Chester locations so I am very excited that they will be opening in Lancaster where I live! I can't wait to join their MUG CLUB!

Paul Rutherford had been Assistant Brewer @ Iron Hill's North Wales location now he has been named head brewer at Lancaster!

Thanksgiving @ the North Wales location will see a very limited release of an Imperial Stout mega bottle and I can only hope that will be on the brewing schedule for Lancaster Thanksgiving 2008!

Fenz is Open in Lancaster PA

Fenz Restaurant & Late Night......Stepping into Fenz Restaurant, 398 Harrisburg Pike, you feel like you're stepping into a true late-night hot spot. Everything about it is impeccable and feels like it was designed with ease. Fenz is open exclusively for dinner and late night dining and Fenz Restaurant is designed for that experience. From the menu to the lighting to the tableware, nothing was left to chance. The atmosphere is professional and modern, yet you can relax and enjoy yourself. Bringing influences into their kitchen, from the American family kitchen to the Far East, when ordering an entree from either the main menu or a snack from the Bar Bites menu, one doesn't need to be a risk-taker. By ordering the old standby at Fenz, you will still be trying something new. Fenz Restaurant, 398 Harrisburg Pike, is open Tue-Sat opening at 3pm, 717-735-6999. I can't give a review yet of this restaurant but soon so stay tuned!

What's brewing @ Triumph

Here's what is brewing at Triumph, if you are around any of their locations in November:
Brewer's Reserve Barrel Tappings!!!
Join us every month when the brewer drags up a barrel out of his secret stash. The supply is very limited (about ten gallons), so make sure to be on hand when the tap is hammered home.
This month's tappings:
Philadelphia - Blonde Double Bock. Thursday, November 1 at 6pm.
New Hope - Belgian Red Ale. Friday, November 2nd at 6pm.
Princeton - Barrel-Aged Scotch Ale. Wednesday, November 7 at 6pm.

Happy Hour at Triumph of Philly / Monday-Friday / 5-7 pm
TPS reports got you down? Boss out of his mind? We can help re-adjust your attitude with $3 beers, $4 house wine, & $5 mixed drinks.

Interesting Info about 'THE WIRE"

I had just posted about THE WIRE's last season coming up on HBO and then one of my best friends gave me an article from our Home Town (Bloomsburg, PA) newspaper that she has been saving for me and someone we both know works on THE WIRE. Cool!! It turns out that Jen Ralston, who graduated from BHS class of 89 and from NYU Film School in '95 is a Sound Editor. Her web site is very interesting...http://www.jenralston.net/ check it out....

She has worked on past season's of The Wire and has worked on feature films for directors like the Coen brothers, John Sayles, Scorsese, Ang Lee, and Kimberly Pierce!

Friday, October 26, 2007

XPN coming to Central PA


The next voice you hear … WXPN coming to central Pa. YEAHOOOOOOO!


From PATRICK BURNS, Staff Intelligencer Journal article....
LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa. - Three years after helping launch Philadelphia's coolest live music spot, World Cafe Live, Roger LeMay has a new goal: Make radio hip again in the Lancaster area.
LeMay, general manager of the nationally acclaimed Philadelphia public radio station WXPN-FM 88.5, will begin that task Tuesday when WXPN 88.7 will go live in central Pennsylvania.


The $3.5 million venture, which includes the purchase of Harrisburg station WZXM-FM 88.7 and a new translator tower in Middletown, will double WXPN's broadcast footprint, LeMay said Thursday during a visit to Lancaster.


The deal may appear risky, considering WXPN's $7 million annual budget. But like the station's eclectic and inspiring mix of rock, blues, roots, indie, soul, reggae, funk and folk, LeMay is anything but ordinary.


WXPN is an NPR member — it sells and distributes World Cafe to about 190 NPR stations — but it remains pretty much independent, LeMay said. It does carry NPR news on the hour, "but that's it," LeMay said.


For more info. check out their web site:


They are having a Get to Know Us tour:


The tour begins with a Kids Corner Star Party on Thursday evening. Then, we kick off the weekend early with XPN's Free At Noon Concert and Dance Party at the Whitaker Center. Midday Saturday, join David Dye for his Book Signing. Then, on to Lancaster for a live free concert with Matt Pond PA and Jessica Hoop at the Chameleon Club. Sunday takes us to the Strand-Capitol Performing Arts Center in York, PA. November 1 to the 4th, it's the WXPN

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Fix My Problem First American Home Warranty Corp.


Sure, I have a story. A month into this claim and no dry wall repair!!

This is one messed up company, who does not know a thing about "customer service"? Their training program must be to push off every concern you have, tell you there's "nothing they can do" and, at best, tell you that someone will call you back - which never happens.


The plumber (s) who handle the first part of the claim, fixing the sewer/water exit pipe were excellent and it was a 2 day job. HOWEVER, it has been a mess since then. FIRST AMERICAN can not find a drywall tech in this area and so the CASH OUT option they offered was ONLY $75.00 dollars!! The neighbor next door has gotten an estimate for her smaller hole to be fixed for $300.00! So I am still waiting..... I love how I have gotten four request letters/packets to renew my warranty contract with this lousy company since this has started. Yeah, right... I want to give you more money so I am protected and have a warranty with this company who cannot complete a job of doing some drywalling? Sure I will get right on that!!


PLEASE FIX MY PROBLEM FIRST AMERICAN HOME WARRANTY CORPORATION!!!!!!

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Rant of the Day=blood boiling


With Veteran's Day soon upon us, I read this today...U.S. President George W. Bush asked Congress on Monday (Oct 22, 2007) for $189.3 billion (93.2 billion pounds) to fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, another huge request that faced deep scepticism from lawmakers opposed to prolonging the Iraq conflict.

Bush's request covers military operations for fiscal 2008, which began on October 1, the White House said. If approved it would make 2008 the most expensive year in the Iraq and Afghan wars and would be on top of about $600 billion already approved for those conflicts.

And then I read this...Linda Bilmes, a policy analyst at Harvard who will testify before Congress this week, calculates that over the next decade, the disability costs for vets will be at least $60 billion—more than six times the administration's official projections. The numbers coming out of government budget offices, she says, "are significantly underestimating the reality." All this has angered some vets and their families. "I would love to have the president live my life for one week to see how difficult it is," says Annette McLeod, wife of Army specialist Wendell McLeod, who is suffering from PTSD after serving in Iraq. "How do you fund a war but not fund the casualties?" By Michael Isikoff and Jamie Reno NEWSWEEK
Oct 29, 2007 Issue

Last Season of HBO's The Wire


HBO is expected to premiere the Last Season (#5) of THE WIRE on Jan. 6, 2008. In the Oct. 22, 2007 issue of THE NEW YORKER there is a great article/profile of the series and it's creator, David Simon by Margaret Talbot.


Here is an excerpt: “The Wire,” Simon often says, is a show about how contemporary American society—and, particularly, “raw, unencumbered capitalism”—devalues human beings. He told me, “Every single moment on the planet, from here on out, human beings are worth less. We are in a post-industrial age. We don’t need as many of us as we once did. So, if the first season was about devaluing the cops who knew their beats and the corner boys slinging drugs, then the second was about devaluing the longshoremen and their labor, the third about people who wanted to make changes in the city, and the fourth was about kids who were being prepared, badly, for an economy that no longer really needs them. And the fifth? It’s about the people who are supposed to be monitoring all this and sounding the alarm—the journalists. The newsroom I worked in had four hundred and fifty people. Now it’s got three hundred. Management says, ‘We have to do more with less.’ That’s the bullshit of bean counters who care only about the bottom line. You do less with less.”

Urban Place=Update



Visit their new website for information about this mixed use community, such as floor plans, amenities and photo galleries for their retail, commercial and residential spaces. Apartments are being rented and 1 already is under contract!!

Lancaster Science Factory=Update


Revitalizing Lancaster City....and the Lancaster Science factory will be an exciting educational opportunities that are good for tourism and good for business, bringing a vital family market into the city both weekdays and weekends. On average, a small science center attracts 73,000 visitors annually. We are projecting 40,000 visitors the first year to our location in Lancaster City. The Urban Place revitalization project on New Holland Avenue will serve as a new north east gateway into the city.

The Science Factory will occupy 11,000 sq. ft. in an old factory building in Urban Place, a revitalization project on New Holland Avenue in Lancaster, PA. The Science Factory has 30' ceilings, flexible space, plenty of free parking and is easily accessible from Route 30. The Science Factory is just two minutes from the center of downtown Lancaster, PA. It is scheduled to open Jan. 1, 2008!!

Monday, October 22, 2007

PA Property Tax Relief=Idiots in H-burg

In explaining why he would not give every Pennsylvania homeowner property tax relief, the Speaker Emeritus of the House Republicans this week said, "Let's forget this nonsense about trying to help everyone. The communists tried it and it didn't work." John Perzel, Philadelphia Inquirer 10/11/07. And, to add insult to injury, the leader of the Senate Republicans says the Senate won't even talk about property taxes this fall.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

PA Winners of the Great American Beer Fest

The following PA breweries won medals @ Great American Beer Festival:

Brewery - Beer- State - Medals - Category=descending order

Allentown/Bethlehem Brew Works
English Style India Pale Ale
PA
Gold
Pro-Am Beer

Iron Hill Brewery & Restaurant - Media
Kriek de Hill
PA
Bronze
Belgian-Style Sour Ale

McKenzie Brew House
Saison Vautour
PA
Gold
French- and Belgian Style Saison


McKenzie Brew House
McKenzie Wee Heavy
PA
Bronze
Strong Scotch Ale

Rock Bottom Brewery - King of Prussia
Broad Street Barleywine
PA
Gold
Aged Beer (Ale or Lager)


Sly Fox Brewing Co.
Pikeland Pils
PA
Gold
German-Style Pilsener


Sly Fox Brewing Co.
Instigator
PA
Bronze
German Style Strong Bock

Stoudts Brewing Co.
Stoudts Ofest
PA
Bronze
Vienna Style Lager


Stoudts Brewing Co.
Stoudts Weizen
PA
Silver
South German Style Hefeweizen/Hefeweissbier

Tröegs Brewing Co.
Troegenator
PA
Gold
Bock


Victory Brewing Co.
Victory Festbier
PA
Gold
German Style Märzen

Victory Brewing Co.
Prima Pils
PA
Silver
German-Style Pilsener

I Love Shiner Bock




One of my favorite brews is Shiner Bock. I've even been to the brewery in Texas. Shiner is not distributed in PA for unknown reasons. I have even carried a case home on a Plane from Texas, this was before 9/11, of course. In PA, we have the Yuengling brewery, which I would say is somewhat similar in history and brewing different beers.


Known as the "Little brewery in Shiner," the Spoetzl Brewery is an American brewery located in Shiner, Texas that is wholly owned by the Gambrinus Company. The brewery is most well known for producing Shiner Bock, a dark Czech-style beer. Long a regional favorite, particularly among college students, Shiner Bock is now distributed in 39 states; as far west as California, as far north as Alaska and as far east as Virginia.


Beginning in 2005, Shiner began producing a yearly brew to celebrate their upcoming anniversary. The centennial program develops one special beer each year that is produced in small batches. Each beer is named after the age of the brewery, thus in 2005 the beer was named Shiner 96, the 2006 beer Shiner 97, the 2007 beer Shiner 98, and 2008's beer is Shiner 99. With 96 and 97, the beers were only brewed from September through December. By mid-December the beer production is stopped and that beer was retired. In the case of Shiner 98, Shiner has varied things up, releasing 98 for the summer of 2007, with cases of 98 hitting store shelves in late May 2007. The Spoetzl Brewery claims that the program will end in 2009 with Shiner 100.
Below is a listing of each beer and their respective style:
Shiner 96 — Märzen/Oktoberfest Ale
Shiner 97 — Bohemian Black Lager
Shiner 98 — Bavarian Style Amber


I so want to try the Shiner 98!! I think a road trip maybe in order to find some Shiner 98 in Delaware? Shiner 97 became so popular that Shiner Bohemian Black Lager was created — Originally a limited edition in honor of the Spoetzl Brewery's 97th anniversary, this classic schwarzbier became a permanent part of the Shiner family in late 2007. Black uses imported Austrian Saaz and Styrian hops and dark-roasted malts to create a distinctive taste that honors the German and Czech immigrants who settled the town of Shiner.