Archive for December, 2007

I’ve been tagged. I’m supposed to tag seven people, but it’s a Christmas meme, and since this is Christmas Eve, it’s a bit late for that. Here we go.

1. Wrapping or gift bags?

I’m the world’s worst wrapper, but I think the bags are tacky, so I fumble with paper and tape.

2. Real or artificial tree?

Real, of course.

3. When do you put up the tree?

Not too long before Christmas. I’m not a big fan of the “Christmas three months of the year” thing.

4. When do you take the tree down?

Twelfth Night (that would be Epiphany, for you Protestants, etc.)

5. Do you like eggnog?

There’s a story here. There was a local dairy back home (it’s still there). Even after the milkman retired, it was the dominant brand in the stores, and they had the most amazing eggnog. Nothing else would do, not homemade, nope, nothing else. So for years, I’ve gone without, until I tried the eggnog from Meyer Dairy. Amazing stuff. Just like I had when I was a kid, so I’m happy.

6. Favorite gift received as a child?

Chemistry set. I almost blew up the house.

7. Do you have a nativity scene?

We had an indoor crèche, but I have no idea what happened to it. Maybe one of my brothers has it. But no, I don’t own one.

8. Worst Christmas gift you ever received?

I’ll take the Fifth.

9. Mail or email Christmas cards?

I hate those e-cards. Mail.

10. Favorite Christmas movie?

White Christmas. It’s on right now. Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Vera Ellen, Rosemary Clooney, Dean Jagger, Mary Wickes, what’s not to love?

11. When do you start shopping for Christmas?

Way too late.

12. Favorite thing to eat at Christmas?

Roast pork. Pumpkin pie. Persimmon pudding. Whipped cream.

13. Clear lights or colored?

Colored, of course.

14. Favorite Christmas song?

Oh, several. O Come, O Come, Emmanuel. Adeste Fidelis. Silent Night. O Holy Night (provided somebody can sing it).

15. Travel at Christmas or stay at home?

Depends.

16. Can you name all of Santa’s reindeer?

Never tried, so probably not.

17. Angel or star on the top of your tree?

In this house, nothing. The ceilings are too low.

18. Open your presents Christmas Eve or Christmas morning?

We used to spend Christmas Eve with my paternal grandparents and open presents there, then open presents from everybody else on Christmas morning. Now, Christmas morning.

19. Most annoying thing about this time of year?

Too *&$^# many in-the-way, pokey, fat butts aimlessly wandering the aisles.

20. What do you leave for Santa?

Nothing now. Sorry.

21. Least favorite holiday song?

Mele Kalikimaka. Come. On. Actually, what I really hate are “new covers” of carols. Some things don’t need your individual stamp, and I don’t care who you are. It’s a Christmas carol — just sing it, not your “version” of it!

22. Do you decorate your tree with any specific theme or color?

Naw. When I was a kid, we had bubble lights. Those were really cool. I haven’t seen them in years.

23. Favorite ornament?

Mr. Hankey

Ah!

Picked up a nice pork roast (shoulder, thanks, not loin) at Nittany Meats, then on an impulse, hit the Mall, specifically the candy store. I’m not sure what the problem is, but you can’t seem to find chocolate-covered cherries in stores, even during the Christmas season (although you can always find chocolate-covered espresso beans at Wegman’s). And they had them, hand-dipped, dark chocolate-covered cherries! They also had chocolate-covered walnuts (dark), and I had to have some of those, as well as coconut clusters, and . . . anyway.

Wegman’s. Well, you can buy baby pineapples, but not green beans. But they had really nice broccoli, so that’s on tomorrow’s menu. Scalloped potatoes too, of course, but you know, don’t you, that they don’t have any real ham. The idiot didn’t even know what I was talking about, so I got some prosciutto. It will have to do. I was going to do sweet potatoes, but there was an overabundance of in-the-way butts at the Mall and Wegman’s, and I didn’t want to deal with the liquor store (we have no bourbon), so no sweet potatoes. The world will continue to turn.

Roast pork
Scalloped potatoes
Broccoli (probably with hollandaise)
Pumpkin pie and whipped cream

Oh, and an almond danish ring for breakfast.

We got some pork rub from friends while visiting Bloomington. I’ll rub the roast and let it macerate all night. And I’m betting that Elmer’s-glue-consistency cream from Meyer will make hellacious scalloped potatoes, even if I do have to use prosciutto instead of God-fearing sugar-cured country ham.

Off to rub that roast and try some of those chocolates . . .

Nittany Meats, to get something for tomorrow (what depends on what they have), then the store.

From Ace, “And forever started”:

GI saves Iraqi boy in long-shot adoption
By CARRIE ANTLFINGER, Associated Press Writer Sun Dec 23, 1:14 PM ET

MAUSTON, Wis. - Capt. Scott Southworth knew he’d face violence, political strife and blistering heat when he was deployed to one of Baghdad’s most dangerous areas. But he didn’t expect Ala’a Eddeen.

Ala’a was 9 years old, strong of will but weak of body — he suffered from cerebral palsy and weighed just 55 pounds. He lived among about 20 kids with physical or mental disabilities at the Mother Teresa orphanage, under the care of nuns who preserved this small oasis in a dangerous place.

On Sept. 6, 2003, halfway through his 13-month deployment, Southworth and his military police unit paid a visit to the orphanage. They played and chatted with the children; Southworth was talking with one little girl when Ala’a dragged his body to the soldier’s side.

Black haired and brown eyed, Ala’a spoke to the 31-year-old American in the limited English he had learned from the sisters. He recalled the bombs that struck government buildings across the Tigris River.

“Bomb-Bing! Bomb-Bing!” Ala’a said, raising and lowering his fist.

“I’m here now. You’re fine,” the captain said.

Over the next 10 months, the unit returned to the orphanage again and again. The soldiers would race kids in their wheelchairs, sit them in Humvees and help the sisters feed them.

To Southworth, Ala’a was like a little brother. But Ala’a — who had longed for a soldier to rescue him — secretly began referring to Southworth as “Baba,” Arabic for “Daddy.”

Then, around Christmas, a sister told Southworth that Ala’a was getting too big. He would have to move to a government-run facility within a year.

“Best case scenario was that he would stare at a blank wall for the rest of his life,” Southworth said.

To this day, he recalls the moment when he resolved that that would not happen.

“I’ll adopt him,” he said.

___

Before Southworth left for Iraq, he was chief of staff for a state representative. He was single, worked long days and squeezed in his service as a national guardsman — military service was a family tradition. His great-great-greatgrandfather served in the Civil War, his grandfather in World War II, his father in Vietnam.

The family had lived in the tiny central Wisconsin city of New Lisbon for 150 years. Scott was raised as an evangelical Christian; he attended law school with a goal of public service, running unsuccessfully for state Assembly at the age of 25.

There were so many reasons why he couldn’t bring a handicapped Iraqi boy into his world.

He had no wife or home; he knew nothing of raising a disabled child; he had little money and planned to run for district attorney in his home county.

Just as important, Iraqi law prohibits foreigners from adopting Iraqi children.

Southworth prayed and talked with family and friends.

His mother, who had cared for many disabled children, explained the difficulty. She also told him to take one step at a time and let God work.

Southworth’s decision was cemented in spring 2004, while he and his comrades watched Mel Gibson’s film, “The Passion of the Christ.” Jesus Christ’s sacrifice moved him. He imagined meeting Christ and Ala’a in heaven, where Ala’a asked: “Baba, why didn’t you ever come back to get me?”

“Everything that I came up with as a response I felt ashamed. I wouldn’t want to stand in the presence of Jesus and Ala’a and say those things to him.”

And so, in his last weeks in Iraq, Southworth got approval from Iraq’s Minister of Labor to take Ala’a to the United States for medical care.

___

His parents had filed signatures so he wouldn’t miss the cutoff to run for district attorney. He knocked on doors, telling people he wanted to be tough on criminals who committed injustices against children.

He never mentioned his intention to adopt Ala’a.

He won office — securing a job and an income.

Everything seemed to be in place. But when Southworth contacted an immigration attorney, he was told it would be nearly impossible to bring Ala’a to the United States.

Undaunted, Southworth and the attorney started the paperwork to bring Ala’a over on humanitarian parole, used for urgent reasons or significant public benefit.

A local doctor, a cerebral palsy expert, a Minneapolis hospital, all said they would provide Ala’a free care. Other letters of support came from a minister, the school district, the lieutenant governor, a congressman, chaplain, a sister at the orphanage and an Iraqi doctor.

“We crossed political boundaries. We crossed religious boundaries. There was just a massive effort — all on behalf of this little boy who desperately needed people to actually take some action and not just feel sorry for him,” Southworth says.

He mailed the packet on Dec. 16, 2004, to the Department of Homeland Security.

On New Year’s Eve, his cell phone rang. It was Ala’a.

“What are you doing?” Scott asked him.

“I was praying,’” Ala’a responded.

“Well, what were you praying for?”

“I prayed that you would come to take me to America,” Ala’a said.

Southworth almost dropped the phone. Ala’a knew nothing of his efforts, and he couldn’t tell him yet for fear that the boy might inadvertently tell the wrong person, upending the delicate process.

By mid-January, Homeland Security called Southworth’s attorney to say it had approved humanitarian parole. Within three hours, Southworth had plane tickets.

He hardly slept as he worked the phones to make arrangements, calling the American embassy, hotels and the orphanage. His Iraqi translator agreed to risk his life to get Ala’a to the embassy to obtain documentation. Like a dream, all the pieces fell into place.

Southworth returned to Iraq for the first time since a deployment that left him emotionally, physically and spiritually exhausted.

His unit had trained Iraqi police from sunup to sundown; he saw the devastation wrought by two car bombings, and counted dead bodies. Mortar and rocket attacks were routine. Some 20 in his unit were wounded, and one died. He knew that nothing could be taken for granted in Baghdad.

So when he saw Ala’a in the airport for the first time since leaving Iraq, he was relieved.

“He was in my custody then. I could hug him. I could hold him. I could protect him.

“And forever started.”

They made it to Wisconsin late Jan. 20, 2005. The next morning, Ala’a awoke to his first sight of snow.

He closed his eyes and grimaced.

“Baba! Baba! The water is getting all over me!”

“It’s not water, it’s snooooow,” Southworth told him.

___

Police found Ala’a abandoned on a Baghdad street at around 3 years old. No one knows where he came from.

In all his life in Iraq, Ala’a saw a doctor 10 times. He surpassed that in his first six months in the United States.

Ala’a’s cerebral palsy causes low muscle tone, spastic muscles in the legs, arms and face. It hinders him when he tries to crawl, walk or grasping objects. He needs a wheelchair to get around, often rests his head on his shoulder and can’t easily sit up.

Physical therapy has helped him control his head and other muscles. He can now maneuver his way out of his van seat and stabilize his legs on the ground.

“I’m not the same guy I used to be,” he says.

He clearly has thrived. At 13, he’s doubled his weight to 111 pounds.

Ala’a’s condition doesn’t affect his mind, although he’s still childlike — he wants to be a Spiderman when he grows up.

Ala’a’s English has improved and he loves music and school, math and reading especially. He gets mad when snow keeps him home, even though it’s his second favorite thing, after his father.

At first, he didn’t want to talk about Iraq; he would grow angry when someone tried to talk to him in Arabic. But in the fall of 2006, Scott showed Ala’a’s classmates an Arabic version of “Sesame Street” and boasted how Ala’a knew two languages and could teach them.

Soon he was teaching his aide and his grandmother, LaVone.

LaVone is a fixture in Ala’a’s life, supporting her son as he juggles his career and fatherhood. One day, she asked Ala’a if he missed his friends in Iraq.

Would he like to visit them?

Big tears filled his eyes.

“Well, honey, what’s the matter?” asked LaVone.

“Oh, no, Grandma. No. Baba says that I can come to live with him forever,” he pleaded.

“Oh, no, no,” he grandmother said, crying as well. “We would never take you back and leave you there forever. We want you to be Baba’s boy forever.”

___

Southworth knew once he got Ala’a out of Iraq, the hardest part would be over. Iraq had bigger problems to deal with than the whereabouts of a single orphan.

On June 4, Ala’a officially became Southworth’s son. Though he was born in the spring of 1994, they decided to celebrate his birthday as the day they met — Sept. 6.

Life has settled into a routine. Father and son have moved into a new house with an intercom system, a chair lift to the basement and toilet handles. Southworth showers him, brushes his teeth and washes his hands. He has traded in his Chrysler Concorde for a minivan — it was too hard to lift his son out of the car.

In October, the Wisconsin’s deputy adjunct general gave Southworth, now a major, permission to change units because of Ala’a. His former unit was going to Guantanamo Bay for a one-year deployment, and he didn’t want to leave his son behind, at least for now.

He hopes one day to marry to his longtime girlfriend and have more children. He may run for Congress or governor someday — he’s already won re-election once, and plans to run again next fall.

Not everything is perfect. Ala’a never encountered thunderstorms in Baghdad, and the flash-boom reminds him of bombs. He is starting to get over it, although he still weeps during violent storms.

But Ala’a — who picked out his own name, which means to be near God — knows he’s where he belongs. Southworth always says Ala’a picked him, not the other way around. They were brought together, Southworth believes, by a “web of miracles.”

Ala’a likes to sing Sarah McLachlan’s song, “Ordinary Miracle,” from “Charlotte’s Web,” one of his favorite movies. His head and body lean to one side as he sings off-key.

“It’s just another ordinary miracle today. Life is like a gift they say. Wrapped up for you everyday.”

Just got this from Jake Corman. The Pennsylvania Farm Show, January 5-12, in Harrisburg. I think January is an odd time to have a farm show, but look at the food:

  • PA Bee Keepers Association – honey ice cream, honey waffles, bottles of honey, and beehive products
  • PA Cooperative Potato Growers, Inc. – baked potatoes, fresh cut French fries, potato donuts, and baked sweet potatoes
  • PA Dairymen’s Association – milkshakes, milk/chocolate milk, ice cream sundaes, deep fried mozzarella cubes with marinara sauce and ice cream cones
  • PA Livestock Association – pork barbeque sandwiches, roast beef sandwiches, lamb stew, ham and cheese sandwiches, beef sausage, Jumbo beef/pork hot dogs, steak salad, ham salad, horseradish and pink lemonade
  • PA Maple Syrup Producers Council – maple sundaes, maple yogurt, maple cotton candy, maple coated nuts, maple syrup, maple candy, maple cream sugar, maple sugar and cookbooks
  • PA Mushroom Growers Cooperative – deep-fried breaded mushrooms, packaged fresh mushrooms and portabellos, mushroom soup, grilled portabellas, mushroom salad and schroomies
  • PA Vegetable Growers Association – vegetable soup, batter-dipped vegetables, blooming onions, strawberry slush drink, broccoli-cauliflower salad, chicken corn soup, chili, dill pickles, carrots and celery, tomato juice, broccoli soup, berry pie and bean salad
  • Penn Ag Industries Assoc./Penn Ag Poultry Council – chicken nuggets, chicken breast sandwiches, hot dogs, turkey barbecue, wings, bucket of chicken, chicken cheese steak, seasoned slow roasted rotisserie sliced chicken, chicken soup, deviled eggs, red beat and mustard eggs, chicken parmesan sandwich, turkey meatball sandwich and chicken chili
  • Penn Ag Industries Assoc./Penn Ag Poultry Council & Penn Ag Aquaculture Council – fish sandwich, trout chowder and tortilla crusted tilapia, fresh bagels w/or w/o cream cheese, cinnamon sticky bun, shoofly pie by the slice or whole pies, whoopie pies with white or peanut butter icing, large cookies and cinnamon bun
  • Penn Ag Industries Assoc./Penn Ag Poultry Council & Penn Ag Swine Council – breakfast sandwich (egg & sausage or Canadian bacon) and slow roasted pulled pork
  • State Horticultural Association – apple cider, fresh apples, apple dumplings with ice cream, apple butter, cider floats, dried apple snacks, and apple or peach sundaes.
  • Pennsylvania FFA Foundation – hotdogs, grillers, rib sandwiches, and deep fried mozzarella cubes, apple cider, honey dumplings with ice cream and bakery products
  • Pennsylvania Cattlemen’s Association – rib eye steak sandwiches, philly cheese steak sandwiches, beef BBQ sandwiches, beef hotdogs, steak, egg and cheese sandwiches, beef sticks, peach tea, apple cider and chocolate or white milk.

It’s one of those “Where do we get food first?” things.

Nothing is dark and twisted if not Sweeny Todd, and nobody does dark and twisted better than Tim Burton. Who better to adapt this gothic horror to the screen? Who else can show you a little girl’s doll in a crib and make your skin crawl?

Sweeny Todd is a tour de force of blood, revenge, cannibalism, murder, and mayhem. Todd returns to London to avenge his false imprisonment, but when the young twit interrupts his chance to murder the judge, what little sanity Todd has left cracks, and he turns into a serial killer. Mrs. Lovett, his partner, makes the corpses into meat pies, which are the hit of London.

It’s a beautiful film to see, and a beautiful film to hear. Sondheim’s complex, lush score wraps you throughout, and for the most part, the actors tackle the music well.

sweenytodd.jpg

Oh, you didn’t know it was the musical? Yes, although this is more operatic than most. You won’t find much dialogue puncuated by sponaneous songs; most of the dialogue is sung, and this is perhaps Sondheim’s greatest score, sophisticated, complex, and lush. It’s a refreshing change from films that have no score, no nothing but a few bad songs by bad nobodies who run the URLs for their bad websites in the credits in hopes of finally selling some of their crap.

Johnny Depp plays Todd, and this is the role he was born to play. There is none of the innocence of Edward Scissorhands or Ed Wood, or the dark humor of Willy Wonka. Johnny Depp presents a sadistic, psychotic, obsessed character. Helena Bonham Carter is remarkably good (given that I’ve never been impressed by her) as Mrs. Lovett. Alan Rickmann, who is brilliant as the cynical Spock-equivalent in Galaxy Quest, is just as brilliant as the judge.

There is one notable weakness: There is too much blood. Burton zooms in on the neck of almost every victim as Todd slashes his throat in the barber chair with his silver razor, and I suspect he does it to show us Todd’s bloodlust, but once or twice would have sufficed. By the time Todd gets his revenge on the judge, the amount of blood is almost ludicrous (I believe there is a maximum arterial spray you can get from one human being). Having said that, the blood is a bright vermillion, and looks surreal, a touch I liked a lot, particularly in the final scene, when Toby, the small boy, slashes Todd’s throat in the cellar. There is no anti-climax or epilogue. Todd’s death is the end of the film, and we have no idea what happens to the young boy, Todd’s daughter, or the twit who loves her.

You may want to wait until after Christmas. This isn’t exactly holiday fare, but it’s very good stuff, perhaps the best movie of 2007. Don’t take the kids. My Fair Lady it ain’t.

Remember that electrical trouble I’m having from time to time with the Explorer? Yesterday, it was raining — yes, really raining, not just sprinkling — and on our way to the theater, we stopped at Burger King for lunch. When we got back in the Explorer, not only would the windows not work, but the wipers refused to operate. So we drove back home, slowly, unable to see much more than the yellow line, to take the sardine can instead. By that time, I Am Legend had already started, so Sweeny Todd it was.

Damn, what a movie! More later.

Oh. It had seemed obvious we were going to have a white Christmas, since everything had been white already, until yesterday. The snow would have stood up to the mid-40s temps, but it rained all day long. Almost all of the snow is gone.

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I Am Legend, or Sweeny Todd? There are four movies in the theaters I’d like to see, but those are the two out by the mall today.

but a bit of a surprise: Roman Catholicism is now Britain’s dominant church. I guess St. Thomas More has finally been vindicated.

Don Surber sez:

In the roller coaster of politics, she [Hillary] is still the favorite to win the Democratic nomination. Rejoice, Republicans, rejoice.

Indeed. Are you reading, Santa?

Both Romney and Hillary are stepping on your act. What about all those video games played backwards?

Oh wait. Here’s Huckleberry’s Christmas message backwards. He’s a Satanist!

After Christmas, I’m switching to a graphics-free, black-and-white (well, greyscale) theme.

Just so ya know.

I suppose there are things the public doesn’t know, that I just assume everyone does, like this (hat tip to Phi Beta Cons):

In September 2004, Charles Ogletree, a professor at Harvard Law School, found himself having to admit that his latest book, All Deliberate Speed, contained six paragraphs lifted verbatim from a book by Yale professor Jack Balkin, What “Brown v. Board of Education” Should Have Said. Equally surprising was the fact that Ogletree hadn’t known about the plagiarism, which occurred in a passage about the history of desegregation efforts, until he was told of it by Balkin himself.

Okay, so why didn’t he know about the plagiarism?

“I accept full responsibility for this error,” Ogletree said in a statement. But some readers of that statement might have gotten a different impression: Ogletree attributed the plagiarism to two research assistants: “Material from Professor Jack Balkin’s book … was inserted … by one of my assistants for the purpose of being reviewed, researched, and summarized by another research assistant with proper attribution … Unfortunately, the second assistant, under the pressure of meeting a deadline, inadvertently deleted this attribution and edited the text as though it had been written by me. The second assistant then sent a revised draft to the publisher.”

It was a curious admission. In other words, at least some of Ogletree’s manuscript was sent to his publisher without having been read by the person supposed to have written it. Yet to Ogletree, the crime was not that someone else had written the material, just that it wasn’t the person Ogletree expected to write it.

But check the title page of All Deliberate Speed and the Library of Congress catalog information, and Ogletree’s name stands alone. An impressive total of nine students are listed in the acknowledgements as a “deeply committed group of researchers,” but there’s not a hint that their words appear verbatim in the book—or, at least, there wasn’t until something went wrong.

The article then goes on to “uncover” the scandal that professors have grad students do their research and writing for them, then put their own names on the work. And my response is

This is news? Where have you people been? Didn’t you go to grad school, oh journalists?

Not that I don’t have a problem with it, mind, but this is nothing new. It’s a grand old tradition, and it does have useful functions. PhD students are, after all, supposed to be doing research, and they are being paid to do Professor Lethargic’s research for him. Sometimes, they are listed in the acknowledgments, but usually, they aren’t, and that’s the way being a PhD student is. So why is this a scandal — and why is it news?

I can only assume that this is one of those things I incorrectly assume everybody knows. Otherwise, it would have all the news value of “Water is wet!”

One of the things I miss about Bloomington is Kohl’s, and they’re supposed to be building one here, but we’ve been waiting and waiting. Now, there’s a story in the local rag:

We’re just one signature away from Kohl’s getting approval to build.

The department store has kept many of you wondering since it resubmitted plans to build in the Colonnade Shopping Plaza next to Target in September — the third time it submitted plans in Patton

Township and the second time at this specific location. Then, it seemed, nothing. A call to Patton Township officials revealed that Kohl’s has sent its last set of plans, minus one signature, to the township.

Once that document is signed, the plans can be filed at the courthouse and zoning and building permits can be issued, said Patton Township Manager Doug Erickson.

Can I sign? Signature from whom? And how do we get whoever it is to sign the damned petition and get this thing going?

The reporter didn’t say. Moron.

The best Christmas greeting so far:

So how’s about that version 15.0.1, other than the idiotic installation? Well, it’s not much different. Improved ODBC drivers and a data exchange engine (same for Informix and Oracle back-ends). Very little difference in the interface. Oddly enough, it seems to run faster, nice when most upgrades run slower because of feature creep (like Firefox).

One of the features I really hated was the graph wizard. Well, it’s just as annoying, and I still hate it. You don’t have to use the wizard to create a graph, fortunately.

There was some talk a few years ago in the department about moving from Excel to SPSS for stats. I came out strongly against the idea. SPSS is a superior (and powerful) stats package, and although it’s not hard to learn or use, provided you know what you’re doing, it’s way more power than students need, it’s not the standard package (Excel is), and it would have cost a lot of money to switch.

Having said that, if you’re going to do serious statistical analyses, consider buying a copy of SPSS or SAS (I’ve never used SAS, but one of these days, I may buy a copy, since the company is right here). You can do more with Excel than most realize (using functions, instead of just the data analysis toolpack), but Excel is a spreadsheet, and isn’t designed to do serious statistical analysis.

And yeah, yeah, I’m working on that stats rewrite.

Greedy Rethuglicans!

When Gov. Mitch Daniels announced last week that budgets would have to be tightened in state government because of slumping revenues, longtime state employee Nancy Shockley figured she’d have to tighten her belt, too.

Shockley and more than 31,000 other state employees, however, learned Thursday that pay raises are on the way for most of them.

Daniels announced that most state employees will receive 4.5 percent pay increases.

Those raises, most of which will be given out in February after performance reviews, include a 1.5 percent increase that all state employees are getting in their final 2007 check.

The news came as a relief to Shockley and other state employees. Only last week Daniels had announced that state revenues were falling behind expectations and ordered most state agencies to trim their budgets by 5 percent.

In the past, tight budgets usually meant state salaries were frozen.

“Yeah, I was concerned,” said Shockley, who has worked 31 years for the state in the Department of Personnel. “I kind of assumed we wouldn’t be getting a raise this year.”

An e-mail sent to state employees Thursday, however, reassured them.

“Everyone is pretty happy about it,” Shockley said.

Happier, perhaps, than a lot of employees in the private sector.

According to Compdata Surveys, a national compensation survey and consulting firm, preliminary pay increase budgets were 3.65 percent in 2007 and projected to be 3.63 percent in 2008.
The pay increases will cost the state about $60 million. The state employs about 35,000 full- and part-time employees. Their median salary is $34,694.

The payroll at the end of November was more than $1.259 billion, which the state said is nearly $50 million lower than when Daniels took office as the number of state employees has declined.

Jane Jankowski, spokeswoman for Daniels, said the state will still meet its budget targets under the new constraints, “but we’re not going to take it from employees’ paychecks.”

In addition, spokesman Gary Abell said, the pay raises are covered by agencies finding efficiencies in their budgets.

Some employees will get more than 4.5 percent.

Under a merit system of pay that Daniels instituted since becoming governor, about 10 percent of employees whose performance exceeds expectations will receive a total of a 10 percent raise.

Another 10 percent whose work needs improvement will receive only the 1.5 percent increase that all state employees are getting in their final 2007 check.

Overall, state employee salaries will climb an average of 4.8 percent.
State Personnel Director Debra Minott said the salary increases reflect Daniels’ commitment to state employees even in tough economic times.

“He did not want them to be the ones to take the hit,” Minott said. “They did for many years.”

What about free houses? What about free healthcare? Why do they have to slave for the state? They should get a paycheck just because they’re OPPRESSED! And a free house! And free healthcare! And free abortions! A FREE RIDE IS A HUMAN RIGHT!

Hat tip to Frugal Hoosiers — and speaking of, let’s compare Christmas from Mitch Daniels with Christmas from the Michigan unions:

Under Governor Mitch Daniels, state employees in Indiana have received raises, merit bonuses, and retirement health benefits. In Michigan, state employees get to have a little more money taken out of their paycheck and sent to their union boss.

AND WHERE’S THE FREE HOUSES? HOUSING IS A HUMAN RIGHT! BUY ME A HOUSE NOW!!!!

Ace tries to be charitable, with the emphasis on the verb:

I’ll note again that this is the guy who actively courts Truthers as supporters, appears on the talk show of psychologically warped conspiracy pornographer Alex Jones, says he just can’t do anything at all if a Stormfront newsletter links to his campaign page, etc.

The fucking freak courts people like this. So yeah, I’m trying to give the benefit of the doubt here, but this is the company he keeps. Not the exclusive company, to be sure, but he doesn’t mind palling around with basket-case extremists and bug-eyed malcontents on either the extreme right or extreme left.

On the count of three, everybody.

One.

Two.

Three.

It’s the Joooooos!

It’s the Jooooos!

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From John Miller at the Corner:

Every day that E2 [Elizabeth II] is queen is a day that Prince Charles isn’t king. May she be the Energizer Bunny of royalty.

Hat tip to Say Uncle for this, which I never would have seen otherwise (and that’s part of the point). It’s nowhere to be seen in the MSM, except for this Chinese site (I’m cleaning it up, because it’s pretty messy):

A recent poll conducted by Zogby International for Associated Television News

Stop there. Note that this is not some weird Chinese poll. This is a Zogby poll. A Zogby poll I’ve so far only seen referred to in the Chinese press. Anyway:

A recent poll conducted by Zogby International for Associated Television News shows that voters value the endorsements of the National Rifle Association, by former President Clinton and President George W. Bush over influential organizations like the AFL-CIO and the National Council of LaRaza or celebrities Oprah Winfrey and Barbra Streisand.

The interactive poll, conducted December 13-17, 2007, surveyed 6,072 likely voters nationwide and has a margin of error of +/- 1.3 percentage points.

Let’s see how those poll numbers stack up:

Q. Considering the presidential election and messages that may be sent to you from the following people or groups, how important are those messages to you when considering for whom to vote — more likely to support, less likely to support, or no effect? Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, National Council of LaRaza, AFL-CIO, National Rifle Association, The National Right-to-Life, Oprah Winfrey, Barbra Streisand.

  Percent Response Potential Votes (millions)
NRA 27% 56
Bill Clinton 25% 52
George W. Bush 23% 48
AFL-CIO 16% 33
Oprah Winfrey 9% 19
Nat’l Council of LaRaza 5% 10
Barbra Streisand 4% 8

See that? An NRA endorsement could affect 56 million votes. Compare that with the potential voting blocks for Babs Streisand or Oprah Winfrey. And that’s the best thing about this poll, of course, that we are not, in fact, a nation full of mindless Oprah Winfrey fans.

Join or renew here. NRA News here.

<rant>

Used to be Microsoft Office was the only software you couldn’t update (you’ve always had to uninstall the current version, then install the new one), and I always put that down to its being Microsoft software. Now, you can’t upgrade anything.

Worse, you can’t just install software. Oh no. I just threw things across the room trying to install SPSS 15.0.1. You have a serial number for the disk and a registration number, and you have to enter both, but no, you then have to get connected to spss.com so they can register your copy even though you’ve already registered the copy.

Of course, the server was down, and I ended up with a trial version. I don’t want a trial version. So I waited, and tried again.

Nope. See, I had a trial version that wasn’t a trial version installed, so I couldn’t register it, even though I’d already entered the registration number, so I had to uninstall it, and go through the whole process again.

And then it opens a browser window and tries to get you to create an account. That means answering all kinds of idiotic, intrusive questions, as well as having to uncheck crap like “Yes, I want you to send me at least forty email messages a day!”

What crap. And in August, I’m going to have to go through this whole thing yet again.

<rant />

The rumor is that Tancredo is dropping out of the race. I’m not glad that Tancredo specifically is dropping out — this isn’t an anti-Tancredo moment I’m having — I’m glad that the field is narrowing. There are too many candidates. Hunter needs to follow suit (and a couple of others).

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Got this in my email queue:

Controversy is escalating among border security organization leaders and various Minuteman activists upset over an endorsement by Jim Gilchrist, founder of The Minuteman Project, of former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee.

After confirming Monday he had questions about his endorsement of Huckabee, Gilchrist yesterday went on a series of radio interviews, announcing to listeners he had decided to stick with his endorsement, even though Huckabee’s immigration plan was less than perfect.

But his refusal to withdraw his endorsement of Huckabee hardened the resolve of many former Gilchrist supporters to renounce his endorsement and defeat Huckabee.

William Gheen, president of ALIPAC, said Huckabee must be defeated because the open borders lobby will just use Gilchrist’s endorsement to “deceive voters on their way to victory.”

More at the link.

When was the last time you heard a politician talk about the Tenth Amendment?

Drew Carey’s eminent domain video (ten minutes):

There’s a lot of talk in the dextrosphere about McCain making a comeback (WSJ, Donald Douglas, Captain Ed), and Mark Levin has laid out McCain’s problems with the base.

I have a lot of problems with McCain which I’m not going into right now, but what has happened to him? The last few times I’ve seen him, none of the personable, humorous John McCain was there. He’s looked exhausted and, frankly, not overly interested. Where’s the McCain who sang Streisand on SNL? Problems and issues aside, it’s kind of sad.

In case you’ve never seen his SNL skit, it’s hilarious. Here it is.

lovechild.jpg

Hat tip: Ace, who reads the National Enquirer so you and I don’t have to.

Fred on Huckleberry (hat tip to Jay):

And the full Hannity and Colmes clip:

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The Brits take a lot of crap over their food, but they’re right about one thing: Beef needs nothing but salt and pepper. I’m not opposed to garlic, or maybe a bit of rosemary, but beef needs nothing to complete or complement it. Beef stands on its own.

I just sprinkled a rib roast with kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper. Fifteen minutes at 500, then 17 minutes per pound at 350. Perfection.

I think roasted potatoes are in order. I don’t want to pollute the pristine culinary perfection of a rib roast with chlorophyll. Well, creamed spinach would be nice, but I don’t have any spinach here, and I don’t have the patience today to deal with the idiots at the store.

Hat tip to Ragnar.

Edwards vs. Huckabee? Shoot me now. And save a bullet for me.

Citizen Soldier:

Jules has more.

Ironic funny. Now that Julia Carson is no longer among us, Pete Visclosky (IN-1) is Indiana’s number one gun-grabber and soft-on-crime advocate.

He was mugged. In his own district. Hat tip to Frugal Hoosiers for the link.