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Good for Franklin mayor Tom Taylor...


He and others collaborated on a piece in today's paper about a worthwhile effort.

You don't have to shovel heat


Five months ago...




A car landed vertically in a snowbank in an accident involving several vehicles on Interstate 93 north of Salem, N.H. No one was injured. Photo: Tim Jean / The Eagle-Tribune via AP






Lake Michigan in Fox Point looks like a frozen barren landscape. A rare lakeshore flood warning was in effect until 6 p.m. Wednesday along Lake Michigan from Sheboygan south to the Illinois border with waves of 10 to 16 feet. Journal Sentinel photo: Kristyna Wentz-Graff





Sam Lozoff shovels out a delivery car Wednesday morning in front of the Jimmy Johns store on S. Kinnickinnic Ave. in Bay View. Journal Sentinel photo: John Klein






Walking was the only way people could get down many Milwaukee side streets Wednesday morning. E Bennett Ave had snow thigh deep making it impossible to move cars from the curb.  Journal Sentinel photo: John Klein






Snow wave. Photo submitted to jsonline by Erin, Milwaukee.


 



Canadian National Rail Road workers use blowers to clear a switch so a diesel locomotive can pass between Main Street & Arcadian Avenue in the City of Waukesha late Monday afternoon. Photo: Allen Fredrickson - Waukesha, WI


 

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Losing our cool


An oldie but a goodie.

OH MY! Many public officials acknowledge sirens are outdated


FOX 6 NEWS:

"Municipalities discuss cost effectiveness of tornado sirens."

Goodnight everyone, and have a weekend with strings attached!

Nostalgia


It's Friday night. Time to unwind with our regular Friday night feature on This Just In.

The weekend has finally arrived.

The sun has set.

The evening sky has erupted. 

Let's smooth our way into Saturday and Sunday
.

Tonight, a rather unusual theme that just hit me recently as I listened to a 70's show on the radio.






There are bands with a long history noted for their trademark horn sections. On occasion, they'd slow it down, backed by lush string sections. They definitely pulled it off, and the subsequent sound was amaizing.

We begin with Blood, Sweat and Tears. It would take forever to provide bio material givent the countless times the group changed personnel. This was the band that gave us the famous blasts that preceded Spinning Wheel, And When I Die, and Lucretia McEvil.

A lesser known tune in the mid-70's was a tender love ballad.




 

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The best cartoons of the week


Political Cartoons by Michael Ramirez



Political Cartoons by Henry Payne



Political Cartoons by Henry Payne




Political Cartoons by Chip Bok



Political Cartoons by Steve Kelley

 

Political Cartoons by Gary Varvel

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The best cartoons of the week

Political Cartoons by Glenn Foden




Political Cartoons by Michael Ramirez




Political Cartoons by Robert Ariail



Political Cartoons by Michael Ramirez




Political Cartoons by Jerry Holbert
Political Cartoons by Henry Payne




Political Cartoons by Henry Payne




Political Cartoons by Chip Bok



Political Cartoons by Steve Kelley

 

Political Cartoons by Gary Varvel



Political Cartoons by Bob Gorrell



Political Cartoons by Eric Allie


 

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The Barking Lot (07/02/11)

The Barking Lot

 
The Barking Lot is a regular weekly feature of this just inWritten by my lovely wife, Jennifer and me.  It opens with the weekend dog walking forecast followed by the main blog from dog lover, Jennifer. Then its DOGS IN THE NEWS and our close. Enjoy!


THE WEEKEND DOG-WALKING FORECAST: We grade the weather outlook for taking your pet outdoors. 

TODAY:  Isolated thunderstorms. High of 86.  "A"

SUNDAY:  Partly cloudy. High of 80. "A"


Here’s my lovely wife, Jennifer with this week’s main blog:


Next Monday, July 4, 2011 will again be time to celebrate the independence of our wonderful country.  Sights, sounds and activities over this weekend will include: 

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The latest from Rehorst

Rehorst

 
     
 

The Monthly Newsletter of Wisconsin's First & Finest Craft Distillery
 
     
             
 
In This Issue
Order Online
Tours
Summer Events
Tales of the Cocktail
Margaretto

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Week-ends (07/02/11)

Week-ends


A look back at the people and events that made news the past week. Week-ends is a regular weekly feature of This Just In...


HEROES OF THE WEEK


Gary Sinise


Jody Kelley


Barry Galfano


Bob Wieland


Kassidy Merritt


Michael Kacer


Elderly woman armed with cane



VILLAINS OF THE WEEK


Racine firefighters union


Eugene City Council


Joseph Simpson JR


Hillary Clinton


Coalition Against Breast Cancer


Stephanie Robinette



QUOTES OF THE WEEK


"I thought (Obama) was kind of a dick, yesterday."
Mark Halperin


“So let’s take a look here. The word 'dick' inappropriate. But the Republicans will hurt disabled kids is totally permissible. The Republicans will hurt college kids. The Republicans will take food out of old people's mouths. Totally appropriate. The Republicans want to take Social Security checks away from old people, totally appropriate. Paul Ryan will push your grandmother to her death over a cliff in a wheelchair, totally appropriate. The rich are selfish, mean-spirited, extremist racists, totally appropriate to say. Conservatives are racist, sexist, bigot, homophobes, totally appropriate to say. It is totally appropriate to make up quotes I never said and attribute them to me. It's totally appropriate for left-wing sportswriters to invent things I never said, that's totally appropriate.”
Rush Limbaugh


“They want to see two girls come together and have a mud wrestling fight. And I’m not going to give it to ‘em.  I have great respect and admiration for the Governor."
GOP presidential candidate Michele Bachmann commenting about the media comparing her to Sarah Palin.


“When I look around this room, I see America’s future. Our doctors, our teachers, our nurses, our engineers, our scientists, our soldiers, our Congressman, our Senators and maybe our President.” US Senator Dick Durbin (D-Illinois)


“They have no right to be here. They’re clogging up our emergency rooms. They’re making our education system more expensive, and if you go to the Madison County jail, far too many illegal aliens there because they have victimized Americans. As your congressman on the House floor I’ll do anything short of shooting them, anything that is lawful. It needs to be done because illegal aliens need to quit taking jobs from American citizens.”
Rep. Mo Brooks (R.-Ala.)



OUTRAGE OF THE WEEK


The TSA and its handling of a 95-year old woman and her adult diaper.



MOST UNDER-REPORTED STORY OF THE WEEK


Softball politics in Wisconsin



MOST OVER-HYPED STORY OF THE WEEK


I thought there was far too much coverage of the re-opening of the O'Donnell parking structure. Every time, it re-opened the wounds for the family of the young boy killed in that accident.



STRANGEST, MOST UNUSUAL STORY OF THE WEEK


The Wine Rack and other liquor luggage.


It's your feet, ladies.


That’s it.
Thanks for checking in.

We close with the latest from NewsBusted:

 

POWERFUL, EFFECTIVE AD

Let's just ban all fun on the Fourth


They’re out there.

The nervous Nellie’s, worry-warts, fuddy-duddies (lefties) who in their miserable hum-drum lives wish to eliminate all the fun and celebration surrounding our holidays, including America’s birthday, Independence Day.

When I filled in for Mark Belling this week on Newstalk 1130 WISN, this blog served as inspiration for one of my topics. Sure enough, I took more than a few phone calls from people who were adamant that no firework should be legal. Why? Because one that landed in the street ALMOST caused a car accident. That firework leftovers were found, not on their roofs, but on their lawns, that a couch caught on fire.

I thought one unhinged east-sider (of course) was going to break down and cry.

Was there any actual property damage I asked the callers?

No.

Was there any personal injury?

No.

BUT THERE COULD HAVE BEEN!

They are just too dangerous?

Why?

Because they are.

Is that because the fireworks themselves are dangerous or is it more due to a lack of proper parental supervision and/or complete stupidity?

Well, that might be true…

BINGO!

Certainly there’s a risk at using fireworks if you’re a complete buffoon and have no clue what you’re doing.

Using that same logic that all fireworks should be banned around Independence Day, should we clamp down on grilling?

How about bicycle parades on the 4th?

And what about cars?  Incredibly risky. Should we ban them, too.

To all the ninny nanny-staters, big, bad meanie-greenies, do us a favor. Clam up. Lock yourself inside on the 4th. Hide under your mattress, and let the vast majority of us enjoy celebrating the greatness of America.










My Most Popular Blogs (07/03/11)

Most popular


As I post every Sunday, here are the five most read blog entries of mine from the previous week. NOTE: some entries may have been posted prior to the past week.

1) Do Franklin residents really care?

2) Photos of the Week (06/26/11) 

3) Culinary no-no #230

4) Summerfest is back, thank you Henry Maier!

5) NY Times highlight Ryan Braun, the Brewers' "savior"

Photos of the Week (07/03/11)

Photos of the Week

 

1) The Minnesota Zoo is closed due to the state government shutting down on Friday going into the July 4 holiday after Democratic Governor Mark Dayton and Republican legislative leaders failed to reach a budget deal in St. Paul, Minnesota Friday July 1, 2011. State parks and campgrounds have closed ahead of what is usually their busiest stretch of the year for the July 4 holiday, and dozens of highway rest stops were shut down for one of the biggest travel days of the year. Photo: Reuters


2) Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich speaks to the media at the Federal Courthouse Monday, June 27, 2011 in Chicago. Blagojevich has been convicted of 17 of the 20 charges against him, including all 11 charges related to his attempt to sell or trade President Barack Obama's vacated Senate seat. At right is his wife Patti. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato)


3)
Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) addresses a gathering of supporters to formally launch her campaign for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination in her childhood hometown of Waterloo, Iowa, June 27, 2011. Bachmann, a rising star of the conservative Tea Party movement, leaped into the race for the Republican 2012 presidential nomination on Monday and said the country cannot afford four more years of President Barack Obama. Photo: Reuters


4)
Jennifer Pitts Adair kneels in the spot where she survived a direct hit from the April 27th EF5 tornado, June 20, 2011. Her Camden Ct. home in Limestone County near Athens, Ala., was destroyed to the foundation yet the twister left her lying in floor of what was once her closet injuring only her shoulder. Adair credits her survival to lessons learned from the 1974 tornado that claimed three relatives years before she was even born. Gary Cosby Jr / AP


5)
A crew member aboard the International Space Station, flying at an altitude of approximately 235 statute miles on June 27, 2011, exposed this still photograph of a major fire in the Jemez Mountains of the Santa Fe National Forest in north-central New Mexico. The fire is just southwest of Los Alamos National Laboratories. Photo: NASA


6)
In this photo taken Thursday, June 30, lightning strikes near the downtown Chicago area as a powerful storm swept through the area. Tom Cruze / Chicago Sun-Times via AP


7) A rainbow of light can be seen at the base of the over 300 foot tall Yellowstone River Lower Falls in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, on June 21. Jim Urquhart/Reuters


8)
Two skydivers parachutes tangle during 'Aviation training' at the Airpower 2011 airshow in Zeltweg, Austria on Friday, July 1. Both soldiers were injured in the incident and flown to nearby hospitals. Mario Kuhnke / EPA


9) Firefighters freed a Fond du Lac man Tuesday after he got his hand stuck in a car while retrieving a Snickers candy bar. Russ Plummer/The Fond du Lac Reporter


10)
Bodies painted in red and black lie on the ground making an image depicting a bull to protest against bullfighting in Cali, Colombia on June 30.. Carlos Julio Martinez / AP


11) A man dressed up as the devil jumps over babies lying on a mattress in the street during 'El Colacho', the 'baby jumping festival' on June 26, in the village of Castrillo de Murcia, near Burgos, Spain. Baby jumping is a traditional Spanish practice dating back to 1620 that takes place annually to celebrate the Catholic feast of Corpus Christi. During the act - known as El Salto del Colacho (the devil's jump) or simply "El Colacho" men dressed as the Devil (known as the Colacho) jump the babies to take the evil from those born the last twelve months of the year as they lie on mattresses in the street. Israel Lopez /AP


12) A rabbit jumps over a hurdle near Jena, Germany, on June15. This rabbit belongs to the First Thuringia Rabbit Sport Jena Society, whose members devote themselves to 'Kaninhop.' It consists in rabbits running a course and jumping over obstacles while being timed. Martin Schutt / EPA


13)
Sushi chefs pose for photographs as they try to lift a 772 pound, 9 foot long bluefin tuna during an event promoting a restaurant in Seoul on June 28. Kim Ju-Seong / Yonhap via Reuters


14) Kent Carmichael of Ulysses, Kan. poses with a giant halibut he caught on Tuesday, June 28, in the Gulf of Alaska, about 90 minutes offshore from Pelican in Southeast Alaska. A conversion table in the Alaska Tide Book was used to determine the weight of the 94-inch fish to be an estimated 466 pounds.
Highliner Lodge & Charters Inc. via AP


15)
Sydney Wildlife World's new baby joey koala "Boonda" clings to its mother "Elle" on June 28. Koalas are under threat due to a shortage of suitable habitats due to mass land clearances, with Sydney Wildlife World launching KOALA HQ in July to help raise much needed awareness regarding the importance of conserving one of Australia's most iconic and adored marsupials. Greg Wood / AFP - Getty Images


16)
Festival goers walk through rubbish left in the main arena in front of the Pyramid Stage as they begin to leave the Glastonbury Festival site at Worthy Farm, Pilton on June 27, 2011. As the 140,000 plus music fans began to leave this morning the clean up of the 1000s of tonnes of rubbish left by them begins. The festival, which started in 1970 when several hundred hippies paid 1 GBP to watch Marc Bolan, has grown into Europe's largest music festival attracting more than 175,000 people over five days. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)


17) The O&M Co., Reeve Carney and Jennifer Damiano are shown in a scene from "Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark." The reboot of the "Spider-Man" musical on Broadway enjoyed a strong second straight week at the box office, leaving the two lead producers cautiously optimistic about the future of the show."Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" took in $1.7 million for the week ending Sunday, June 26. (AP Photo/The O&M Co., Jacob Cohl)


18) Over one thousand guitarists perform "Amazing Grace" during the World Culture Festival at Berlin's Olympiastadion July 2. Thousands of people showed up for the festival which marks Shankar's "Art of Living" movement's 30th anniversary. John MacDougall / AFP - Getty Images


19)
NBA basketball player Dirk Nowitzki waves to fans as he arrives at the Wuerzburg Residenz during a visit to his German home town of Wuerzburg, June 28, 2011. Nowitzki became the first German to win an NBA title when his basketball team Dallas Mavericks beat the Miami Heat last weeki, giving the Mavericks their first championship in their 31 year history. Nowitzki was also named the Most Valuable Player of the Championship series. Frank Rumpenhorst/Pool via Reuters. Here, Nowitzki holds a glass of beer while he arrives at the Wuerzburg Residence. Ralph Orlowski / Getty Images


20)
A tennis fan attends Day Eight of the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on June 28, in London, England. Julian Finney / Getty Images


21) Children cavort in a fountain to cool off while parents catch wisps of mist as temperatures jumped up at Summerfest and elsewhere in Wisconsin Friday. Milwaukee’s high of 86 degrees fell short of meteorologists’ forecasts. Photo: Jeff Sainlar


22)
A young model reacts as he wears a creation by Swiss-Korean fashion designer Youn Chong Bak, as part of the Smalto collection as part of spring-summer 2012 men's fashion, presented in Paris, on Saturday, June 25. Jacques Brinon/AP

Recommended Reading (07/03/11)

Recommended reading


Here are, in my view, interesting, noteworthy columns and articles from the past week that I highly recommend (You will note that on occasion, I do not endorse the opinions of the author and may point that out. Despite my disagreements, I still feel the piece is worth a read).


Harvard: July 4 parades are right-wing

Democratic political candidates can skip this weekend's July 4th parades. A new Harvard University study finds that July 4th parades energize only Republicans, turn kids into Republicans, and help to boost the GOP turnout of adults on Election Day.”


I’m not saying Democrats aren’t patriotic…but Hahvahd is

“Top Ten Ways Democrats Can Re-"Appropriate" July Fourth

10. Include a disclaimer on celebration notices warning that displays of patriotism might endanger children's welfare.

9. Have the EPA require that celebrations use only fireworks that are environmentally friendly and greenhouse gas neutral.”


An exceptional Fourth of July

“But as another Fourth of July approaches, there has never been more uncertainty about the future of America — and the anxiety transcends even the dismal economy and three foreign wars. Yet there has never been any nation even remotely similar to America. Here’s why.”


While my son serves

He certainly chose an unusual path: Fewer than 1% of Americans wear the uniform these days. That, in turn, puts families of deployed soldiers in something of a world of their own.

While the Iraq war has wound down, there are still dangers. In June, 11 servicemen were killed, five in a single rocket attack. Death by improvised explosive device is a possibility for anyone riding those roads, and so visions of your son bleeding out as he screams for his mother can appear, unsolicited, in the middle of the night. Some level of apprehension is unavoidable. Then again, why do we have children if not to give us plenty to think about at 3 a.m.?”



Teacher’s lesson compares Scott Walker to white segregationist

“At first, the teacher, who already apparently has a warning in her personnel file for violating the school’s ‘controversial issues’ policy, claimed to just invite the students’ observations about what took place.

Consider what these students said: of immigrants, one said Walker would ‘send them back to Mexico.’ Lyman apparently didn’t correct this idiotic notion. Another said, ‘does he want to be rich?’ ‘Yeah, he wants to be rich!’ ‘He’s selfish.’ ‘He’s crazy.’ ‘He’s guilty.’ ‘He’s greedy.’ ‘He should go to jail, even though he’s governor’.”


Rage against the TSA machine


It seems the first commandment of the TSA is that every mind must be trained in the likeness of a machine. ‘Garbage in, garbage out,’ is how computer programmers explain the way bad inputs determine bad outputs. Likewise, if TSA workers are programmed not to use common sense or discretion — surprise! — TSA workers won’t use common sense or discretion.”


And this oldie but goodie...

What's Great About America

Tonight's the Night! The Michelle Witmer Story at 6:30

Sisters in Arms: The Michelle Witmer Story begins at 6:30 p.m. tonight, July 11.

John Witmer tells the story of his daughter, Michelle, the first female National Guard member killed-in-action.  Presentation followed by book signing.

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Summer Library Program Brings the Chicadees to the Library July 19

The singing and dancing Chicadees will perform Animal Voices in Our Backyard at 1:30 p.m. July 19.  Kids in Grades 1 to 6 won't want to miss this fun and exciting program.    No registration, but please come early as seating is limited.  See you next Tuesday!

Oak Creek considers financing for proposed distribution center

Oak Creek, Industrial

A developer planning to build a $4.9 million light industrial building in Oak Creek is seeking $300,000 in financing help, with the money to be repaid by the building's property taxes.

The Common Council, at its Tuesday night meet, will consider authorizing city staff to take preliminary steps to provide the financing through a tax incremental financing district. A final proposal also would need council approval.

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Family seeks answers in mysterious Oak Creek biker fatality

cycling, fatalities

Sam Ferrito’s survivors have visited the scene of his death numerous times in the past week, always leaving with more questions than answers about the crash that killed him on July 17.

To them, it’s inexplicable that a car heading in the same southbound direction on Nicholson Ave. would cross the center line and hit Ferrito, who was biking along the northbound lane intent on avoiding exactly the kind of collision that killed him.

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Friends Gigantic Book Sale Coming August 9

This is the book sale you've been waiting for.  The Friends of the Oak Creek Public Library's annual book sale is Tuesday, August 9 from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. in the the library's meeting room.  There's something for everyone--hardcover books, DVDs, CDs, paperbacks, and lots of children's materials, too.

See you at the book sale August 9!

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