thinking about shameless promotion

I recently spent a large number of hours adapting CubeCart for use with The Circle School’s website. If you’re looking for a shopping cart program and don’t mind doing some tweaking, I highly recommend CubeCart. It’s not as out-of-the-box pretty as some of the other cart programs, but it’s extremely easy to customize, both functionally and aesthetically.

But that’s not the shameless promotion I’m getting at. This is:

Thinking About The Circle School, by James Rietmulder, is now available for order. It’s written specifically about The Circle School, but it’s also a really interesting look at some of the philosophical questions about the future of education. I might be biased, but I highly recommend it if you’re at all interested in education in the 21st century.

meager little great paradigm shift

I’m posting from Gathering Grounds, a coffeehouse here in Westminster. It’s a cute little place, consisting of four tables, four couches, and more high school outcasts than I’ve seen since the Wire. It’s nothing like the Wire, except that it does seem to be a “gathering ground” for the aforementioned teenagers. It’s pretty low key and relatively quiet, and no one seems to be doing anything remotely close to crazy. But anyway, I should be working on my novel.

I just wanted to draw your attention to this article about the close of the Dover Intelligent Design trial. The Washington Post also pointed out a few days ago that the Dover school board is up for re-election on Tuesday. I’ll be interested to see how that turns out.

pa pay raise repealed

Apparently the PA state legislature is listening to its constituents. Kind of.

After months of angry talk show hosts and voters expressing their, well, anger with the pay raise the PA legislature gave themselves over the summer, both houses have passed bills to repeal it. It ain’t over yet, but it’s a step.

Here are the relevant stats (in my opinion):

Pre-raise, the base pay for a legislator was $69,647; top leaders made $108,722.

Post-raise base pay was $81,050; top leaders made $145,533.

According to the Patriot, the raises made PA legislators the second best paid in the nation.

But wait, you might be thinking, how can they give themselves immediate raises mid-term?

The raises weren’t in the form of actual raises because, you’re right, that would be illegal. Instead, they authorized monthly “unvouchered expenses.” That is, every month a legislator can say, “I spent a bunch of money, you need to reimburse me,” but doesn’t have to provide any kind of proof of that. It’s understood that they don’t actually have to spend any money.

So whether or not the PA legislators deserve raises, this was not a cool way to go about giving them to themselves.

roe chart

My earliest memories of Arlen Specter relate to my mother’s despise for him. It wasn’t until a couple of years ago that I learned her biggest problem with him was his conduct toward Anita Hill during Clarence Thomas’s confirmation hearings. Since I’m too young to remember the specific atrocities he committed, I’m finding lately that I think I actually like Specter.

Today, he kinda made me proud to be a Pennsylvanian.

Arlen Specter displays the 38 cases in which the Supreme Court upheld Roe v Wade

koi

Biff and I have just returned to the homebase after having dinner at Koi.

Being a fan of Vietnamese food, I was looking forward to trying the new restaurant. I was especially intrigued by the idea of a finer dining Asian experience.

The interior of Koi is interesting. The walls are done in a kind of red Venetian plaster with a visually appealing texture. Two enormous chandeliers hang from the ceiling. Several glass cases of pottery and other art fill the front room. I had quite a bit of time to take this all in as we waited for someone to show us to our table.

Koi’s menu is small, but I thought this was encouraging, as I hoped it would mean they were very good at making what they did offer. Biff and I agreed we’d get a couple of appetizers and split an entree, to maximize our sampling capacity. We started with the summer rolls with peanut sauce (3 for $5) and an order of chicken satay, also with peanut sauce (4 skewers for $6).

The summer rolls came quickly, and were exactly what I was craving. These are raw rolls, wrapped in a rubbery rice shell and filled with rice vermicelli, shrimp, lettuce, cilantro, and mint. I would have liked some more shrimp, but was well satisfied with what we received, and eager to try the next dish.

Luckily I didn’t have to wait long, as both the chicken satay, our entree, the chicken curry in bread bowl dinner soup ($9), and the “salad” (a tiny plate of chopped lettuce, served with a dressing that made me wish the salad had been more substantial — or at least that the lettuce was in pieces sized to be fork-friendly) that came with the entree, arrived before we’d even made a dent in the summer rolls. The satay was excellent; the chicken tender, juicy, and flavorful.

The chicken curry arrived with only one spoon — an Asian-style broad based soup spoon — and I made eye contact with our server several times before Biff finally waved him over and requested another spoon. As it was, we may have been just as well off using our forks, as this chicken curry “soup” came with barely enough non-solid material to qualify as stew, let alone soup. It was comprised entirely of cubed potatoes, carrots, and a few pieces of chicken, slow-cooked in a thick curry sauce. I’d try to explain the flavor, but it’s one we’ve all had before — curry powder and salt. And a lot of both.

When we quickly ran out of broth or sauce or whatever it was in which to dip the copious amounts of bread supplied by the bread bowl, a server (not our own) asked if we’d like some more sauce. I thought then that our experience might turn around. But no, she came back several minutes later to inform us that we’d gotten the last of the chicken curry, but we could have beef broth instead. We accepted, and when it finally arrived, after Biff asking over and over, “Is she coming? Is she coming?” it tasted just like beef gravy from Grandma’s house. My grandmother uses gravy from a can.

I should say that the curry wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t great, and I had much higher hopes for it. But Biff picked it out, so maybe if I’d been choosing we would have had better luck (this sounds horrible, but usually Biff just lets me pick, and it tends to work out well).

Still, when the bill came, I had to admit that the food we’d had was worth the $20 it cost. But will I go back? While I’d like to try the crab and rice vermicelli ($10), the grilled wasabi chicken ($14), and the smoked salmon sushi salad ($13)…Probably not, unless I hear that both the service and the food have improved. Too disappointing.

half staff

I noticed that many, but not all, flags around here have been flying at half staff for the last few days. In case you’re curious too, it turns out Governor Rendell ordered that “Pennsylvania state flags be flown at half staff through Sept. 11 in honor of the seven National Guardsmen killed this week, and all 92 Pennsylvanians who have lost their lives fighting the war on terror.”

I don’t really see that many state flags being flown at all, so I guess some people have opted to fly their American flags at half staff instead.