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  • Seven for Saturday: News You Can Use 5/14

    Seven for Saturday: News You Can Use 5/14

    scrabble board

    Soccer started early this morning; shin guards went AWOL; my link love is later than usual. My apologies.

    Whether you need interesting dinner party fodder, something to ponder while in the shower, or just something to read while waiting in line at the grocery store: I gotcha covered.

    My favorite links from the week….


    1. Thang, innit and grrl added to Scrabble dictionary

    “Robert Groves, editor of Collins English Dictionaries and editor of the latest word list for Scrabble users, said: ”The latest edition adds nearly 3,000 new words to the existing quarter of a million available to Scrabble players. These additions are an eclectic mix of new technological jargon, overseas English, recent colloquialisms, street slang, and a few fairly well-established phrases that had not made it onto the list until now.”

    Excuse my French, but what a load of hot horse puckey. In this house we play according to the King’s English.


    2. Disney Trademarks ‘Seal Team 6,’ Name Of Unit That Killed Bin Laden

    “The applications cover ‘entertainment and education services,’ ‘toys, games and playthings’ and ‘clothing, footwear and headwear.’ “

    Henry David Thoreau said, “It is truly enough said that a corporation has no conscience,” and by that he meant, “WTF, Disney?!”


    3. Toy Soldiers Convey The Unrecorded Casualties Of War [Pics]


    I shudder to think what heroic softening glow Disney plans to put on those Seal Team 6 toys, games and playthings. My parents were the playthings of war. My uncle, permanently emotionally damaged: substance abuse problems and all the other issues that stem from there.

    Though I wouldn’t buy these for my kids either, they are a much more realistic representation of what soldiers are like… after the war is over.

    The articles focused on a single battalion based at Fort Carson in Colorado Springs, who since returning from duty in Iraq had been involved in brawls, beatings, rapes, drunk driving, drug deals, domestic violence, shootings, stabbings, kidnapping and suicides. Returning soldiers were committing murder at a rate 20 times greater than other young American males. A separate investigation into the high suicide rate among veterans published in the New York Times in October 2010 revealed that three times as many California veterans and active service members were dying soon after returning home than those being killed in Iraq and Afghanistan combined. We hear little about the personal hell soldiers live through after returning home.

    It’s no different from the stupid Disney princesses. What happens after happily ever after?


    4. Tiger Mom: Here’s how to reshape U.S. education

    Yeah, I still haven’t read the book yet. But the woman knows what she’s talking about. Tiger Cub got accepted by Yale and Harvard.

    Companion reading:

    How Do We Prepare Kids for Jobs We Can’t Imagine Yet? Teach Imagination and The Creativity Crisis: Why American Schools Need Design. I linked to both in last week’s roundup.


    5. McDonald’s sales rise 6% in April, beating expectations

    DUDE. STOP GIVING McDONALD’S YOUR MONEY. Have you not seen Super-Size Me?

    6. Cooking Real Food Isn’t as Hard as the Food Industry Wants Moms to Believe

    It’s really not. I swear. Especially now, during farmer’s market season; the less you do to fresh foods the better it tastes.

    “People not being accustomed to cooking is a bigger barrier than money or class or any of those other things that people are bringing into the discussion [of real food.]”

    Would you agree?


    7. How I Healed My Child’s Cavity

    “…cavities are caused by nutritional deficiency and when this nutritional deficiency is corrected, the cavity heals. If you think about this in an open-minded manner leaving all preconceived ideas about cavities behind, doesn’t this make sense?  Shouldn’t the body be able to heal a cavity just like it heals a broken bone or a cut on your arm?  Why would teeth be any different from a broken wrist after all?”

    Interesting; all the more so because I had the shadows of a cavity forming six months ago, and I was sure that six months of not-quite-perfect brushing with new braces on meant I’d be getting that cavity filled. At my visit last week though, I was told the soft spot had resolved itself.

    Two headines I want to share just because they’re so DUH worthy:


    VIDEO:

    Several people asked if I had seen this. To be honest, I’m more disturbed by this girl’s parents decision to post a video of her shirtless on the internet, than by her choice of lovey plaything.

     

    I do love this video of a sock gone missing and the quest to find him… vaguely not suitable for children for its (split-second) cartoon depiction of a body part that rhymes with sock. Via kurositas, which always has such interesting visual stuff, particularly animation. Check it out.

    For Sock’s Sake from Carlo Vogele on Vimeo.

     


    That’s all I got. What good stuff did you see this week?

  • Local Family Fun This Weekend: 5/13- 5/15

    Local Family Fun This Weekend: 5/13- 5/15

    alice in wonderland

    Adventures first… explanations take such a dreadful time.

    -Lewis Carroll
    (the Gryphon, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland)

    Dover Downs is this weekend, so bear that in mind for your travels.

    I’ve been told that this listing is helpful, and while I believe a large part of living green is supporting local, I want to keep simple. green. organic. happy. accessible to everybody. Sooooo for local peeps I am resurrecting Family Fun Delaware and my boys are going to shoulder most of the burden of maintaining it. It’ll be local reviews & events, plus kid reviews of movies, books, music, games, etc; also Maverick is talking about science experiments. We’ll see how it goes. At the very least, though, it’ll feature this weekly roundup of fave family friendly events.

    I’ll link to it next Friday, and keep ya’ll updated when it goes live.

     

    Drumroll please… my top picks this weekend:

     

    ProjectMUSIC Opera! presents Through the Looking Glass, a one-act version of Alice in Wonderland

    Friday (tonight!) May 13th, 7:00pm at Loudis Hall in the University of Delaware’s Amy E. DuPont Music Building. Features University of Delaware students and fourth and fifth graders from Thurgood Marshall Elementary School. Admission is free and doors open at 6:30.

    Delaware Geocaching Trail

    Starts May 13th 2011. The ultimate treasure hunt in a quest to discover Delaware— hunt for a cache using GPS technology & then continue on to discover the next treasure.

    I honestly have no clue what geocaching is all about, it sounds interesting so I’m sharing, but I’m going to have to research it more. If you’ve knowledge or experience please share your expertise in the comments!

    Cecil County GreenFest

    Saturday, May 14th 10:00am- 4:00pm rain or shine at the Cecil County Fairgrounds & Ed Walls Activity Hall. Proceeds from GreenFest will support
    the Fair Hill Nature Center’s environmental education programming. This year GreenFest is highlighting the Green and Healthy movement “from the ground up!” Exhibitors will be showcasing the latest consumer products for home and garden with interactive family-friendly exhibits and demonstrations. Learn easy ways to save energy, make your home safer, and garden without harming the environment. Activities include Exhibit Hall Scavenger Hunt, Environmental Midway games, “Minute to Win It” Games, Make & Take Green Cleaners, Soil Tunnel Exploration, Salad Tables and Boxes, Rain Barrel Conservation, Backyard Water Fountains, Hayrides to the Nature Center, Stream Critter Hunt, Bug Hunt, Nature Crafts, Create a Fairy House.

    Italian Market Festival

    May 14th & 15th 10:00am- 5:00pm rain or shine. The nation’s oldest outdoor market and Philly’s largest block party. Annual Procession of Saints, live entertainment, the first-ever half-ball tournament to benefit the Mummers Fancy Brigades, and most importantly, streets lined with food vendors, including a 100ft long stuffed sausage at Esposito’s Meats (using Grandpop Esposito’s 100yr old recipe).

    Peanut Butter and Jams welcomes Joanie Leeds

    Saturday, May 14th 11:30am (doors open at 11:00am) at the Queen in Wilmington. Kid music parents can enjoy! NYC singer/songwriter Joanie Leeds, already known for her pop/soul sound in the grownup world, is now making waves in the land of kids’ music. Currently teaching music at four Manhattan schools, Joanie uses her students as inspiration for her original songs.

    World Fair Trade Day

    Saturday, May 14th from 12:00noon- 5:00pm at Village Imports Fair Trade Store, 165 East Main Street (down Traders Alley) in Newark. There will be free Fair Trade coffee and chocolate samples and door prizes. Event is free and open to the public.

    Attracting Butterflies to your Backyard

    Saturday, May 14th at 1:00pm at Bellevue Park. May is Gardening for Wildlife Month! Learn a few easy ways to attract beautiful butterflies to your own backyard, no matter the size of the yard. You will make and bring home your very own butterfly feeder to get started. This program is appropriate for all ages. Register by calling (302) 761-6963 by 4 p.m. on Friday, May 13. Meet at the Arts Center. $6 per person.

    Leonardo da Vinci’s Workshop: Inventor, Artist, Dreamer at the Franklin Institute.

    This exhibition from Milan is in its final days (running until May 29th). Hands-on interactive models of Leonardo’s inventions and machines, as well as state-of-the-art touch screen technology that recreates da Vinci’s personal notebooks (codices). All of the models were constructed according to Leonardo’s notes, drawings and designs, and were recreated using materials and techniques that would have existed in the 15th and 16th centuries. Includes a recreation of Leonardo’s workshop.

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    We’ve got double-header football tomorrow along with two soccer games, but I’m going to make it to the da Vinci exhibition if it kills me. I’m also sorting through the kids spring/summer clothes to see what needs buying (oh, my aching wallet).

    Whatcha doin’ this weekend? Anything fun?

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  • School Food vs Prison Food

    School Food vs Prison Food

    school-food-prison-food

    The school is the last expenditure
    upon which America should be willing to economize.

    -Franklin D. Roosevelt

     

    Click over to Good.is to see the infographic at full size.

    While you’re there, subscribe to the RSS feed… frankly, I just don’t have enough time to share all the good stuff that comes from that site.

     

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