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Jan 26, 2006

Test ... Are you a citizen?

CITIZENSHIP TEST

How well would you do if you took a citizenship test? Try this one out - it is educational and fun.

24 out of 30 is considered a passing grade.
96% of all High School Seniors FAILED this test
50+% of all individuals over 50 did too!
And we WONDER why America is in the shape it's in?
"WELL, DUH!"

Click on the link below.
www.toast.net/games/Independence/page1.asp

Fortunately, they give you the correct answers after they grade you! Be prepared to give up your citizenship!!

Jan 25, 2006

How many steps do you take in a day?

If you're logging less than 5,000 steps daily with your pedometer, you need to step up your efforts.
Walking 5,000 or fewer steps throughout the course of the day -- about 2 ½ miles -- is deemed sedentary behavior according to new activity guidelines. Most people log between 2,000 and 5,000 steps daily by performing everyday activities. Step up your activity level so that you squarely land in the "active" category, which requires 10,000 daily steps.
The average person takes between 2,000 and 5,000 steps daily just in the course of performing typical activities of daily life, such as moving about the house or doing errands. According to a new set of physical activity guidelines, this level of activity is considered to be sedentary. Taking between 5,000 and 7,499 steps per day qualifies as low activity; 7,500 to 9,999 qualifies as being somewhat active; 10,000 to 12,499 is considered active; and 12,500 or more is considered highly active. Wear a pedometer to keep track of your daily steps. If you're new to exercise but would like to increase your physical activity level, start by taking a daily 15-minute walk around your block after dinner to accumulate more steps. Increase this amount gradually until you reach your 10,000-step goal.

http://www.realage.com/news_features/tip.aspx?cid=16348#rateTip 1-25-06

How many steps do you take in a day?

If you're logging less than 5,000 steps daily with your pedometer, you need to step up your efforts.
Walking 5,000 or fewer steps throughout the course of the day -- about 2 ½ miles -- is deemed sedentary behavior according to new activity guidelines. Most people log between 2,000 and 5,000 steps daily by performing everyday activities. Step up your activity level so that you squarely land in the "active" category, which requires 10,000 daily steps.
The average person takes between 2,000 and 5,000 steps daily just in the course of performing typical activities of daily life, such as moving about the house or doing errands. According to a new set of physical activity guidelines, this level of activity is considered to be sedentary. Taking between 5,000 and 7,499 steps per day qualifies as low activity; 7,500 to 9,999 qualifies as being somewhat active; 10,000 to 12,499 is considered active; and 12,500 or more is considered highly active. Wear a pedometer to keep track of your daily steps. If you're new to exercise but would like to increase your physical activity level, start by taking a daily 15-minute walk around your block after dinner to accumulate more steps. Increase this amount gradually until you reach your 10,000-step goal.

http://www.realage.com/news_features/tip.aspx?cid=16348#rateTip 1-25-06

Dead Cat

OK, first I did not do it.

The other night I was backing into our driveway and noticed the neighborhood cat, dead in the street by the curb. This is cat that had been sleeping on both our front and back porches the last few weeks.

I made a comment about it to Lori which Zane (our almost 4 year old) heard. So he asked about it. Lori stated that maybe I should take him out to look at it … teachable moment. So as we unload the van, Zane is all excited about going to look at the dead cat. I tell him we must first unload the groceries and get a flashlight. So he helped carry in groceries, of which there were several arm loads. After each load taken in he would ask, “Are we going to go look at the cat?” I would say, “After we unload the van and I get a flashlight.” This happened at least three times.

Lori has taught him very well to be careful around cars, “because they can smash you like a pancake.” So in parking lots and when close to a street he obeys very well by waiting for us and holding one of our hands or pant leg.

So after finishing unloading the van, I get the flashlight and we walk out, hand-in-hand, to view the dead kitty. As we walk I remind him about why we must be careful around cars and the street because, of the possibility of being “smashed like a pancake … you see cats are not as smart as you, so they don’t know how to be careful like you are.”

As we flashed the light on to the deceased cat we talked about how sad it was that the poor kitty was dead. We didn’t linger long but as we walked back to the house I reminded him that cats are not as smart as him at being careful around cars and the street, then transitioning to dogs as well, they are not as smart as him and that some day we will get a dog and that he will have to watch the dog carefully because they are not as smart as him either. They have to be kept on a leash or in the backyard.

Later on that night, he accused ME of killing the cat … I am like “what, I didn’t do it.” He said, “Dad you are being silly.”
“No, I didn’t do it, it was already there, I just saw it when we were backing into the driveway.”
He shakes his head, and says again, “daddy’s being silly.”
“No, I did not do it.”
“You’re not telling trufth.”
“Yes, that’s the truth, I don’t tell lies.”

Jan 18, 2006

Spencers butte









you smell funny

what's this?
middle school girls
tunnel vision
middle school boys
Duck bus!
left right left right
being distracted
catch me if you can
giant matt
discussion
Ken fallling
Teresa trusts
working together

Jan 5, 2006

College Football...gotta love it!

What a great bowl season we had this year. Great games and an awesome National Championship game.

The Ducks performance was the only downer. We should have won. We played poorly and sadly I have to point to the coaching staff and their decisions.

As for the rest of the top games, wow, Ohio State really impressed me in the Fiesta Bowl against Notre Dame, the Buckeyes are impressive. The Sugar Bowl, it looked like after the end of the first half that they would both score 60 points, amazing offenses. It was a fun first half of football. Of course they slowed down in the second half and it was a battle to the end.

All of the BCS bowls were battles, the Orange Bowl, wow! Three overtimes! The missed field goals, the intensity was great, I was sure glad Kevin Kelly came through with his third chance to win the game. I am not sure he would have lived to old age if he would have missed another. Paterno and Bowden are the two winningest coaches in D-I football battling it out for over 4 hours (79 years old and 76 years old respectively). It was cool to watch.

Then there came the Rose Bowl for the National Championship. I was saying before the game, this is the most significant football game of the century. Texas and USC, all the stories to be told, wow. Texas ranked number two all season, had an amazing year, routing most all of the teams they came up against. After the game commentators were asking if Vince Young (runner-up Heisman candidate) might be the best quarterback ever! He is amazing, he ran for 200 yards and He threw for 267 yards, in the Rose Bowl for the National Championship! This Young’s second year in a row winning the Rose Bowl, his combined yardage and amazing …. 839 yards in two Rose Bowls.

"That," USC coach Pete Carroll said, "is an extraordinary football player."

"Vince is truly one of the great competitors to ever play college football," coach Mack Brown said Wednesday night. "He has got a tremendous amount of confidence. He just exudes that confidence."

And the USC Trojans … Matt Leinart comes back passing up tens of millions of dollars this year to go for his 3rd National Championship in a row. He was the Heisman winner in 2004, the top player in the whole nation. This year Reggie Bush, running back for USC, wins the Heisman and he deserved it he is like no other, he runs by defensive players like they are 7th grade girls. Two Heisman winners on one team playing for their 3rd National Championship, guarding a 34 game winning streak, they had not lost since 2003!

Now the game, wow, they battle to the final seconds. There was no way to know the final outcome until the buzzer rang. Intense. Wow. That was fun.