Life Archive



Holiday Tunes For Your Party

With Christmas approaching, the time of food, fun, and Fantastic Christmas parties is upon us! If you are considering throwing a Christmas party then you need to be thinking about the most important part of a party, the music! Never fear, in this week’s JSC blog post, we are going to be posting some popular songs to play at your party!

1. The Christmas Song - Nat King Cole
2. Joy to the World - Aretha Franklin
3. Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree - Brenda Lee
4. Have a Holly Jolly Christmas - Burl Ives
5. White Christmas - Bing Crosby
6. All I want for Christmas - Mariah Carey
7. Santa Baby - Eartha Kitt
8. Chipmunk Song - The Chipmunks
9. Jingle Bell Rock - Bobby Helms
10. Winter Wonderland - Dolly Parton
11. Silent Night - Kenny G
12. Feliz Navidad - Jose Feliciano
13. Blue Christmas - Elvis Presley
14. Let it Snow! - Lena Horne
15. Home for the Holidays - Perry Como
16. Wonderful Christmastime - Paul McCartney
17. Baby, It’s Cold Outside - Tom Jones
18. Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas - Judy Garland
19. Merry Christmas, Darling - The Carpenters
20. Rudolf the Red Nose Reindeer - Gene Autry
21. It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year - Andy Williams

If you are looking for more awesome tunes to play at you party, check out the thousands of recommendations people have put on the web! Remember, the music makes the party!




Holiday Party Favors!

The best Christmas party favors spread the warm fuzzy feelings of the holidays. The goal is to use your Christmas favors to bring a smile to your guests' faces, invoking happy memories of past Christmases. Whether it's a holiday story, treat or icon, your guests will love Christmas party favors that walk them down memory lane.

Best Nostalgic Christmas Party Favor number 1: Christmas Stories

Give your guests a trip back to childhood, with Christmas story party favors. Popular Christmas stories are: A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens; How the Grinch Stole Christmas, by Dr. Seuss and The Night Before Christmas, by Clement Clarke More or Henry Livingston. Christmas party favor books can often be purchased at dollar an item or discount stores. Simply tie a bow around the book and pass out to guests.

Best Nostalgic Christmas Party Favor number 2: Personalized Stories

This Christmas party favor idea is based on the first one, but with a personal twist. Take a Christmas story and insert the names and characteristics of your party guests. You can also individualize it by family. The easiest way to mass produce this Christmas party favor, is to compose it on a computer. Draw pictures, add clip art or print on paper with a Christmas motif. I did a version of this Christmas party favor, while decorating a nursing home wing. I broke down the verses of The Night Before Christmas and personalized a verse for each resident. For a resident who adored candy I wrote, "While visions of candy bars danced in Monte's head." I kept it simple and fairly close to the original poem. I wrote the verses on poster board, drew matching pictures and hung them on their doors. The residents spent days going up and down the halls, enjoying the story. Your guests could reap as much enjoyment, from a similar Christmas party favor.

Best Nostalgic Christmas Party Favor number 3: Special Hot Chocolate

Special hot chocolate is the Christmas party favor my grandmother handed out last year. This was probably the best Christmas party favor I have ever received. It took me back to childhood Christmas mornings, sipping hot chocolate and eating cinnamon rolls, with my family. In plastic baggies, she packaged an individual hot chocolate packet, a mini Hershey's bar, a mini candy cane and three tiny marshmallows. You could tie this Christmas party favor off with green and red ribbon.

Best Nostalgic Christmas Party Favors number 4: Cookies for Santa

This Christmas party favor gives your adult guests a chance to do something that they probably wouldn't do on their own: set out cookies for Santa. Give your Christmas party guests the opportunity to be children and remember the excitement of Christmas Eve. This party favor will be an added bonus for parents who forgot to stock up on cookies and may prevent a disappointed child. To make cookies for Santa party favors, purchase small Christmas themed paper plates. Then bake or purchase your guests favorite cookies. Try to avoid cookies with nuts, if you are not sure of all your guests' allergies. Place three cookies on a plate and wrap in plastic wrap.

Best Nostalgic Christmas Party Favor number 5: Holiday Music

Music is one of the best ways to capture the spirit of the holiday season and has all the makings of a nostalgic Christmas part favor. Find Christmas CDs at dollar stores or make your own, on a computer. Try to find artists that your guests would have listened to in their youth. Add a bow to this Christmas party favor or wrap in holiday paper.

Best Nostalgic Christmas Party Favor number 6: Photographs

Photographic Christmas party favors are thoughtful gifts, especially if you have past Christmas pictures of you guests. The younger your guests are in the photographs, the more nostalgia it will bring on. You can use individual or group shots for this holiday party favor. Purchase frames or photo ornaments at discount stores. You may have to shrink down photos, for smaller frames. Place these Christmas party favors in small gift bags.

Remember to have a happy holiday and awesome New Year. If you have any other tips or want to share some party favors of your won give us a shout back because we are here for you!




The First Thanksgiving

The First ThanksgivingIn 1621, the Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast which is acknowledged today as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies. This harvest meal has become a symbol of cooperation and interaction between English colonists and Native Americans. Although this feast is considered by many to the very first Thanksgiving celebration, it was actually in keeping with a long tradition of celebrating the harvest and giving thanks for a successful bounty of crops. Native American groups throughout the Americas, including the Pueblo, Cherokee, Creek and many others organized harvest festivals, ceremonial dances, and other celebrations of thanks for centuries before the arrival of Europeans in North America.

Historians have also recorded other ceremonies of thanks among European settlers in North America, including British colonists in Berkeley Plantation, Virginia. At this site near the Charles River in December of 1619, a group of British settlers led by Captain John Woodlief knelt in prayer and pledged "Thanksgiving" to God for their healthy arrival after a long voyage across the Atlantic. This event has been acknowledged by some scholars and writers as the official first Thanksgiving among European settlers on record. Whether at Plymouth, Berkeley Plantation, or throughout the Americas, celebrations of thanks have held great meaning and importance over time. The legacy of thanks, and particularly of the feast, have survived the centuries as people throughout the United States gather family, friends, and enormous amounts of food for their yearly Thanksgiving meal.

What Was Actually on the Menu?

What foods topped the table at the first harvest feast? Historians aren't completely certain about the full bounty, but it's safe to say the pilgrims weren't gobbling up pumpkin pie or playing with their mashed potatoes. Following is a list of the foods that were available to the colonists at the time of the 1621 feast. However, the only two items that historians know for sure were on the menu are venison and wild fowl, which are mentioned in primary sources. The most detailed description of the "First Thanksgiving" comes from Edward Winslow from A Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, in 1621:

"Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors. They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week. At which time, among other recreations, we exercised our arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest king Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed upon our governor, and upon the captain, and others. And although it be not always so plentiful as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want that we often wish you partakers of our plenty."

Seventeenth Century Table Manners:

The pilgrims didn't use forks; they ate with spoons, knives, and their fingers. They wiped their hands on large cloth napkins which they also used to pick up hot morsels of food. Salt would have been on the table at the harvest feast, and people would have sprinkled it on their food. Pepper, however, was something that they used for cooking but wasn't available on the table.

In the seventeenth century, a person's social standing determined what he or she ate. The best food was placed next to the most important people. People didn't tend to sample everything that was on the table (as we do today), they just ate what was closest to them.

Serving in the seventeenth century was very different from serving today. People weren't served their meals individually. Foods were served onto the table and then people took the food from the table and ate it. All the servers had to do was move the food from the place where it was cooked onto the table.

Pilgrims didn't eat in courses as we do today. All of the different types of foods were placed on the table at the same time and people ate in any order they chose. Sometimes there were two courses, but each of them would contain both meat dishes, puddings, and sweets.

More Meat, Less Vegetables

Our modern Thanksgiving repast is centered around the turkey, but that certainly wasn't the case at the pilgrims's feasts. Their meals included many different meats. Vegetable dishes, one of the main components of our modern celebration, didn't really play a large part in the feast mentality of the seventeenth century. Depending on the time of year, many vegetables weren't available to the colonists.

The pilgrims probably didn't have pies or anything sweet at the harvest feast. They had brought some sugar with them on the Mayflower but by the time of the feast, the supply had dwindled. Also, they didn't have an oven so pies and cakes and breads were not possible at all. The food that was eaten at the harvest feast would have seemed fatty by 1990's standards, but it was probably more healthy for the pilgrims than it would be for people today. The colonists were more active and needed more protein. Heart attack was the least of their worries. They were more concerned about the plague and pox.

Surprisingly Spicy Cooking

People tend to think of English food at bland, but, in fact, the pilgrims used many spices, including cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, pepper, and dried fruit, in sauces for meats. In the seventeenth century, cooks did not use proportions or talk about teaspoons and tablespoons. Instead, they just improvised. The best way to cook things in the seventeenth century was to roast them. Among the pilgrims, someone was assigned to sit for hours at a time and turn the spit to make sure the meat was evenly done.

Since the pilgrims and Wampanoag Indians had no refrigeration in the seventeenth century, they tended to dry a lot of their foods to preserve them. They dried Indian corn, hams, fish, and herbs.

Dinner for Breakfast: Pilgrim Meals:

The biggest meal of the day for the colonists was eaten at noon and it was called noonmeat or dinner. The housewives would spend part of their morning cooking that meal. Supper was a smaller meal that they had at the end of the day. Breakfast tended to be leftovers from the previous day's noonmeat.

In a pilgrim household, the adults sat down to eat and the children and servants waited on them. The foods that the colonists and Wampanoag Indians ate were very similar, but their eating patterns were different. While the colonists had set eating patterns—breakfast, dinner, and supper—the Wampanoags tended to eat when they were hungry and to have pots cooking throughout the day.




Websites When You Are Bored

So let’s paint the picture here: You are at home, it’s a Saturday afternoon and you need to kill some time… What do you? You catch a glimpse of the computer screen and sit down at the chair. You click on the web address bar and begin to type but nothing comes to mind. Well if you have found yourself in this position time and time again, you have come to the right place. In this weeks JSC energY blog, we are going to reveal the top 5 websites to visit when you have some time to kill!

Site number one: www.Youtube.com

From Charlie Bit Me to the Evolution of Dance guy, which this blogger has met and interviewed, it is a site that needs no introduction and has been providing millions of people entertainment for years. Youtube is a place for amateurs and professionals to post videos on anything and everything. If you have not checked it out yet, please drop what you are doing this very second and go to youtube.com!

Site number two: www.Facebook.com

Social Media sites like Facebook and MySpace is such an easy place to kick off your shoes and relax! You can get lost in the numerous long lost friends and games on these social media sites. If you do decide to become a member of Facebook or MySpace, beware of the dreaded Mafia Wars and Farmville.

 Site number three: www.addictinggames.com

This website is such an amazing site if you are looking for some great arcade games to play! The best thing about this site is everything is in the same spot and you do not have to go looking for certain types of games. All your action, adventure, casino games are all on the site waiting for you!

Site number four: www.jigzone.com

If you are in the mood to do some jigsaw puzzles then this is the site for you! Sit back and relax at this site because you can pick the puzzles you want to do and not have to worry about picking up the pieces when you are done! Check this site out asap!

Site number five: www.wired.com

All your computer and tech information is at your finger tips on this site! If you are looking for the latest reviews on gadgets or whether you should purchase a Mac or Pc, then Wired is a perfect pace to stop in and check!

Do you have some sites that you like visiting when you need to kill some time? Give us a shout back and share you info!




Halloween Facts!

The Origin of Halloween

Halloween's roots can be traced back to Celtic culture in Ireland. According to their "Druid" religion, November 1st was New Years' on their calendar. The celebration would begin on October 31st ,and last into the following day. The spirits of all who died in the prior year, would rise up and roam the earth on this night.

This is an evil night when spirits roamed the streets and villages. Lord Samhain, the lord of Darkness, would arrive in search of the spirits to take them to the underworld.

Halloween as it is currently celebrated with costumes, trick or treat, and superstitions, takes from this Druid Holiday.

All Hallows Eve

Halloween was commonly referred to as "All Hollows" Eve. It originated from the pagan holiday honoring the dead. The Roman Catholic Church created All Saints Day (also called Hallomas) on November 1st to honor Saints and All Souls Day on November 2and to honor and pray for the souls of the dead. These holidays were created by the church, in part to downplay the pagan holidays. Needless to say, it did not succeed. Halloween as we know it today, has grown from the ancient Druid Holiday. Along the way both fun, frights, and twists have been added to the mix.

Pumpkin's Roots

Pumpkins have inhabited the planet for thousands of years. They originated in Central America. They were used then (and now) as a food crop. Over the course of centuries, pumpkins spread their vines across all of North and South America. When Europeans arrived in the New World, they found pumpkins plentiful and used in cooking by Native Americans. They took seeds back to Europe where they quickly became popular. Pumpkin recipes

Did you Know? There are no words in the dictionary that rhyme with orange? Hard to believe for such an important color? The same is true for the colors purple and silver. But, who cares about silver and purple...they are not pumpkin colors!

Growing big pumpkins is a big time hobby and serious at that. Top prize money for the biggest giant pumpkin is as much as $25,000 dollars at fall festivals. The current world record for giant pumpkins is 1446 pounds. Now that's a lot of pumpkin pies! 

The First Jack O'Lantern

The Irish carved Turnips and put coals or small candles inside. They were placed outside their homes on All Hallow's Eve to ward off evil spirits. They were also known to use potatoes and Rutabagas.

When Irish Immigrants came to America, they quickly discovered that Jack O'Lanterns were much easier to carve out and began using them. This truly neat tradition quickly spread to the general population in America and elsewhere.




energY News Blast - Sony's 360 3D Display, But Now What?

It is official, Sony has made a 360 degree 3D display and has no clue at the moment what to do with it! The uses off of the top of the VPs head were, "digital photo frame" and some marketing possibilities but how many digital frames do we really need? Nobody needs to see uncle David in his way too small clothing. Bring on the 3D television already Sony, we are waiting...

I remember when I was in 5th grade, reading my Weekly Reader about the cars of the future and how we would all be flying by now. Well as far as flying cars go, I think I will leave that up to the guys and gals at MIT but 3D televisions are expected to be rolling out of Sony's neck of the woods starting in 2010.

Check out the video below for the full look at the 360 degree 3D display and shout back at us with your thoughts and opinions!




iPhone Apps You Can Not Miss!

To this day we have around 60,000 iPhone applications floating around. At the end of the 2008 calender year, the 10,000 milestone had been passed to much surprise. By June of 2009, the App store had 50,000+ apps available for iPhone users. At present, we are looking at a staggering 300 new applications being released every single day. So the big question is how do you find those amazing apps in the 60,000+ app store? Below is a list, compiled from different resources,of the top apps of this year.


Most Useful

Hey Where Are You - A beautifully simple application that takes advantage of Push Notification, by letting users ask and answer the question “Hey, Where Are You?” (Similar: Loopt )

Textfree Unlimited - Currently the best alternative to high SMS plan costs, offering free text messaging using Push Notification.

TweetDeck - Our new, favorite Twitter client that takes advantage of the same layout as its desktop counterpart, multiple columns, separation of user groups, and more. (Similar: Tweetie, Twinkle, TwitterFON)

Print and Share - Print files, emails, web pages, contacts, images and even snapshots direct from your camera, straight to your home printer. Simple setup and works perfectly.

Best Games

Real Racing - Standard track based racing game, but has the best graphics on an iPhone game to-date. Worth it alone to see what the iPhone is capable of.

My Brute - Create a fighter and compete in daily arena matches. Very simplistic, but highly addicting and will bring you back daily.

Zenonia - The first fully featured traditional 2D action RPG for your iPhone and iPod Touch.

Oregon Trail - The classic Oregon Trail, updated with fantastic graphics and animation. Will keep you entertained just like when you were in school. Try not to die of dysentery.

Fun Timewasters

Doodle Jump - Dominated the Top 25 list for quite a while. Accelerometer based movement—you guide your Doodle to bounce off platforms, jumping to the highest point possible as you avoid getting hit.

Mouth Off - Cover your mouth with your device and show off an assortment of crazy mouths that animate to the input sound of your voice. I’ve annoyed dining mates with this one more than once.

Pocket God - Well done, episodic content based on a simple toy of dealing with your islanders. Fun to show off to friends and receive new updates.

Flight Control - Elegantly simple and highly addictive game. You direct various planes to different landing strips, all the while trying to avoid collisions. Updated with Bluetooth device co-op




21 Interesting Facts About Football

  1. There is some argument over the exact date when pro football began. The first college game took place between Rutgers and Princeton in November of 1869. Years later, in November of 1892, the Allegheny Athletic Association football team beat the Pittsburgh Athletic Club. In this later game, at least one of the players was paid for their performance, making it the first "professional" game.
  2. The American Professional Football Conference (APFC) was created in 1920. About a month later, the organization's name was changed by replacing the word "Conference" with "Association."
  3. Original teams in the APFA included the Akron Pros, Dayton Triangles and the Canton Bulldogs. Later teams joining the league included the Chicago Tigers and the Buffalo All-Americans.
  4. The legendary Jim Thorpe played for the Canton Bulldogs, off an on, between 1915 and 1926.
  5. These early days of professional football were portrayed in the 2008 movie Leatherheads, starring George Clooney, Renee Zellweger and John Krasinski.
  6. The "leatherheads" of the movie title was a reference to the early-model football helmets, which were made of thick leather.
  7. In June of 1922, the APFA changed its name to the National Football League (NFL).
  8. The two conferences we know today — the National Football Conference (NFC) and the American Football Conference (AFC) — were formed in 1970.
  9. The Chicago Bears are one of the oldest teams in professional football today. They adopted their current name back in 1922, when the Chicago Staleys changed their name to the "Bears."
  10. The two newest teams / franchises in the NFL are the Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers, both of which started as expansion teams in 1995.
  11. As of the 2008 season, Chuck Noll (former coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers) had more Super Bowl wins than any other coach. He led the Steelers to victory in Super Bowls IX, X, XIII and XIV.
  12. As of the 2008 season, there is a three-way tie between football teams for the most Super Bowl wins. The Dallas Cowboys, San Francisco 49ers and Pittsburgh Steelers have each won five.
  13. Some kickoff and punt return facts at the time of this article: Antonio Cromartie (Chargers) had the longest return of a missed field goal at 109 yards. Ellis Hobbs (Patriots) had the longest kickoff return at 108 yards. Robert Bailey (Rams) had the longest punt return at 103 yards.
  14. As of 2008, Emmitt Smith is the NFL's leading rusher. He holds many football records, including the most career rushing yards (18,355). Emmitt also won the 2006 season of ABC's Dancing With the Stars. Running, dancing ... what can't he do?
  15. Interesting facts about pro football cheerleaders: In 1960, the Baltimore Colts were the first pro football team to have their own organized cheerleading squad. This ushered in the era of cheerleaders.
  16. Tex Schramm, general manager of the Dallas Cowboys, had initially tried to use models for his team's cheerleading squad. But the models could not tolerate the long hours in the hot sun. So Schramm made the decision to use professional dancers and choreography. Thus the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders were born in 1972.
  17. Reliant Park in Houston was the first pro football stadium with a retractable roof. The stadium opened in 2002 and is home to the Houston Texans.
  18. Artificial turf (known as AstroTurf) was first used in the Astrodome in Houston, Texas in 1965. By the 1970s, the use of artificial turf was widespread in football, baseball and soccer venues.
  19. Many pro football players today claim that artificial turf leads to more knee and leg injuries because it does not give. Turf toe is a common term today that refers to an injury of the toes resulting from artificial turf.
  20. TV commercials aired during the Super Bowl are some of the most expensive ads on TV. During Super Bowl XLII in 2008, a 30-second commercial cost $2.7 million dollars.
  21. To date, the longest game in NFL history was the Christmas Day matc-hup between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins. The divisional playoff went back and forth for more than 82 minutes and didn't end until halfway through the second overtime.