I think the Rickster has a spirit of its own and is just helping you find problems on the car so you get them sorted out sooner rather than later. 
I don't think I need to really say this but I would make sure there are no other leaks after you replace that freeze plug before setting the engine back down. Hope all goes well for you.This morning I was able to was able to drain the cooling system, removed the alternator, and got a lifting sling on the motor. I picked it up enough to remove the motor mount, pressurized the cooling system, and hit it with the black light. A steady stream of coolant ran from the freeze plug to the oil ban rail, and to the back of the engine. So a leaking freeze plug is the cause. I've got a replacement freeze plug ready for pick up in the morning, and once that is installed, I should be back in business.
Agreed. I had an instructor for an engine rebuild class who beat that into our brains at every opportunity. He would tell us it is not worth the little lower price to go with the less costly core )freeze) plug. Brass and only brass, and I have been an advocate of that ever since. I have never had a problem driving in a brass core plug, nor having one leak.. Using Permatex to help ensure a good seal may be overkill, but better than than a mystery leak.Go for the brass plugs, not the simply metal ones. The brass ones are thicker and holding up longer, in my personal opinion...