Thanks Keith & Seedtick for your suggestion on the block plane, but I ended up cutting the new angle on the table saw.  I can operate that better than a plane.  I inherited a whole storage shed full of woodworking tools and included in that was two table saws, a band saw, router and table, 2 table mounted jigsaws, bench sander plus a whole bunch of power hand tools.  There is a wood lathe still in pieces that I will put together over the winter.  Shoot, there are some attachments that I don't even know what they are for!
Anyway, the table saw worked great and I glued the ribs in along with the gunwales.  See photo.  Tomorrow, I am going to put the inside chines in and put the bottom on.  That will be all I will have time for this week because on Wednesday, I am going to Birmingham AL and will not be back until Sat morning.
The good news is it's beginning to look like a piro and I am getting anxious to finish it and get it in the water.  I wonder if I am catching this boat building disease!?  
OK, now for a question,  I thought about putting the bottom on in two pieces, instead of butt splicing on a workbench, why not butt splice right on the frame of the piro?  I have an inside chine to help support the plywood and I was planning on tacking along both sides and then glassing the butt joint when it is in place on the bottom.  I thought I saw somewhere in one of these threads where someone did it this way or at least, discussed it, but I can't find it.  Any pitfalls to this idea?  Pros or cons, anyone?  
JC