(See at the end of this email for introductory material)
Around the table: Vlasta, Ellen
===============================================================
Know anyone in need this Thanksgiving Holiday ? Facing an illness? Too busy to cook? Stone Creek Dining Company in Montgomery and the Heartstone Foundation cordially invite you and your family to join them (at no charge) for their 2nd annual Thanksgiving Dinner. Dinner will be served on Thanksgiving Day, November 25th, at the Stonecreek Dining Company from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Located at 9386 Montgomery Road , Montgomery , OH , 45242 . Please call Stone Creek for seating reservations at (513) 489-1444. Life is meant to share!
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New Healing Practitioner at the lloyd House
~~~ Harmonic Pulse ~~~
I invite you to engage in a synergistic, complimentary experience of
~~~ Crystal Healing ~~~ Reiki ~~~ Quantum Touch~~~
One hour sessions offered by Jackie Millay
Certified in Crystal Healing, Reiki, Quantum Touch/Ordained Minister
~~~ I've been involved with the life force energies since 1978 ~~~
Tuesday and Thursday evening
6-9 6-7
At the Lloyd House
3901 Clifton Avenue
Please call 541-4900/405-1514 for an appointment
FIRST SESSION SPECIAL $15.00
This offer is good through December 31, 2010
1 rate of $60.00/Hour
PARK & VINE GEN'L STORE
Second annual Vegan Thanksgiving Love Feast: Nov. 18
Get inspiration from local restaurants, chefs and food craftspeople
for a Thanksgiving meal centered around yummy plant-based foods such
as nut roast, stuffed squash, and pumpkin pie, at second annual Vegan
Thanksgiving Love Feast 6 to 9 p.m. Nov. 18 at Park + Vine, 1202 Main
Street. Registration is $20 in advance or $25 at door. Includes food
samples. Tickets on sale Nov. 1. Drinks from Park + Vine bar separate.
Proceeds split between participating businesses and OTR Homegrown, a
productive farm in Over-the-Rhine. RSVP info@parkandvine.com or call
513-721-7275 before Nov. 15.
Cincinnati Unchained at Park + Vine: Nov. 20
The biggest local shopping event of the year, BuyCincy's Cincinnati
Unchained, takes place Nov. 20, Saturday before Thanksgiving. Stores
citywide are offering deals, gifts and charitable donations during
this annual campaign that highlights locally-owned businesses. Park +
Vine is donating percentage of all purchases to Over-the-Rhine
Community Housing. Author Tami Noyes will be on noon to 2 p.m. hand to
sign her book, American Vegan Kitchen. Cincinnati Unchained coincides
with Crafty Supermarket at Clifton Cultural Arts Center. More details
to follow.
Thanksgiving Vegan Bake Sale: Nov. 24
Stock up on vegan baked goods from Sweet Peace Bakery and Taste of
Belgium just in time for your Thanksgiving celebration 9 a.m. to 9
p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 24 at Park + Vine. Baker Mary Beth King will have
Betterfingers, cinnamon rolls, oatmeal dream pies, pumpkin bread and
more. Take home vegan waffles from Taste of Belgium, too. Find both
Sweet Peace Bakery and Taste of Belgium at a bunch of local shops,
including Park + Vine. E-mail marybeth@sweetpeacebakery.com for
special orders such as carrot cake and pumpkin pie.
From Tenements to Townhouses: Multifamily Housing in Cincinnati
Latest exhibit from Betts House, From Tenements to Townhouses:
Multifamily Housing in Cincinnati, moves to Park + Vine 6 to 10 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 24. Curated by preservation historian and author Margo
Warminski, this exhibit examines physical structures and social
context of multifamily housing in Cincinnati and its evolution over
the 19th and 20th centuries. Show runs through Jan. 23, 2011.
Holidays in the Bag at Park + Vine: Nov. 26
If you're looking for one-of-a-kind gifts, avoid the traffic and
crowds and start your search at Over-the-Rhine's third annual Holidays
in the Bag Friday, Nov. 26. Grab a shopping bag at one of two
to-be-determined locations on Main Street and Vine Street and shove as
many goods as you can in the bag to receive 20 percent (Park + Vine is
taking 25% off 6:30 a.m. to noon, 20% off noon to 9 p.m.) off your
purchases. Complete list of participating stores to be announced soon.
Cloth Diapering Cuteness: Dec. 5
Park + Vine hosts an informal class on all aspects of cloth diapering
the first Sunday of each month at 2 p.m. One of our in-house mamas,
Elizabeth Whitton, tailors each discussion to the specific questions
of present parents. Afterward, browse the best selection of cloth
diapers in Cincinnati and take advantage of Park + Vine's package
discounts. Pick up our new Cloth Diapering Guide, designed by awesome
Chris Heckman, while you're at it!
Vegan Side Dishes for the Holidays: Dec. 11
Hosting your first vegan holiday dinner or bringing a dish to the home
of an omnivorous friend and need to make sure you're satiated? Join
Chef Ilene Ross of Hot Food! Catering for Vegan Side Dishes for the
Holidays 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Dec. 11 at Park + Vine, 1202 Main
Street. Expand your repertoire with dishes such as butternut squash
soup with roasted red pepper puree, Vidalia onion stuffing and roasted
mushroom gravy. Registration is $25 in advance. Includes food samples.
Drinks from Park + Vine bar separate. Proceeds benefit Freestore
Foodbank's Cincinnati COOKS! culinary training program. RSVP
info@parkandvine.com or call 513-721-7275 before Dec. 9.
--
Dan Korman
Park + Vine
1202 Main Street (Oct. 1)
Cincinnati, OH 45202
513-721-7275
www.parkandvine.com
Park + Vine's relocation from 1109 Vine Street to 1202 Main
Street
It's true...
the fantastic fun of the last tuesday of the month drumming is here again...so, see you on
Tuesday, November 30
at the Lloyd House
3901 Clifton Ave.
6:45 to 8:45 PM
no prior experience necessary. bring snacks if you care to.
please park on Lafayette Ave. (after drum, etc. dropoff)
Call with any questions/concerns at 541-4900.
Jackie Millay
SING FOR DR. KING!
(Only twice a month on Tuesdays, meets in College Hill, a wonderful way to celebrate Dr. King and support bi-racial unity. Good singers, mediocre singers, "only in the shower" singers... every one welcome, no audition. If you can match my pitch, you are in. Ellen)
Dear Wonderful Martin Luther King Chorale Singers (and anyone else who loves to sing),
It is the time of year when we gather to imagine the world Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was able to envision.
King saw the beauty that emerges when we all become drum majors for justice, when we step out in freedom's name, when we work for peace and religious tolerance, when we speak out against bigotry and endless spending on war rather than the social uplift of all people.
We have much work to do. Let us join together in song to broadcast hope and courage with a message bigger than each of us individually. Let's raise our joyfilled voices for justice. Let's send out a ringing, resonant choral endorsement of empathy and compassion.
Walk the Journey! Pass the Torch! Embrace the Dream
Rehearsals are every other week in 2010:
Tuesday December 7 @ 7
Tuesday December 21 @ 7
2011:
Tuesday January 4 @ 7
Tuesday January 11 @ 7
Saturday January 15 (10 to 12)
Our performance is on Martin Luther King Day, at Music Hall, Monday January 17. We will make our annual pilgrimage to Warren Correctional Institute on Friday January 14, and we usually perform at least one or two other run-outs in the community.
Thank you,
with love
Dr. Catherine Roma & Bishop Todd O'Neal
Clifton United Methodist Church
3416 Clifton Avenue
Advertisement: Try the Alexander Technique
FREE Alexander Technique Practice session every Sunday 4:30 to 5:30 at the Lloyd House. Open to all.
Ellen Bierhorst Ph.D. ~ Alexander Technique ~ http://www.lloydhouse.com ~ 513 221 1289 ~ Cincinnati
I am having a blast here in my second year of teaching the Alexander Technique! Unbelievably, a full calendar since the launch of my practice in late June 2009.
Fantastic introductory fee deal : First lesson free; second through 4th lessons only $10. After that, only $50/lesson if you buy a package of 4 at a time, prepaid. * The real fee is $78 per lesson. I am interested in "turning on" as many people as possible to this wonderful learning. Good for pain, for performance improvement in the arts, athletics, ... And finally, good for personal development. It has definite geriatric benefit as well.
You can read about my own experiences and find links to other sites here:
http://www.lloydhouse.com
Call and make an appointment or to discuss it with me. 513 221 1289.
........
* However, it is my commitment to adjust fees for anyone truly wanting lessons who cannot afford even this modest fee. Try it and see. Ellen
EAC,
Budget Hearings Could Be Critical for Environmental Issues. See Dates & locations below.
December 1, 2010 – 6:00 p.m. Duke Energy Convention Center 525 Elm Street Cincinnati, OH 45202 | December 7, 2010 - 6:00 p.m. Madisonville Recreation Center 5320 Stewart Road Cincinnati, OH 45227 | December 9, 2010 – 7:30 p.m. College Hill Recreation Center 5545 Belmont Ave Cincinnati, OH 45224 |
December 13, 2010 – 6:00 p.m. Midway School 3156 Glenmore Avenue Cincinnati, OH 45211 | December 15, 2010 - 6:00 p.m. Clifton Cultural Arts Center 3711 Clifton Avenue Cincinnati, OH 45220 |
In addition to City Budget deliberations, the arrival of the holidays is a good time to reflect on the 2010 OEQ achievements which include:
Rollout of the Enhanced Recycling Program - projected to eventually save the City $1 million/year and bring Recyclebank rewards to residents.
Implementation of Energy Efficiency Upgrades to City buildings and facilities- projected to save the City $1 million/year.
Helping to secure grant money to clear land for new and expanding businesses – increasing revenue for the City.
Learn Sarver Heart Center's Continuous Chest Compression CPR
Every three days, more Americans die from sudden cardiac arrest than the number who died in the 9-11 attacks. You can lessen this recurring loss by learning Continuous Chest Compression CPR, a hands-only CPR method that doubles a person's chance of surviving cardiac arrest. It's easy and does not require mouth-to-mouth contact, making it more likely bystanders will try to help, and it was developed at the University of Arizona College of Medicine.
"This video is worth sharing," said Gordon A. Ewy, MD, director of the UA Sarver Heart Center and one of the research pioneers who developed this method.
Lloyd House: Suite Will be vacant and available again come 12/15/10
Third floor two room suite, has own bathroom. Monthly house dues: $460 includes all utilities plus high speed wireless internet. Kitchen shared with two others. Wonderful space! Please call Ellen: (513) 221 1289
Must be rock solid financially, over 25, non smoker, homo sapiens only.
Very jolly, juicy multicultural household in Victorian Castle. See www.lloydhouse.com
ARTICLES AND LETTERS
- Correction of last week's table notes, a letter.
- Bentley Davis... still too busy to write the promised article... hang in.
- Link to article about salt by Dr. Mercola
- Steve Sunderland: Standing up for the Inspirational Public School Teacher
Ellen, there's a mistake in the table notes. The deal I mentioned hasn't been finalized; it's just in the talking stages. Just wanted you to know. Sorry if I didn't make myself clear. Lauren Hanisian
Bentley Davis' updates on the political scene... Bentley rocks! Best politics expert I've met. Ellen
Political Notes:
Bentley is too busy (recovering from campaigning), but got questions? email her.
Bentley DAvis <bentleysdavis@gmail.com>
From Mercola.com (a trusted naturopath) One of the best articles I have read explaining the difference between processed and natural salt – and the health benefits of the latter. Ellen
STANDING UP FOR THE INSPIRATIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERBY Steve SunderlandHaving an inspirational teacher is a life changing experience. Ateacher who really cares about us, finds the way to make clear what wehave been confused about, who knows our name in a way that celebratesour relationship, and fosters a seed of learning that cannot be cutoff, is one of the most significant experiences for humans. Theinspirational teacher creates a separate world for us, a world in which we canstep out of the darkness of ignorance and confusion. We find theshadows of fear are greatly reduced. The teacher inspires a presentand a future of imagination, creates another brain to help us thinkboth about our "real" world and our "creative" world. The worlds ofpossibility.I have been watching the attack on teachers build up in our nationalmedia and our local newspapers. There has not been a balance, aweighing of the value of teachers that have made and continue to makea powerful impact on children, parents, families, and communities.(The recent biased movie, "Waiting For Superman," has not one inspiring, effective,or successful public school teacher, principal, or parent.) There is nodoubt that public education has made Americagreat. There is suspicion, now, about the reasons that problems havearisen for students who have more learning problems, for children thatcannot grasp math, science, and languages with ease, and for childrenthat "fail" our state and federal tests. Children are seen as the"danger" of the future, capable of pushing the entire economy into adownward fall that will reduce America to a second-class nation. Whohas "made" children inadequate? Well, the simplistic answer is thepublic school teacher and his/her union. Whatever the problem withchildren, or the schools, all of the problems ofchildren, can be connected to "the teachers."This nonsense position seems to have taken hold in some areas of thecountry, although there are indications that parents, teachers, andcommunity leaders are understanding that the simplistic approach onlyworsens any chance of understanding and working to improve theschools. (The voters of Washington, D.C. refused to grant the mayoranother term in part due to a heavy handed approach of his schoolchancellor.) Teaching, as most people know at some basic level, isanything but simple. Children at all grades challenge the brightestpeople with learning obstacles, learning interests, and learning gaps.Education is a process of working with children to seeif they can learn the skills and spirit of changing ignorance and biasinto knowledge and empowerment. Parents know that there are alwaysteachers, principals, and other symbols of leadership in educationthat are wrong for their children and inappropriate for many childrenat different schools. Yet, I have not met a parent who does not knowat least one good teacher and I have not met a person who has not hadan "inspiring" teacher. ( Or, a dedicated principal or school board official.)Facing the real gifts and great efforts ofteachers of all levels of skill can start a dialogue between parentsand teachers that can be both appreciative and critical. Accepting thecomplexities of the human mind of children, especially interests or blockstriggered for unknown reasons, can begin a reexamination of how tosupport the unique development of a bright little child or a highschool senior. Refusing to accept racist, gender discriminatory, orxenophobic approaches to children and their success, provides for asafe bridge for parents and teachers to discuss the beauty andpotential of every child. Let's support our public school teachers and keep away from demonizing teachers,public schools, unions, and communities that are facing long termconditions of struggle. Our hope, and the hope for the 90% of allpublic school children, is that we end the yelling and start thenurturing of every teacher and child.(This article will appear in an upcoming issues of METRO, a Cincinnati newspaper.)
REVIEWS: BOOKS, Movies, MUSIC, CONCERTS, RESTAURANTS, WEBSITES ...
Please send me your tips...love to hear what you are reading etc. ellen
Wow, people tell me they read these reviews! Awesome. Now send me yours. long or short, anything. ellen
I am reading The covenant, by James Michner, the saga of South Africa, from pre-historic times to the 1960's, before the end of apartheid. Fascinating! Also reading a biography of Edgar Cayce, the trance medium medical intuitive of Virginia Beach. Edgar Cayce : an American prophet
Kirkpatrick, Sidney. As a work of literature it is plodding and unimaginative, but exceedingly detailed and authoritative. I am enjoying it. ellenTri-State Treasures
Information about Tri-State Treasures and how to submit them is at the bottom of this email. Please help me by providing all basic information, and formatting your submissions as described below. Thank you.
Sincerely, Jim
Ongoing Tri-State Treasures:
Tri-State Treasures is compiled by Jim Kesner
- Submit Tri-State Treasures or request addresses to be added or removed from the list by emailing jkesner @ nuvox.net; specify "Tri-State Treasures."
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- Please submit your Tri-State Treasures in the following format. This will greatly help me & enhance the probability your item will be included:
Brief Title of the Treasure [date at time]: Brief description of the treasure; what is it; why is it wonderful & unique. Cost. Sponsor. Location including address & zip code. More info at telephone, email, & website.
An Example:
Fabulous Film Festival [Friday 3 May at 8-10 PM]: The first & best film festival in Cincinnati will present live-action, documentary, & short films... Presented by Flicks Я Us. Tickets are $8. At The Movie Theatre, 111 Main Street, Cincinnati, OH 45200. More info at 513.111.2222, info @ filmfestival.com & www . filmfestival.com.
A Newsletter published every Thursday from the Lloyd House in Cincinnati
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Our Salon blog is an interactive site: http://lloydhouse.blogspot.com
If you would like to respond, amend, or correct anything in this Newsletter, please consider using that. I will receive a copy of anything posted there.
FIVE SECTIONS, including:
Table Notes of the discussion at this Wednesday night's Salon, as recorded by Ellen
Events and Opportunities
Articles and Letters
Book, Film, Theater, TV, Music, Website Reviews
Tri-State Treasures, compiled by Jim Kesner
Submissions: you must have the email copy to me by Wednesday night midnight. Copy the format you see in this Weekly please. (Times New Roman font, text 14 pt, headlines 20 pt. Maroon for Opportunities and Events, Navy for articles.)
The Wednesday Night Salon has been meeting each week of the year (no break for holidays, weather) since July 2001 in pursuit of good talk. Bring a dish at 5:45 pm and join us. We are usually about 10 people of varied erudition and age. We like to talk politics, environmentalism, social issues, literature, the arts, ad any blamed thing we want. Sometimes we have a special presenter. We emphasize good fellowship and civility always. Way fun! Everyone welcome. 3901 Clifton Avenue 45220.
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