Also, check out Book Reviews etc. section (teal). Spencer Konicov urges we read "AndGod was not in theFire" by Daniel Gordis. Will lead discussion here, time to be announced. ellen
(See at the end of this email for introductory material)
===============================================================
Saturday, March 5
7 pm Dessert Reception and Program
FREE
Wise Temple, 8329 Ridge Road, Amberley, OH 45236
To RSVP or for information, contact Linda Kean at 513.766.3318 or lkean@jfscinti.org
|
| |||||||||||||||
|
Bring Trader Joe's to Clifton
Park + Vine ("Green" General Store)
1202 Main Street
Following is a list of upcoming events at Park + Vine. They're divided
into two groups: monthly and one-timers. If you have questions, let us
know. Meanwhile, thanks for your support!
MONTHLY
Pop Up Swap Shop + Last Bites Bakery: every Saturday
Share Some Sugar Pop Up Swap Shop and Last Bites Bakery return to 1200
Main Street next to Park + Vine 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Jan. 8 and every
consecutive Saturday until Model Group leases the space. Sell, barter
or just get rid of stuff that sits in closets collecting dust and
leave with other items that other people no longer want. Or leave with
nothing. All un-swapped items will be donated to CAIN (Churches Active
In Northside).
ONE-TIMERS
Amanda Checco brings her fantastical departures from reality to the walls of Park + Vine for a month-long show opening 6 to 9 p.m. Final Friday, Feb. 25 and running through March 20. !YEYEAH! is a small exhibition of Checco's recent prints, digital photography and illustration. |
Celebrate the rich lager that heralds the end of the winter brewing season and the coming of spring at Shop Bock, a shopping event at the local, independent stores, including Park + Vine, of historic Over-the-Rhine during Bockfest, March 4-6. Here's how it works: buy a special Shop Bock bag at participating stores for $3 and receive discounts on most merchandise. Each bag comes with a Shop Bock 2011 button! Proceeds from sales of Shop Bock bags benefit Over-the-Rhine Foundation.
|
Vut do you vant on your veener? Find out at Veenie Roast during Bockfest 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, March 4 at Park + Vine, which is along the Bockfest Parade route! Try grilled vegan sausages and hot dogs on pretzel buns with local kraut and relish. Sponsored by Fab Ferments, Mayday and Sweet Peace Bakery. Cash only. |
Veenie Roast: March 4
Vut do you vant on your veener? Find out at Veenie Roast during
Bockfest 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, March 4 at Park + Vine, which is along
the Bockfest Parade route! Try grilled vegan sausages and hot dogs on
pretzel buns with local kraut and relish. More details to come!
Home Weatherization Tips: March 5
Learn how to properly weatherize your home from Home Weatherization
Expert Tony Gray 10 a.m. Saturday, March 5 at Park + Vine, 1202 Main
Street. Workshop includes tips and practical how-to advice from
funny-guy Gray, who was a big hit with people who attended a similar
class in November. Prepare your home for spring, while reducing energy
bills. Suggested donation of $5 benefits People Working Cooperatively.
RSVP cdemeropolis@wordsworthweb.com before March 4.
--
Dan Korman
Park + Vine
1202 Main Street
Cincinnati, OH 45202
513-721-7275
www.parkandvine.com
March 9, Special Salon presentation by Morris Williams. See below in Articles.
On the left is John Taylor, President/CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, Washington, DC, and the other gentleman is past Federal Reserve Board Chairperson, Allan Greenspan. We met with him at least four times, warning of what the banks were doing, and that the lack of regulatory enforcement could hurt the nation. Now we know right we were. Some of that is in the letter to Obama that you received, and was the basis for the economic recovery strategy I want to discuss with the potluck group.
Morris
Democracy for America (Howard Dean's org) launches campaign re. Social Security
Thank you for joining our campaign to make Social Security safe, stable and secure. We're building our biggest campaign ever and with your help we can build a national grassroots movement to scrap the cap that limits the amount some Americans invest and make the payroll tax fair and equal for all Americans.
You can help us grow our campaign right now by inviting your family, friends and neighbors to sign our petition to make Social Security safe, stable and secure.
1. Send people you know an email asking them to sign on and include this link:
http://SafeStableSecure.com/credo/friends
2. Share our petition on your Facebook wall by clicking here.
3. Click below to tweet our petition:
Thank you again for everything you do.
-The DFA Team
Gourmet Buffet a la Vegan
March 19, 2011, from noon until 3 p.m., at the Summit Restaurant of the Midwest Culinary Institute, located in the ATLC Building on the campus of Cincinnati State Technical & Community College, 3520 Central Parkway, 45223. Seating is limited and paid reservations are due by March 10. The cost is $30
Would you like the next generation of chefs to respect and appreciate catering for people who want to eat healthful delicious plant foods? Do you want to see vegan and vegetarian options become mainstream? Then please support and help make Vegan Ooh La La! happen!
Vegan Ooh La La!
A gourmet buffet in step with the times
– Quiet but sure, a movement is growing in Cincinnati and the region. It's in step with what's happening nationally, where there's regular news of well-known people going vegetarian or vegan. Seemingly unlikely converts include President Clinton, formerly known for mid-run fast-food stops. Or prizefighter Mike Tyson. Oprah and 378 staff members went vegan for a week in February. That's in addition to the long list of well-known "veggies" like Ellen DeGeneres, Brad Pitt, Ashley Judd, Paul McCartney and Brooke Shields. Vegan restaurants are popping up around the country, including Cincinnati's Loving Hut, serving vegan fare exclusively to dedicated patrons, both lifelong vegans and committed meat-eaters.
VeganEarth, a Cincinnati-based non-profit organization that routinely attracts 100 participants to its monthly potlucks, and Mercy for Animals, a national 501(c)(3) non-profit animal advocacy organization founded in 1999 in Ohio, are celebrating the momentum by sponsoring the innovative Vegan Ooh La La! banquet. Chef Robert Coltrane and students of the Midwest Culinary Institute at Cincinnati State Technical & Community College will prepare a gourmet vegan feast at an open-to-the-public event.
Mary-Jane Newborn, co-founder of VeganEarth, which until recently was known as EarthSave Cincinnati, says the goal of Vegan Ooh La La! is to show more people how delicious vegan food is. "People sometimes think vegans are into self-denial," says Newborn, "But we're all 'foodies' -- we love to eat!" Newborn adds that the event is being held in conjunction with the Great American Meat-Out. "Vegan Ooh La La! will enable even more people to discover the amazing variety of delicious foods that are healthy for the planet, healthy for people, and involve no suffering by our fellow beings."
The Vegan Ooh La La! gourmet buffet will be served on March 19, 2011, from noon until 3 p.m., at the Summit Restaurant of the Midwest Culinary Institute, located in the ATLC Building on the campus of Cincinnati State Technical & Community College, 3520 Central Parkway, 45223. Seating is limited and paid reservations are due by March 10. Dress code is business casual. The cost is $30, to help defray the college's expenses in preparing the gourmet banquet. Checks payable to VeganEarth can be sent to VeganEarth, 2310 Williamsburg Drive, Suite B, Cincinnati 45225.
You are receiving this email because of your relationship with Power Inspires Progress. Please reconfirm your interest in receiving email from us. If you do not wish to receive any more emails, you can unsubscribe here
|
|
It's true...
the fantastic fun of the last tuesday of the month drumming is here again...so, see you on
Tuesday, March 29
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.
Looking forward to seeing you,
Jackie Millay
Cincinnati, OH 45202-7308
(513) 621-5514
Anyone who was at the MLK Day celebration at Music Hall would have seen the Samba group parading down the left aisle, across the stage, and up the right aisle while playing drums. Way fun! ellen
Charles Simic
Master Class in Poetry | Poetry Reading |
Thursday, March 3 at 3:00 p.m. | Thursday, March 3 at 8:00 p.m. |
Elliston Room, Langsam Library | 127 McMicken Hall |
Charles Simic, former Poet Laureate of the United States, was born in Yugoslavia in 1938 and immigrated to the United States when he was 15. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his collection of prose poems, The World Doesn't End, and is the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship. His many books of poetry include Dismantling the Silence, Return to a Place Lit by a Glass of Milk, Classic Ballroom Dances, Night Picnic, The Book of Gods and Devils, Jackstraws, Walking the Black Cat, A Wedding in Hell, Hotel Insomnia, My Noiseless Entourage, and That Little Something, as well as Selected Early Poems and The Voice at 3:00 AM: Selected Late and New Poems. His newest collection of poems, Master of Disguises, was published last year. His prose books include Memory Piano, Metaphysician in the Dark, A Fly in My Soup, Orphan Factory, The Unemployed Fortune-Teller: Essays and Memoirs,Wonderful Words, Silent Truth: Essays on Poetry and a Memoir, and Renegade. He has also translated many works by French, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, and Slovenian poets. He lives in New Hampshire.
- Hello, friends,We're all eagerly awaiting spring, and we have just the thing to welcome the season in advance! Join us this Thursday, March 3rd, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. for the opening of an exhibit of paintings by John Humphries, selected from 96 participating artists as the winner of our 2010 Golden Ticket Exhibit.In addition to John's fantastic paintings, we'll be celebrating with salsa you can dance to and salsa you can eat. And for you foodies out there, we're having a special salsa competition! So bring your best salsa (you have to have made it yourself) – the favorite of the night will win a special drawing by John. We'll have plenty of chips, tasty beverages and a few salsas to start things off. Don't miss it!Dreaming of roasted tomatillos,Ruth E. DickeyExecutive DirectorP.S. Mark your calendar now for Sunday, March 13th, when we're delighted to present Bi-Okoto Drum and Dance Theater'sAlaafia: Experience the Cultural Diversity of West Africa. Show starts at 2 p.m., free for kids and just a suggested donation of $5 per adult.
OSCAR SHORTS & MORE
CWC'S 10th Annual Presentation
March 13, 15, 16 and 20
The Academy Award Nominated Live-Action and Animated Short Films, plus funny commercials and bonus shorts. Two distinct programs - "A" and "B" - 20% discount for combo packages.
Major changes for 2011: Two additional screenings, a different and roomier venue, a much larger screen, better seating and sight lines, more free parking, expanded menu, two bars.
This event sold out in advance last year - to avoid disappointment, please get your tix as soon as possible. Complete details here: Oscar Shorts 2011.
FREE Alexander Technique Practice session every Sunday 4:30 to 5:30 at the Lloyd House. Open to all (students, teachers, the general public)
Ellen Bierhorst Ph.D. ~ Alexander Technique ~ http://www.lloydhouse.com ~ 513 221 1289 ~ Cincinnati
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
h 513-541-4900 / c 513-405-1514 / socaja@yahoo.com.
Tuesday/Thursday evenings at the Lloyd House
"Beware CFL light bulbs from China! Fire hazard"
Debbie 732-6355
ARTICLES AND LETTERS
- Mayors mobilizing against gun violence call for your support
Dear friend, Every day in America, 34 people are murdered with guns. Each death devastates a family and shatters a community. The recent tragedy in Tucson is no exception -- it sent a shock wave across our country that united us in a moment of crisis and profound loss. Now, to honor those affected by gun violence, we must take action to stop this pattern of senseless shootings. America's gun laws are designed to keep firearms out of the hands of criminals, the mentally ill, drug abusers, and other dangerous people.But the background check system these laws depend on is broken, making it far too easy for guns to end up in the wrong hands. In my city of Newark, we've shown how a dedicated police force and an engaged community can reduce gun crime and make it harder for dangerous people to get guns. But we need our leaders in Washington to step up and help us get the job done. That's why I'm asking you to join 550 mayors from across the country in calling on Congress and President Obama to fix our broken background check system. Sign the petition to Fix Gun Checks and tell your elected officials where you stand. The Tucson killer bought a gun despite a history of drug abuse and mental health issues. That is tragically reminiscent of Virginia Tech, where the shooter passed a background check even after a judge declared him mentally ill. In fact, we've seen this kind of failure again and again. Dangerous people have slipped through the cracks in our gun laws ever since Congress passed the first Gun Control Act back in 1968, after the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy. It's time for Congress to fix gun background checks and stem this tide of violence by taking two critical steps:
Tell Congress to fix the broken background check system and keep our communities safe. Together, let's close out this 43-year struggle to keep dangerous people from getting guns. Thanks for standing up, Mayor Cory Booker |
Morris Williams' HCCRG
Thanks for writing back. Below is a summary about HCCRG. I have also
attached a summary of the economic recovery strategy which HCCRG sent
President Obama, and information that tells you my background. We are
asking people to send your letter of support for this strategy to the
President and to your congressmen. Then send your letter to all you
know, encouraging them to do the same.
After reading this, please contact me again if you plan to put yourshoulder to this wall.
From the knowledge I have gained from helping with foreclosures since
1974, I am the volunteer Convener of the Hamilton County Community
Reinvestment Group (HCCRG), which works (free - no staff) to increase,
clarify, and improve on policy, regulatory, and program approaches to
increase fair and equal access to capital, credit, and financial
services. Predatory lending, fraud, and predatory based foreclosures,
as well as job creation fall within our purpose and mission.
HCCRG is a voluntary, unincorporated association of scholars,
activists, and community residents dedicated to improving political,
economic, social and cultural developments in Hamilton County and
America. If Americans can convince President Obama and the Congress to
reinvest in Americans, we can revitalize America. We are not trying to
save any special type businesses, geographies or populations, but, we
hope to re-establish a broader network of opportunities for fair and
equal access to capital, credit, and financial services, and the
expansion of consumer markets for which all who have the will,
knowledge and skills can compete.
As a private citizen, I worked as a volunteer for President Obama's
presidency in three states, and advocated for him in 26 states. The45
Advisers to the Hamilton County Community Reinvestment Group (HCCRG)
may be Democrats, Republicans, Charterites (local party inCincinnati),
and non-party citizens. I don't know how they voted or whether they
worked for any presidential candidate.
What we have in common are the intents and hopes of why and how the
citizens in this country can prosper again from the proposals in the
December 22, 2009 HCCRG letter to President Obama. Equally importantis
that one of the intents of the HCCRG proposals is to build a greater
expectation from the broader public of being included in the economic
recovery, in contrast to being (just) a pass through mechanism, suchas
the lowly $600.00 per qualified taxpayer to spend with major
businesses. (Economic stimulus?). Our success with building this
expectation of inclusion could result in more congressional supportfor
the HCCRG type proposals. This could be great support for President
Obama assuming he begins to direct government dollars and other assets
toward a "bottom up" economy as HCCRG has proposed.
Best regards,
Morris
Join us April 13-16, 2011 in Washington DC for the National Community
Reinvestment Coalition's Annual Conference- see www.ncrc.org for more
information. CONTACT ME ABOUT SCHOLARSHIPS
Morris Williams
Convener
Hamilton County Community Reinvestment Group
hccrg05@aol.com - 513-641-5446
Board Member Emeritus, National Community Reinvestment Coalition
ncrc.org - 202-628-8866
DEMOCRACY GROWING IN AMERICA
With respect to economic, political, and reglious cultures, where is this country headed? Our "bottom line" economic culture has hardened hearts to the point that handshakes don't work. Cunning and calculating shrewdness has replaced honesty and fairness…it all ends up on the streets, in the courts, in the demonstrations, and on the battle field.
This economic hardness is directing our politics to forget that one of the real values of combined (united) states and a constitution is the protection of the rights and privileges of all citizens, not just the rich and strong. In a ruthless and lawless society, the uncompassionate rich and/or physically strong will always take out the poor, the weak and the unorganized.
In today's world this organized lack of compassion from corporate and political leadership shows itself in economic and political attacks on those who need quality education, living wages and benefits, Medicare, Medicaid, social security, and general health care. This is frightening to the population. These corporate and political leaders practice these hard hearted economic and political cultures while at the same time declaring that from a reglious culture, they believe in God, and they want to be like Jesus. Really!!! ?
They demand that working people and the poor, those Americans who already live on the edge, are told they should sacrifice their benefits and jobs for the country, but the rich refuse to do the same. It appears that most of the rich people who demand that they not pay their fair share of taxes; who control the predatory practices of many type businesses in which their employees do things to customers to increase corporate bottom lines; who lay off employees to increase their company's bottom line, are the same people who pressure politicians to cut salaries, cut earned benefits, and cut health care and education.
They have convinced me that they don't aspire to Christian beliefs of "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you," and forget that care for "the least of them" requirement. And, I am further convinced by their actions that they have declared American citizens their enemies. Their greed has forced us into and is keeping Americans in a depression, with the potential to greatly further disrupt our country. In my opinion, their unchecked greed is the greatest threat to America's national security.
As we sit idly in front of the TV and watch money control the politics of this country in degrees we have never seen before, we are watching them attack our democracy towards the point of failure. One-man-one-vote will only mean that we can vote in a face, but our vote to improve our day-to-day community life is being eliminated in favor of the corporate bottom line. The very democracy, to improve daily living, that we send our troops to demand and die for to protect citizens in other countries, is being stripped here at home.
Those in the Vermont Legislature who are challenging the Supreme Court's decision on the case of Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (unlimited corporate money to candidates – more on this later); the boycott by the Wisconsin Senators; and the demonstrators of Wisconsin, Ohio, Florida, and Michigan public employees and citizens in other states, are all doing their version of the real "Boston Tea Party" movement. What is your version?
Morris Williams
READERS' LETTERS
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
Charles Simic
Master Class in Poetry | Poetry Reading |
Thursday, March 3 at 3:00 p.m. | Thursday, March 3 at 8:00 p.m. |
Elliston Room, Langsam Library | 127 McMicken Hall |
Charles Simic, former Poet Laureate of the United States, was born in Yugoslavia in 1938 and immigrated to the United States when he was 15. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his collection of prose poems, The World Doesn't End, and is the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship. His many books of poetry include Dismantling the Silence, Return to a Place Lit by a Glass of Milk, Classic Ballroom Dances, Night Picnic, The Book of Gods and Devils, Jackstraws, Walking the Black Cat, A Wedding in Hell, Hotel Insomnia, My Noiseless Entourage, and That Little Something, as well as Selected Early Poems and The Voice at 3:00 AM: Selected Late and New Poems. His newest collection of poems, Master of Disguises, was published last year. His prose books include Memory Piano, Metaphysician in the Dark, A Fly in My Soup, Orphan Factory, The Unemployed Fortune-Teller: Essays and Memoirs,Wonderful Words, Silent Truth: Essays on Poetry and a Memoir, and Renegade. He has also translated many works by French, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, and Slovenian poets. He lives in New Hampshire.
Photo courtesy of Richard Drew
SIMON SAYS: book reviews by Anna Sher Simon
(I hope Anna will be back next week. ellen)
God was not in the fire by Daniel Gordis. Check it out u may like it also. Let me know what u think.
(Spencer will lead discussion on this book in a couple weeks or so. We urge you to get it. Available cheap on Amazon or through the public library. Spencer says it is relevant regardless of what your religious affiliation. ellen.)
Rabbi Gordis describes this book as an attempt to answer the question, "Why be Jewish?" But the question he really addresses is, "Can living a traditional Jewish life of study, prayer, ritual and mitzvah lead one to a spiritual life that is meaningful in today's world?" To this question, his answer is a resounding "yes," and he is largely successful in describing how traditional Jewish practices can lead one to the sense of connectedness and commitment -- here equated with spirituality -- often missing in our lives. His approach is largely psychological: study validates our struggles to believe; ritual takes us away from the mundane world; keeping kosher brings an aspect of spiritual discipline into the mundane world. Although this approach has inherent limitations -- the persuasiveness of some of his arguments may lie in the psyche of the individual reader -- it is well-suited to his target audience of people who are already seeking a deeper Jewish spirituality.
If you are looking for a book that demonstrates that the prayer services, rituals, study and observance of the mitzvot really can lead you to a more spiritual life, then you have come to the right place. Rabbi Gordis is eloquent in his belief that traditional Jewish practice can provide spiritual sustenance. If that thought is a sufficient reason for you to "be Jewish," then you will find that Rabbi Gordis has also answered the first question posed above. The problem for me, however, is that Rabbi Gordis does not really address why it should be *Jewish* study, prayer, ritual and discipline that leads one to spirituality. Most of the arguments Rabbi Gordis provides apply equally, at least in general terms, to other religions I have studied. Prayer, ritual, discipline and ethics, in one form or another, are shared by Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism. Why one should adopt *Jewish* forms of spirituality -- and what sets Jewish forms apart from other religions -- are questions not addressed in this book.
Rabbi Gordis includes a *very* helpful section of "Suggestions for Further Reading," which is arranged by the themes covered in each chapter and provides a brief comment on each of the books, instead of just the usual unadorned list. Amazon reader.
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 at nuvox.net; specify "Tri-State Treasures."
- Email addresses are posted in BlindCopy to protect your identity. Email addresses are not shared, given or sold without explicit permission.
- Tri-State Treasures are typically transmitted on Wednesdays; send submissions as soon as possible for best probability of being included.
- 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 at filmfestival.com & filmfestival.com.
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.
To unsubscribe from the Weekly, send me an email message and in the subject line put "unsub weekly - #" and in the place of "#" put the numeral (1 - 15) found on this email to you in the subject line after the date.
No comments:
Post a Comment