Journaling on estrip is easy and free. sign up here

Heidi's Journal

heidi
My Podcast Link

11/01/2009 17:28 #50183

final costume
Category: holiday


image


The pin:

image
libertad - 11/02/09 21:07
You looked great. The hat is amazing.
metalpeter - 11/02/09 19:37
And she wasn't even the one showing off the most boobs at the Party.
matthew - 11/02/09 09:56
Cleavage! You Edwardian harlot you. ;) just imagine what would happen if we gave woman the right to vote. Boobs everywhere!!!
lilho - 11/01/09 20:12
pretty cool. good idea.
hodown - 11/01/09 19:48
Your costume is amazing!
I love it!!!
theecarey - 11/01/09 19:05
Gorgeous! I just love your look in this. Our paths crossed at the party but somehow I failed to introduce myself.

10/29/2009 17:58 #50142

Hats!
Category: shopping
As I've been working on compiling my Halloween costume, I've tried several hats and haven't been happy with them. I went to a party at the North Street Nickel City coop house Saturday night and some lovely woman let me borrow her adorable black velvet hat with rose detail but of course wanted it back as the she left. I wasn't quick enough to ask if I could rent it from her for this weekend's festivities. I had found a cute little half-hat at Patricia's, the crazy over-stuffed store next to East End Salon on Allen but I couldn't get it to sit right with my too-big head and too-thick hair. I highly recommend Patricia's for accessories. Adorable black velvet bag, elbow-length gloves... she even had white kid-leather elbow length gloves with the buttons at the wrist - they were gorgeous! They're something I've only read about. I feel like a bull in a china shop - the pathways are so narrow and everything is piled so high - so I just tell her what I need and she scurries around, digging deep into piles of furs, hats, suits, accessories, shoes, and random household items until she finds the perfect item. It's like a combination grandmother's attic, thrift store, and Claire's.

Anyway, so I checked out House of Randolph, 70 Allen St., hoping the cute fancy dresses in the window would be accompanied by hats. Irma, the owner, said she doesn't carry hats but did show me her gorgeous clothes "for us voluptuous women... the clothes are not for sticks." Really beautiful stuff and next time I need a fancy outfit, I'm going to try there first. As funky & cool as Allen Street Dress Shop is, they rarely have anything that fits me.

So I used the google machine to find "hats buffalo ny"... and I found Flashy Toppers over on Jefferson Ave. Stunning hats!!! They've got men's and women's hats, flashy and subdued. Very fun, great service. They've got a coupon in the Buffalo First coupon book, too. My hat has sequins, lace, and rhinestones and even came with a big huge proper hat box! Can't wait to wear it!




jenks - 11/01/09 20:56
good call- cleavage should never be hidden!
heidi - 11/01/09 17:26
At the estrip party, Oscar the Grouch asked if I was a suffragist. It had crossed my mind but I hadn't focused on it until her question. I added a pin for Saturday night that read "Vote for the Woman Suffrage Amendment. Nov. 2nd, 1915" Very cool how the whole thing came together. I also ditched the cleavage-hiding scarf. ;-)
metalpeter - 10/30/09 18:05
Can't wait to see the costume tonight
dcoffee - 10/30/09 14:10
Oh boy! I can relate to the hat issues, my head is too big. See you tonight!

10/25/2009 20:08 #50116

Exploding brain
I just had dinner with my Tioga County friend Liz (her activist blog: and her store website: ) and her gf Hannah at Falafel Bar as they were on their way home from a wedding in Denver. Two hours of intense brain sharing about everything from crazy friends to natural gas well drilling to the proposed closing of North Penn High School.

I guess I need to get some of my brain energy out before I can focus again...

The Southern Tioga school board is going to choose whether to renovate or close the high school I (and my parents, aunts & uncle) graduated from. Closing the high school would mean busing kids in grades 9-12 to the schools 10 miles north and south and renovating the elementary school into a pre-k to 8th grade facility. It's a $17M vs. $27M project according to the feasibility study, but it looks like there's a lot of waste/unnecessary stuff in the high school renovation part that is inflating the cost. I created a facebook fan page five days ago for "Save North Penn High School!" and already have 440 fans and my dad and few friends have asked me to create an ad in the free weekly classifieds paper to promote the cause. I don't have access to the feasibility study these proposals are based on, which prevents me from having solid substantive arguments. The best I've got so far is "closing NPHS will negatively impact educational outcomes for students" and "closing NP means the death of Bloss." It'll be interesting.

Liz has been focused on the impacts of natural gas well drilling that's happening all across PA. There was a massive fish kill a few weeks ago in a formerly healthy stream on the West Virginia-PA border caused by dumping of untreated hydraulic fracturing waste water into an abandoned deep coal mining hole. The West Virginia DEP-equivalent says that it caused by a naturally occurring golden algae bloom - exactly the same cause proposed by the responsible company - but the PA DEP says it's from the waste water and wants the company's US EPA permit revoked. NY has halted all drilling - smarties! She's set up an information session with our county planner (possibly retired - i forget) for tomorrow night. I'm hoping a lot of people will show up and learn about the environmental devastation that's happening elsewhere so that we can be on guard in Tioga County. Companies are already drilling and spilling the frac water - we're getting reports from the local DEP office - 8,000 gallons of this toxic stuff. I'm so frustrated that so many people haven't learned from the devastation of the mines - the Tioga River, which runs through Bloss, is a dead river because of acid mine drainage.

And now I must return to the grey and gloomy world of law school... someday I'll get paid for the analysis work and the resulting legal actions, right?


heidi - 10/25/09 21:12
Yes, taxpayer money - in PA, schools are primarily financed with local property tax revenues, with the state contributing about 36 percent of funding across the state and the feds a very small percent (6%, maybe?). Because the population is sparse (36 people per square mile in the county), property taxes are quite high relative to the value of the properties.

I've asked for a copy of the feasibility study - we'll see if they'll give it to me... My guess it's available for "public inspection" by going to the school district office and asking. The PA Open Records law makes it necessarily public information, but they can also charge a hefty per-page copying fee. We'll see.

Unfortunately, I'm not a lawyer so I can't challenge it, and by the time I am, it'll be too late. However, in general, there's not a lot of citizen/public interest legal action happening in Tioga County partly because folks don't have the resources to file cases or know when its appropriate to file, and many lawyers don't want to challenge their friends - people in power. We're working on challenging the school board to listen to the residents - writing letters, attending school board meetings... but I don't know how effective it'll be. Really, I need more info before I can contribute much more.
tinypliny - 10/25/09 20:56
  • strongly feel.
tinypliny - 10/25/09 20:52
But I don't understand. If the feasibility study was conducted to evaluate the alternatives to spend public money (I assume this is taxpayer money, yes?), it should be availably publicly for all to see and assess for themselves. Wasn't there a public debate about this? Why isn't there a public challenge/case in court yet if this many people from the community strong against the option they are considering?

10/23/2009 15:08 #50083

tourism video contrast
Category: tourism
I can't figure out how to swipe this video from facebook and it's not on youtube so I hope this is public...

Tioga County Visitors Bureau tourism promotion video:



in contrast, a new Buffalo Niagara tourism video






jenks - 10/24/09 10:32
thanks for posting that buffalo video. I've seen it floating around facebook, but have never taken the time to actually watch it. It's a great video... makes buffalo look wonderful.

I have to admit, I was not psyched to move to Buffalo when I found out I was going. But after five years, I was sad to leave. And now I have some Buffalo pride, and I defend the city when people make fun of it. And I think it's one thing when someone from NYC/Chicago/Boston looks down their nose and goes 'ew, Buffalo'. But when someone from Hartford goes 'ew, Buffalo, bet you were glad to get out of there' I want to say "to come here?!" I mean really.... Hartford kind of reminds me of Buffalo, but with less to do. Not that it's a bad place... I've met great people and am having a good experience. But for hartford to make fun of Buffalo is the pot calling the kettle black.

And, to be fair, that video says 'when people think of buffalo, they think of snow and rust'. (I would have thought they'd say snow and wings, but that's just me.) And then they went on and showed how great Buffalo is. IN THE SUMMER. And I agree- Buffalo in the summer is glorious. But the winter.... ehhh.... not as glorious. There are no farmer's markets/outdoor festivals/concerts/etc in the winter, which is what the whole video was about. And unfortunately, winter is much longer than summer.

10/16/2009 17:21 #50028

Are Americans Faking Religiousity?
Category: politics




Among developed countries, America is viewed as one of the most religious nations, and it seems that there is no end to its inhabitants' appetite for Christianity in all its flavors. Americans tell pollsters that they go to church in immense numbers, and most of them name the Bible as their favorite book.

Church attendance as established by surveys is one of the main factors alleged to illustrate the depth of religious feeling in America. Depending on which poll you consult, between 33 percent and 43 percent of Americans claim to attend church weekly. Using the low end of that range, we get a figure of around a hundred million people. Even cursory crack research, however, reveals that this can not be true, for the simple reason that there are not enough seats in all churches in America to hold nearly as many people.



I think the article is snarkily amusing, but the second half is easier to poke holes in,

According to a study conducted for the Catholic Biblical Federation in 2008, 93 percent of Americans have at least one copy of the Bible at home. Twenty-seven percent of Americans surveyed believe that the Bible is "the actual word of God, which must be taken literally, word for word," and 78 percent view its contents as true. Almost half of American respondents agree-either somewhat or completely-with the statement "The Bible should be studied at school," and 56 percent have given a Bible as a gift at least once. In addition, a Harris poll conducted the same year showed that Americans overwhelmingly name the Bible as their favorite book.

One might deduct from these numbers that the Americans' knowledge of the Bible is at least somewhat satisfactory. Nobody could like the Bible, let alone maintain that its contents are true, give it as a gift, or recommend that it be taught in schools, without possessing at least an elementary awareness of its teachings. In order to agree that the Bible contains the unerring pronouncements of God, which are to be taken literally, word for word, from beginning to end, one must necessarily be acquainted with what these pronouncements are.



Since they don't reference other polls of American ignorance, it's easy to make fun of Bible literalists' ignorance of the Bible. But it totally correlates with general American ignorance about history (or any other substantive topic).
or


james - 10/18/09 15:08
I think this might be a case of polling being poorly conducted. Biblical Literalists might commission a poll to show support for their position. You tailor a calling list and bam, suddenly the majority of Americans don't believe in evolution. I am not saying this article isn't on to something, just that polls are often poorly designed, poorly executed, and/or poorly interpreted.
jenks - 10/18/09 12:32
I'm not sure I know a single person that has ever given anyone a bible as a gift, let alone 50% of the people I know. I guess I'm a statistical anomaly.
metalpeter - 10/16/09 18:56
That is a good point. I think that I shouldn't go here because it is kinda a different topic but. There is a difference between having faith (religion) and going to church. If you go to a church event like helping at say a food pantry or driving a van to pick people up does that count as going?
tinypliny - 10/16/09 18:46
I think its a more an issue of what they believe is the "right thing to say" rather than just telling the truth or miring themselves in conflicted long windy answers between their truth and their beliefs of what this truth should look like.
metalpeter - 10/16/09 18:37
Here is my take:

People Lie in poles all the time. Part of the reason is that you don't give essay answers. Most of time I think it is a choice. I also think they lie a bit because they don't know who is really doing the poll. If you mean to go and you don't that means you went as long as you go most of the time.

But there is something this article doesn't even talk about at all. They do this silly math thing and it is kinda dumb. I know they have to do numbers. But the reason for a lot of these mega churches is because there aren't enough people going to the old churches any more so they have to combine them. That is all they have to say it would be like 5 sentences and the article would be done. Yes some mega churchs are because of growth in an area.

But This article is flawed in one big way. It acts as if all Christians are the same. There are many kinds of Christians the ones that I can think of are Pryspertains, Catholics, Roman Cahtolics, Baptists, southern baptists, and I'm sure there are others. Each group has different views and then each person has their own views also that hopefully line up with that church. This isn't only true of Christians this is true in other faiths also. All Christains don't follow the pope, I'm guessing more don't follow him then do. Just because you are a Budhist doesn't mean you follow the Dalai Lima, again lots of people don't because there are different kinds of it.

Yes there are flaws in what was written but I know for a fact that less people go to church then years ago. Here is my proff from my next of the woods. Richmond and Bryntt used to be a church now it is condos. Elmwood and North that is now a museum used to be a church. Across form grover some museum place used to me a church. These aren't cases of people leaving the city. They where churches when I was a kid and all closed way after the sprawl to the burbs.