From attorney Hanan Isaacs, a review of the Ban the Box proposed law. As you may know, as a supporter of Not in Our Town and The New Jim Crow movement, I am in favor of it. It is called the Opportunity to Compete Act (A3837).
Category Archives: Faith and Social Justice
From Bejing, to Princeton — to Alcatraz. The zodiac animals of Chinese artist and political dissident Ai Weiwei enliven the plaza at the Woodrow Wilson School. Soon visitors to Alcatraz will see his art. As in today’s New York Times.
That’s the good arts news from Princeton today. The bad news is that the funds of the Triangle Club have been embezzled to the tune of more than $100,000. Robin Lord will be the attorney for the defense and this is one case I hope she doesn’t win.
Or is it good news that an arts organization could make that much money and it wasn’t missed?
Why is the White doll the good doll?
Why is the white doll the good doll? In a study of kindergarten children, both black children and white children chose the white doll as their favorite.
Blacks and whites alike have been programmed since birth to think that whites are better. Black children are taught to be aware of their behavior at all times, because of possible danger, while white kids have the privilege of just being kids.
Tonight (Monday, December 2, at 7:30 p.m.) I will join Debra Raines, Director of Mission Advancement at the Princeton YWCA, in facilitating another in the series of Continuing Conversations on Race and White Privilege at the Princeton Public Library.
women) and George Stinney (at left, 14, the youngest male executed in the 20th century). Also the case of Eleanor Bumpers (fatally shot in New York in 1984 during an attempted eviction) and Reneisha McBride (shot by a Detroit man when she knocked on his door in the middle of the night.)Best of all, I like the way he tells stories. In “Random Unisons,” the poems of Daniel Harris have a beginning, a middle, and an end, and I’m always eager to find out how they end.
For instance, Class Project,
Imagine their surprise, those four second-grade children grouped
at a classroom table. With a little hand each one grips
the single, fat, foot-long pencil the teacher’s brought today for a project — its yellow shaft almost hid under fists.
At the end —
. . . the kids (grown up), their hands and wrists maybe interlocked
for a fireman’s carry, or other random unison.
Harris puts his writerly technique to saying things that are worth saying, like chronicling the poignant arc of a life. Dancer opens with
His day job? “It’s just blech,” he natters, crap
to pay for his nightlife: work at the barre,
taking class, my lines.” But his feet can’t skip
past his plod on the cold concrete at the store;
The poem follows the man’s performing career, but then his physical powers dwindle so at the end he is a teacher of the next young dancers:
Inheritors, his; from counter or desk
they come, tingling to practice arts of risk.
He talks of death, and love, and common things, like bees, as in Driving Home from Stockton, New Jersey:
All summer we see them: honeybees
under brightest suns toiling, well into dusk;
they scout, tinker with blooms of lavenders,
sunflower, mint — then bear the rich daubs
of nectar back to the common hive.
So too,
these long black nights, workers fix roadways,
in heavy black jackets striped with yellow…
My favorites are the poems of love. They allow a place for imagining.
Though I have heard of Daniel Harris, and his passion for social justice, we have never actually met — except through these poems. I recommend it for bedside table contemplation.
Bayard Rustin: The proof that one truly believes is in action.
Civil Rights historians know that John F. Kennedy was a latecomer to celebrating the March on Washington, and that Lyndon Johnson was the one who accomplished significant civil rights goals. They also know that Bayard Rustin was the unsung hero of the civil rights movement. Finally, now that he is going to receive a posthumous Medal of Freedom, Rustin is getting at least part of his due.
Princeton’s Ann Yasuhara tells how, on several posts at Not in Our Town Princeton.
Get the Facts on Obamacare
GET THE FACTS on the Affordable Health Care Act. The Princeton Human Services and Princeton Health Departments are staging a very useful workshop on how to sign up for healthcare coverage — Tuesday, November 26, at 6 p.m., free. Among the sponsors is Not in Our Town, which I work with.
Get your questions answered: Are you eligible? How do you apply? What documentation will you need? How to sign on to the website.
It’s not rocket science but it helps to get advice.
A Mormon in the corner office: Here is a press release about a free event sponsored by the Princeton University Faith & Work Initiative — a conversation with Jim Quigley, CEO Emeritus, Deloitte, Touche & Tohmatsu Limited, on November 21, 2013 at 7:00 pm, on the Princeton University campus in Lewis Library 138 (the modern building, near the intersection of Ivy Lane and Washington Road in Princeton). The event will be preceded by a reception from 6:30 – 7:00 pm.
Quigley will be interviewed by Prof. David W. Miller, Director of the Princeton University Faith & Work Initiative, on his Mormon perspective on business, leadership, and faith.
Helping to fill all the stockings: this letter came from Princeton Human Services.
In the spirit of the upcoming holiday season Princeton Human Services would like to solicit your help in making a child’s Christmas a little bit brighter.
For the past fifteen years, municipal employees have made hundreds of Princeton children’s holiday wishes come true, by providing at least one gift.
With these hard economic times, we understand everyone has had trouble. That is why this year more than previous years your generosity is needed. Hundreds of applications have been distributed throughout Princeton. Children up to age 12 will be filling out a holiday wish list which will include two (2) gifts they would like for the Holidays, which are not to exceed $60 dollars.
If you are interested in becoming a donor, please call the Princeton Human Services department at (609) 688-2055 between the hours of 9:00 am to 4:30 pm or email Elisa Neira at eneira@princetonnj.gov by November 15, 2013.
Thank you for considering our request and we hope to hear from you soon.
Sincerely,
Elisa Neira, MSW
Executive Director
Anna Quindlen: Humanizing Healthcare
Anna Quindlen made a speech to healthcare professionals about how doctors should treat patients and their families. Her 83-year-old father had recently died from burns over 40 percent of his body. She praised his caregivers.
As you would imagine, her words are potent. “They put a human face, a series of human faces, on my father’s care.” Her speech is online at HumanizingMedicine.org, and read it now because it will be taken off the web in December.
In her comments on medicine Quindlen talks about journalism. Newspapers used to be faceless dispensers of information, and readers “had their back fences to chew over their tragedies, their disappointments, and their dreams.” Now newspapers use social media to facilitate those discussions.
She likens the power relationships inherent in medicine with the power that journalists have. When interviewed, you have every good reason to wonder whether I will get your story right — or wrong. But doctors have power over our very lives.
And so she makes the case for empowered patients, patients and family members who are armed with knowledge, who want to be treated as individuals. “People want the press to see them . . . as a person. They want the doctors and nurses to see them as something more than files. . . We are part of a society that has suddenly discovered that it has no human face and that is terrified and repelled by that fact. ”
I learned of Quindlen’s speech from another of my favorite writers.
Jim Ayala, a resident of Manila in the Philippines, gave up a McKinsey career to help his home country. He spokr at the Carl Fields Center on Saturday, November 16. Oops we missed that one! But his name is linked to an article in the Princeton Alumni Weekly. He is Class of ’84.



