Sherry Chandler » 2005 » September » 08

I got this e-mail from Ernie O’Dell a while ago. There’s probably still time to sign up:

I’d appreciate your carrying word to any poets or prospective poets you think might be interested in a set of ten sessions on writing poetry, developing the poetic voice, etc.

These will be run by me (Ernie) and will be Tuesday evenings 6-8 pm from September 13 to November 15. They will be held here at my home in Middletown, Kentucky.

Price is $10 per hour, payable week by week, in installments or in a lump sum. One scholarship is available.

If someone would like references, I can furnish a list of clients willing to give their opinions.

Interested poets may contact me at 502-245-4902 or by email.

Thanks much. Ernie

This post was written by sherry

I saw this article in the NYTimes online on August 25th and intended to comment on it. Unfortunately, in the distraction of Hurricane Katrina and her aftermath, I delayed until the full article went into archive and is no longer available free. Here is the abstract

Years of inadequate financing and maintenance have led to widespread disrepair that is imperiling collections at Smithsonian Institution, world’s largest museum complex; recent audit by Government Accountability Office noted ‘broad decline’ in its aging facilities and systems, posing ’serious long-term threat’ to its countless artifacts; Smithsonian officials estimate it will take total of $2.3 billion over next nine years to solve most pressing problems; say Congress’s slightly increased appropriations for fiscal year 2006, to $621.3 million from $615.2 million in 2005, is not enough

The current administration has as its goal to cut the Federal government until it is small enough, in words widely attributed to Grover Norquist, “to drown in a bathtub.” This is a federalist ideology that began to break down in the days when Calvin Coolidge may or may not have visited flood-ravaged Louisiana with Randy Newman’s “little fat man with a notebook in his hand,” who may or may not have been Herbert Hoover. At any rate, Coolidge’s federal government felt no responsibility to help victims of the 1927 flood on the Mississippi, many of them poor and black.

We see one result of that revived ideology in the feeble response to Hurricane Katrina, another in leaks in the Smithsonian roof.

Mr. Bush’s first resort to help the flood victims is to set up the Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund to raise private moneys.

The United States rejected this lack of government involvement after the 1927 flood and especially after the Great Depression.

Are we, in fact, embracing it now?

This post was written by sherry