| Darling teenaged kitten, anyone? |
[Jun. 11th, 2009|01:51 pm] |
|
Does anyone want a lovely and lovey kitten/cat? S/he hangs around the corner by my apartment, and I feel like I should save him/her. VERY affectionate and a little underweight due to being homeless. I already have 2 cats, which is plenty for me. Any takers? |
|
|
| Crisis |
[Jun. 2nd, 2009|12:28 pm] |
FU deleted my email account, which apparently dismantled my ability to get onto FU library databases, including MLA Directory of Periodicals. This is bad timing because I just finished revising an essay for publication and my target journal is not going to work. Researching another one is basically impossible without the MLA D of P. I've been trying all morning.
There was a rumor that alumni could pay $100 and get access again, but a Michael at the library tells me that is not true. *sigh* |
|
|
| Sorry for the bummer |
[Apr. 29th, 2009|08:29 pm] |
|
This is an email my friend sent me, which I'm posting in case anyone wants to help. I'm leaving this post open to the public.
Dear Friends, Just two weeks ago, good friends of mine found out that their 5 year old son, Kai, has a rare type of leukemia (Philadelphia Chromosome Positive Acute Lymphomblastic Leukemia) He is being treated with a cocktail of seven chemotherapy drugs, however, for this high risk form of leukemia, chemo is rarely enough. Kai's only real hope lies in a bone marrow transplant. Making this even more difficult, his father is also fighting a very rare type of cancer (Mantle Cell Lymphoma). We need to find a genetic match for Kai, so he can have the bone marrow transplant he needs to stay alive. We want to register as many new bone marrow donors as possible in order to give him hope. To do this, we have organized a 'bone marrow drive' : we would be very grateful if you could you come and sign up as a bone marrow donor . The testing process for donors is quick, painless and easy (see below) - the location is here: Sunday May 17th from 10 am to 2 pm Prospect Park YMCA 357 9th Street Brooklyn, NY 11215 Telephone number 718 768 7100 for specific information contact Sandy Phillips at extension 2377 To find out if you are a match is simple: you fill out a registration form and are given a kit to swab the cells from the inside of your upper cheek. The drive organizers send your kit to a central testing facility, and your genetic type is stored securely in their database which is screened whenever people with Leukemia are looking for a bone marrow match. If you are a match for a patient dying of leukemia, 80% of the time, your donation takes place through a blood transfusion, 20% of the time, through a minor procedure to sample your bone marrow. 1 in 130 people tested turn out to be a match for a leukemia patient. For more details about how this all works, click here to Understand your commitment and find out if you are eligible to register. If you cannot make it to the drive on May 17th, but would like to help the Andersons , please visit www.HopeForKai.com. There are other drives, opportunities to volunteer, and/or you can help financially (each donor test costs $65, and is paid for by charitable donations). Please take a moment to think about whether you can help save this child's life: the testing and donation process is much easier than you think. Some more information about the bone-marrow screening service: DKMS, the world's largest bone marrow donor center, is the amazing organization that is running this. They are a non-profit organization, and as such, DKMS relies on the generosity of individuals to help finance the $65 cost DKMS pays to tissue type each bone marrow donor who registers. Donations are voluntary. Donate today! Every dollar counts! 100% of your donation will be used to register donors and add them on the National Registry. For more information, please visit www.dkmsamericas.org We'd also be grateful if you could forward this email to anyone you know: colleagues, friends and family to encourage them to register as a bone marrow donor . |
|
|
| Indian Beets |
[Mar. 9th, 2009|07:49 pm] |
If you're like me, Urban Organics sends you beets every week. What to do with them? This comes from Madhur Jaffrey's Indian Cooking, and it's both delicious and easy. 1 pound (3) fresh beets 1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil 1 teaspoon cumin seeds 1 bay leaf (I skipped it) 1 cup chopped canned tomatoes 1 cup water 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin 1/2 teaspoon ground coriander 1/4 teaspoon ground turmeric 1/4 teaspoon cayenne 1/2 teaspoon salt
Optional toppings: chutney (I used Lebanese rose jam) Spanish onion, raw and chopped roasted cashews raita (plain yogurt mixed with cumin seeds. Mine was soy.) currants or raisins hot lime pickle
1. Peel the raw beets and cut them into 3/4 inch cubes. Measure out the spices.
2. Heat the oil over medium-high heat in a saucepan or skillet until it sizzles. Put in the cumin seeds and bay leaf and stir for a few seconds until the seeds start to darken. 3. Add the tomatoes and the water, the cubed beets and all the spices and bring back to the boil. I also threw in a chopped potato and apple. Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer until the beets are tender. (Jaffrey suggests 30 to 40 minutes, but the time will vary depending on your beets, the size you cut them, and the exact heat setting you choose.) Serve over rice, with toppings of your choosing.
|
|
|
| Phones |
[Jan. 16th, 2009|01:14 pm] |
My phone was stolen yesterday at a library in East New York, probably by a middle school boy. Terrible. It hit me hard, but I'm moving on. It was giving me a little trouble anyway.
So I need to replace it. It was a Blackberry Pearl with service from T-Mobile. I can get another for $100 the T-Mobile guy says. I think I'm still under contract with T-Mobile, but it's up soon. My phone bill was about $85 a month, which included email. I could do that again, but maybe there's a cheaper option? Input? |
|
|
| Preaching to the choir, but what the hell |
[Oct. 31st, 2008|11:54 am] |
|
Copy this sentence into your LJ if you're in a heterosexual marriage (or if you think you might be someday) and you don't want it "protected" by the bigots who think that gay marriage hurts it somehow. |
|
|
| After Leather and I get crowned Doctorates of the Universe |
[May. 16th, 2008|08:13 pm] |
Shall we go to Manhattan for some eats and heavy drinking? Shall we go for Lebanese food and bellydancing to a place called Byblos at 6pm near GCT (39 and 3rd)? http://www.byblosny.com/ Reviews are good and they can handle big parties.
RSVP here if you want to come. (Or if you hate Middle Eastern food and have another place in mind, speak up!) |
|
|
| Debunking Bush and Taliban as fascists |
[Sep. 7th, 2006|03:32 pm] |
So last week or the week before or something, Bush called Islamic extremists 'fascists." Then the lefty blog world retorted that actually Bush is a fascist.
For my Under the Volcano chapter, I had to do much research into fascism, so the fact that this world is enjoying some currency caught my attention. In brief, Fascism is/was an idealistic European political system based on yoking an aristocratic value system of cultural/racial supremacy to the machine age, a la Fritz Lang's Metropolis. Extreme Islamic theocracies reject the machine age, so the word fascist doesn't fit.
On to Bush. Why do lefty bloggers call Bush et al fascists? The main charge is the administration's close ties to corporations. Fascism is/was corporatist, they say. But Hitler, one prominent Fascist, did not take orders from Volkswagon, the way American corporations dictate public policy: Enron wrote energy policy; Bacardi's lawyers drafted sections of the US embargo against Cuba, to name but two examples.
If you live in a country in which corporations have far too much political power and you admit to living under an economic system called capitalism, in which the bottom line is money, then shouldn't you take out Occam's Razor and conclude that maybe the problem is not fascism but CAPITALISM?
For my money, fascism, communism, capitalism and religious extremism are all seriously fucked up ways to approach life, but the point is that they are not all the SAME fucked up way to approach life. Sign/signifier is arbitrary of course, but that doesn't mean we need to allow ourselves intellectual sloppiness. Idiots! |
|
|
| FYI, nature lovers |
[Jun. 29th, 2006|10:50 am] |
| [ | mood |
| | cheerful | ] | lizzy2150's relevatory experience with Mary Kay reminded me of a body products company I've been meaning to pitch to all my friends and family: Prairieland Herbs. I think it's actually one woman and her friends making soap in a farmhouse in Iowa. That could be a cynically perpetuated fantasy, but I don't think so. When you put your order in online, Karla will send you little notes such as "How exciting to live in NYC! My niece goes to school at NYU and loves it." I ignore them but like it.
Anyway, her stuff is really great and comes in many lovely essential oil fragrances. I'm addicted to the pinion leaf shampoo bar, originally purchased because I'm trying to reduce plastic packaging over here. The talc-free body powder, solid perfume and bath salts are all made from very simple ingredients. In my experience, the only loser is the bath tea. It's a package of giant tea bags you throw into your bath. Tea bags are gross.
I'd like Karla to prosper, so check it out: www.prairielandherbs.com |
|
|
| navigation |
| [ |
viewing |
| |
most recent entries |
] |
| |
|
|