Showing posts with label Kent State. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kent State. Show all posts

Monday, May 24, 2021

The Pandemic Is Over ! (Maybe)/ "The Great Hits And Albums of 1970"

 We visited my sister Robin in Maryland for Passover, leaving here March 26, stopping in Kingwood, where my under-65 husband was able to get vaccinated against COVID-19 before he was eligible in our county. Kingwood is the seat of the county just to the east of us, on the border of Maryland, not far mileage-wise, but accessible only on narrow two-lane roads. We stopped for lunch near Hagerstown, more than halfway to my sister's place in Greenbelt, Prince George's County, expecting to eat at the noodle place in the parking lot of the mall. It was closed, so we ate Japanese food at a stand in the mall. I skipped my usual chicken. I've been off meat for most of the pandemic, because of news reports about executives at a chicken company taking bets on how many of their workers would get sick. I don't eat beef more than two or three times a year and have been off pork for several decades.

In Greenbelt, people were much more fastidious about masking and distancing than anywhere in West Virginia. The rule in the town is that you have to wear a mask anywhere out of your own house. Most people complied.

Joe ran Tree of Life's community seder from Robin's dining room, online . It went well, and people from all over were able to watch.  I ate chicken and some beef  at Robin's. Passover is a feast, and one should eat what one can, within the holiday guidelines.

We came back after a few days, and two weeks from the day we left Morgantown, we visited Morgantown Mall, in the city of Westover, south on U.S. 19 and across the Monongahela River. Joe headed for the last traditional department store (there were once four) to buy some clothes. I had  a list of CDs to  buy at the media store, but it was gone. I did buy new athletic shoes. We headed out to University Town Center, just north on I-79, in Granville, and stopped at a TV and media store where we had bought our computers. The young clerk scoffed when I said I needed a new portable cassette player and asked about buying CDs. The  "We millennials buy vinyl. We've found that vinyl sounds better," he said to the man who has been buying vinyl since 1955, probably before his grandfather was born. I knew that long ago, but it's hard to take vinyl in the car, and I  don't subscribe to streaming services. Our last stop was Target, where I found a cheap tape player, and a CD version of "McCartney III," the latest from Paul McCartney (I have a vinyl copy of the original "McCartney" from 1970, and "McCartney II," from 1980. I know this is a lot of blather, but it was our first "outing" in over a year.

We were invited to an outdoor lunch with a neighborhood gay couple and another friend of theirs, a widowed man who lives down the street from us. The weather was warm and we sat outside, maskless. That was in April.

Just this week, the weather turned warm, after a much cooler than expected early May, and the CDC announced that people who were "fully vaccinated" could be indoors or outdoors without masks. Many people were surprised and unsure that we could really do this. Cases are up in parts of the United States, roaring out of control in India, and in West Virginia, vaccinations have slowed due to reluctance on the part of many citizens. Our county's statistics are good, but variants have shown up among college students, who could only get vaccinated in the last few weeks. They are just starting to vaccinate people in the 12-16 age range.

Joe and I were doing Shabbat services from home for a year. I sang the candle blessing at the beginning and the wine blessing at the end, and a song if there was a new Jewish month coming up. A few weeks ago, the synagogue leaders decided we could do the service alone, without a congregation, at the synagogue building. A family asked to have a bar mitzvah at the temple, and asked me to be a guest. Most people were not masked, and at the reception at a hotel, where the rule was to wear masks unless eating, the rule was not followed, except by the staff and a few of us guest. I was a little put off, although I genuinely like this family, and I guess no one was hurt after all.

Friday, May 21, we opened the synagogue for services. It was still broadcast over the internet. Thirteen of us came. Others have said they were not ready. There were no refreshments after. The idea was to not have people stand around chit-chatting, but they did anyway, and, as the night was warm, people hung out later on the steps. I enjoyed seeing people face-to-face, even masked. Everyone was glad to get out. Friday afternoon, I had confronted a maskless shopper at our local supermarket, but the manager came over to our argument to tell me that the market's national office had told them that starting that day, they would not tell people to wear masks. I was upset that the supermarket chain did not care that the City of Morgantown, where I am on Council, had not rescinded its ordinance mandating masks. At home, I emailed the Mayor, Council and Manager to ask if there was a change. Apparently, I didn't get the memo (there was no memo) that the rules we set up expired Friday night. So I was right technically that people should have been masked Friday afternoon. I didn't need to get into an argument with someone over it, and today, Monday, I wrote to the manager and apologized for my behavior.

We were invited to dinner at the home of congregants Saturday and Sunday; unmasked and inside, three couples Saturday  evening, and four couples on a screened porch Sunday late afternoon. We also attended a memorial to people who had died of COVID-19 at a church near our house. We were all happy to see each other in person, almost shocked and gleeful.

So things seem to be  open, and masks are optional for those of us who are more than two weeks from our second shot. It's liberating and joyous, and a little scary. Are we really immune? What about variants? Will this immunity last? And I feel some guilt about American "privilege" when I see what's happening in India and other  places in the world. 

I just finished teaching an online class for Osher Life-Long Learning called "The Great Hits And Albums of 1970."  I put up at least twenty videos on YouTube each week to play in class. They are still there, if you want to look under my name. At first, I just went chronologically through a list of charted albums, from a book I have. We saw the breakup of The Beatles, with their last albums, and the first solo albums from  each of The Fab Four. I played one cut from each album. We spent time with Creedence  Clearwater Revival, the Jackson Five, Three Dog Night, old-timers like Engelbert Humperdinck and Tom Jones (not so old then) and comedy from David Frye ("I Am The President"). We had second albums from Crosby, Stills, Nash (and Young),  solo albums from Stills and Young and Santana. We saw The Supremes without Diana Ross, and Diana Ross without The Supremes. I played tunes from British groups Traffic, Jethro Tull, King Crimson and The Moody Blues. We heard from Grand Funk Railroad and Quicksilver Messenger Service. I spent a lot of time researching the bands and the music. It was exhausting.

On the other hand, this is exactly the kind of interpretive cultural history that I trained for, but never used in real life. People in the class, who are all over fifty, and mostly over sixty-five were, for the most part, enthralled, with memories of their young days and some new things to learn. It was perfect.

Sometime around week three, an article appeared in one of the Sunday magazines about the girl in the picture from Kent State, May 4, 1970, with her arms raised and apparently screaming, as she knelt over the body of a student shot dead by the Ohio National Guard. She was a fourteen-year old runaway at the time, and the writer caught up with her, retired in Florida. The horror of that time returned to my consciousness. I was a junior at Johns Hopkins that year, and we shut down  the campus weeks early after that event. President Nixon and many of  his followers felt it was a good thing that college students were murdered. At twenty, I couldn't yet vote, but I'm proud to say I've never voted for a Republican for any public office. I sold ice cream from a Good Humor truck in the summer of 1970, and spent most of  my senior year depressed, trying to figure out what my adult life would be. I had no idea. Those times came back to me this spring.

I was saddened to see what happened to so many of the stars I highlighted: eleven year old Michael Jackson, so brimming with potential, innocent twenty-year old Karen Carpenter, still living at home with her brother and parents when their hit "Close To You" came out. Jim Morrison and Jimi Hendrix, both gone in 1971, John Lennon murdered in 1980, Duane Allman and Berry Oakley of The Allman Brothers killed in motorcycle accidents, John Ham and Tom Evans of Badfinger who both committed suicide. 

For the last class, May 21, I had fallen far enough behind to have forty-one albums I could have highlighted. Some albums I picked were Led Zeppelin III, Derek and the Dominoes, Jesus Christ Superstar, Idewild South by The Allman Brothers and Judy Collins' Whales and Nightingales, where she sang "Amazing Grace." She said she was hoping that would stop the war in Vietnam. For the last four albums, I picked albums that didn't chart that I like. I had The Beach Boys sing "This Whole World" from Sunflower, The Five Stairsteps sing "O-o-h Child," about things would get easier, Laura Nyro's cover of the 1962 King-Goffin hit for The Drifters, "Up On The Roof" and I ended with the ten-minute Latin jazz piece "Just For You" by Sweetwater, a relatively forgotten group from Los Angeles. Sweetwater sang "See the change in the world, just for you." The world didn't really change for me in 1970, and generally I'm not sure things are much better than they were then. As usual, I can't complain about my own life, despite missteps and hardships along the way. Other than being old, which I should have anticipated, but didn't, I am relatively healthy, financially more solvent than ever and blessed with a mate who got me through these last frightening months. 



Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Letters

An article appeared in our local paper about two weeks ago about how happy The West Virginia Chamber of Commerce and The Business and Industry Council are with the Republican Party. These groups are trying to make it harder to sue negligent business owners, to change the election laws to find judges more amenable to business interests, overturn environmental rules, lower business taxes, make West Virginia a right-to-work state to help destroy labor unions, and advance charter schools in the state, again to shut out unions. Of course, I was livid. Here's the letter I wrote, which was published Sunday, December 13 in the Morgantown Dominion Post.

It's always good to know who your friends are. The West Virginia Business and Industry Council and The West Virginia Chamber of Commerce know that their friends are in the Republican Party.
For the rest of us, if the Republicans continue to rule, they will reduce taxes on businesses, make it harder to sue an employer or merchant, reduce wages for working people, and cut out more health and safety regulations in the mines. West Virginia University will lose more funding, and fewer local students will enroll because of rising tuition. Public schools will suffer, and more miners will die in accidents. Meanwhile, CEO pay will continue to rise. The Republicans say their plan will help the economy. Actually, it will make the very rich even richer, and everyone else poorer.

In 2014, the Republicans promised to fix the roads and improve the economy. Instead, they have made things worse, and promise more of the same if they are reelected in 2016.

I reedited this letter to make it clearer, so this is not exactly what was published in the paper.

Today, there were two awful letters in the paper. I could blame it on the age of the letter writers, but at sixty-six, I can't complain about old men who have nothing to do but write letters to the editor.

Both letter writers appear frequently in the paper. Riley Thomas, who is 76 according to an internet search, complains about President Obama not saying "Radical Islamic terrorism." According to an article on Politifact, President Obama has said "ISIL is not Islam." He does not want to equate Islam to terrorists. Thomas' point is something used to conflate terrorists and Islam. He also states:

 "Other mass shootings have their roots in mental illness and out-of-control criminal activities. Government needs to address the root causes of these atrocities and affect a solution, not make excuses for its inability to fix the problem." Would that a Republican government would actually allocate money for mental health issues. Of course, he doesn't mention the "terrorists" who claim to be "Christians" or "Patriots" or "Defenders of the White Race."

He ends by saying:

"To me, gun control is a good grip, a steady aim and a smooth trigger pull. Not depriving someone of their constitutional right to defend themselves."

Or their right to own as many weapons as they can afford, so that they can gun down their enemies. That's what I hear. These are false talking points from the Republican Party and the NRA. What happened to "A well-regulated militia.."? Ignore terrorism by so-called Christians, but demonize all of Islam. And don't ever mention that it is way too easy for people to get guns.

The other writer, Dan Carnegie, age 65, according to the internet, opens by discussing a college class he attended where the instructor was upset about the killing of four students at Kent State University in Ohio, on May 4, 1970. Carnegie says "As a Vietnam veteran, I was very understanding of the guard (sic) . Protests have a way of turning violent. They should have been in class." He goes on from there to defend the policeman in Chicago who shot Laquan McDonald. He says "No, I don't agree with shooting someone 16 times. But when you invite the police to respond- you must take responsibility for what is to come."

"No" and "No." I was a junior in college on May 4, 1970, and we shut down our school. The protests at Johns Hopkins were peaceful, as were the protests at The University of Maryland, where the National Guard was also called in. With all the talk of the Second Amendment, where is the talk about the First Amendment right to peacefully protest against blatantly illegal actions by the Nixon administration, waging war in Cambodia, which was expressly forbidden by Congress? And why are the police, who are supposed to catch perpetrators of crimes, allowed to execute people without a trial? And lie about it.

The Dominion-Post states that they will only publish one letter per month from each writer. Otherwise, I would have been on these guys today. If you want to send a letter, then write to opinion@dominionpost.com. I don't have a subscription to the paper, so I can't access their on-line edition to show the full text of the letters I've quoted.

In my election campaign, I would love to be able to make people like this see things a different way. What I may be able to accomplish is to represent people who see things through a lens of compassion, what the Constitution really says, and an understanding of history and where our state and country need to go. People like us are not well-served by most of those in political office here in West Virginia.