Thursday, September 27, 2007

Remember When?

180px-Hoffman_abbie4_med
Many of you are too young to remember what it used to be like before the landmark case of Roe v Wade made abortion legal.

This is from Abbie Hoffman’s famous book about sticking it to the man, Steal This Book.

The best way to find out about abortions is to contact your local woman’s liberation organization through your underground newspaper or radio station. Some Family Planning Clinics and even some liberal churches set up abortions, but these might run as high as $700. Underground newspapers often have ads that read “Any girl in trouble call - -,” or something similar. The usual rate for an abortion is about $500 and it’s awful hard to bargain when you need one badly. Only go to a physician who is practicing or might have just lost his license. Forget the stereotype image of these doctors as they are performing a vital service. Friends who have had an abortion can usually recommend a good doctor and fill you in on what’s going to happen.
Abortions are very minor operations if done correctly. They can be done almost any time, but after three months, it’s no longer so casual and more surgical skill is required. Start making plans as soon as you find out. The sooner the better, in terms of the operation.
Get a pregnancy test at a clinic. If it is positive and you want an abortion, start that day to make plans. If you get negative results from the test and still miss your period, have a gynecologist perform an examination if you are still worried.
If you cannot arrange an abortion through woman’s liberation, Family Planning, a sympathetic clergyman or a friend who has had one, search out a liberal hospital and talk to one of their social workers. Almost all hospitals perform “therapeutic” abortions. Tell a sob story about the desertion of your boy friend or that you take LSD every day or that defects run in your family. Act mentally disturbed. If you qualify, you can get an abortion that will be free under Medicaid or other welfare medical plans. The safest form of abortion is the vacuum-curettage method, but not all doctors are hip to it. It is safer and quicker with less chance of complications than the old-fashioned scrape method.
Many states have recently passed liberalized abortion laws, such as New York* (by far the most extensive), Hawaii and Maryland, due to the continuing pressure of radical women. The battle for abortion and certainly for free abortion is far from over even in the states with liberal laws. They are far too expensive for the ten to twenty minute minor operation involved and the red tape is horrendous. Free abortions must be look-on as a fundamental right, not a sneaky, messy trauma.
*There is a residence requirement for New York but using a friend’s New York address at the hospital will be good enough. The procedure takes only a few days and costs between $200 and $500, depending on the place. The best advice is to call one of the New York Abortion Referral Services or Birth Control Groups listed in the New York Directory section.


Don't you love living now? Thank you to Offsprung for posting it first.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Goin' to the chapel

This weekend we all celebrated Chris & Emily’s wedding. And I do mean celebrate.


Here is the happy couple, getting ready to cut the cake:

Bride & Groom

people dancing:

shimmy and shake

a very tired baby:

blue

and just a cool shot:

never mind the light

We had a great time. Now, back to the grind. I'm so tired from the wedding, working too much, and cleaning my house that I'm putting a frozen pizza in the oven for dinner. Sad. Just sad.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Little fishy in the brook...

Poor Woman's Fish Stew

I’m calling it Poor Woman’s Fish Stew, and I'm reeeeaaaallly sorry about the picture quality. Terrible lighting!

At any rate, I had some nice swai fillets that we had picked up two days ago and I needed to cook them. I sautéed up ½ a sliced small onion, 3 medium carrots, 1 medium zucchini, about 4 baby bella mushrooms, 1 clove garlic, fresh ground ginger. All of this in a saucepan with olive oil and curry oil over medium heat. I then added the zest of 1 lime, with the juice from ½ of it. I threw in salt and pepper, fresh thyme and chopped parsley. After that I added 1 tablespoon of tomato paste, some fake chicken stock, turmeric, and enough water to cover the vegetables. Let it simmer for a while. Finally, I added the swai and poached them on one side for 4 minutes, then flipped them and let cook for another three. I served all of this over brown rice.

It wasn’t half bad. But, not quite enough spice. Good amount of heat. I didn’t measure anything, of course. I’ll try it again and really measure out the spices this time and try to crank it up. I’d take some suggestions, of course!

OMG! I forgot to tell, I sold a piece from the Art Hop. I mean this to sound totally blasé. Did it sound totally blasé? Next round is on me!

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Transportation Overload

American Machine

I was proudly involved with The Bus, Jim Lantz’s first production. His newest is coming soon, and I can’t wait.

Support local theatre!

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Art Hop 2007

I'm not going to waste a lot of time on words, just show a few photos of Friday night. You can see more if you follow the link.

Memory 2
These were taken on Pine Street at the BCA area.

things past

And this morning I had time to set up a bit more at the Soda Plant.

Hawking the wares

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Who's Got the Time?

Art Hop 2007 Instillation view 1

Busy, busy, busy. Art Hop is this weekend. I went today and checked out my pieces. That's one view- I'm in the Soda Plant on Pine Street. I submitted work from my "Stills" series. Rockin'- come see.

Next weekend a wedding for good friends, up in Johnson (say it with a VT accent, please!), and then on the 29th Dance Dance Marathon.

Support the arts and shake your bootie.

bca_marathon