Friday, March 30, 2012

CLTP unveils new season April 5

Cheyenne Little Theatre Players'
2012-2013 Season Announcement
Thursday, April 5, 2012
6:30pm
Historic Atlas Theatre

Enjoy Hors d'oeuvres and desserts while listening to our directors talk about their productions.
as long as you're there, why not purchase your Season Membership that evening?
Anyone who purchases their membership, and pays in full that evening, will also receive a coupon to bring a friend to a show of their choice during our 2012-2013 Season.
Make a donation of $251.00 or greater that evening and receive a 2nd coupon!

So, mark your calendar now,
and we'll see you at the Atlas!

** If you cannot attend our event,
Season Memberships may also
be purchased online at www.cheyennelittletheatre.org
or by calling our Box Office at
307-638-6543.

Casper Star-Trib: Randall Terry halts illegal Wyoming robo-calls

Wyoming Secretary of State's office warns Randall Terry to halt illegal robo-calls. He complies (with a few snarky comments). Read story and comments in today's Casper Star-Tribunehttp://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/govt-and-politics/presidential-candidate-randall-terry-halts-illegal-robocalls-in-wyoming/article_d0a34664-b1a9-56d7-973b-ef63b48ba0ee.html

Attention Wyoming Democrats: GOP extremists attempting to hijack April 14 caucuses

Received this urgent message from the Laramie County Democrats and wanted to relay it ASAP (and please pass it on via social media and e-mail and word of mouth and any other means at your disposal):

Laramie County Democrats:

Action Alert: Extremists in the GOP are attempting to hijack and make a mockery of our Democratic Caucus on April 14, 2012. TODAY MARCH 30 IS THE LAST DAY TO REGISTER FOR THE DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS ON APRIL 14! IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF YOUR REGISTRATION STATUS OR DID NOT VOTE IN 2010 YOU MUST REGISTER WITH THE LARAMIE COUNTY CLERK IN PERSON. ELECTION CLERK PHONE: 633-4204

Apparently not content with turning their own presidential primary into a circus act, the GOP is sending out the clowns to try to disrupt our democratic process.

Anti-abortion activist Randall Terry hopes to seize control of the Wyoming Democratic Caucus. He's motivating Tea Party activists and followers to attend the Caucus. This is just another example of the obstructionist tactics the GOP resorts to when they don't have answers.

While the GOP continues to play games with politics, Wyoming Democrats are focused on addressing the real problems citizens in our great state face, and we will not be distracted by jesters or fools.

We NEED every registered Democrat in Laramie County to cast a ballot on April 14th. Please come to the Laramie County Community College Training Center. Registration begins at 9:30 AM, and the caucus will begin promptly at 11:00 AM.

Let's turn out in great numbers and show Randall Terry, and the rest of America, that Wyoming Democrats are tired of these charades and tactics. Let's continue the momentum of the 2008 election and continue to support our party as it struggles to make the changes that benefit all Americans.

If you have questions, please call:

Linda Stowers, Laramie County Chair 307.220.1219
Ken McCauley, Vice-Chair, 307.530.4970
Lori Brand, Communications Director, 307.631.3410

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Cheyenne Winter Farmers' Market moved up to March 31

Cheyenne Winter Farmers' Market this Saturday, March 31, 10 am-2 pm, Inside the Historic Train Depot Museum, 121 W. 15th Street. The normally scheduled market would be April 7 but has been switched due to Easter weekend.

Cheyenne Winter Farmers’ Market is held inside the sunny and cozy lobby of the Historic Cheyenne Depot Museum in downtown Cheyenne, featuring farm and hand-crafted products from Wyoming and the local region.

 At the Cheyenne Winter Farmers' Market this Saturday, March 31:

·         Farm-fresh eggs and cheese

·         Grass-fed beef, lamb, and bison, pork, goat's meat, smoked wild-caught salmon

·         Gourmet local mushrooms

·         Local honey

·         Gourmet pastas, flavored oils and vinegars

·         Fresh breads, home-baked treats, chocolates and candies

·         Locally produced jams and Amish-style peanut butter

·         Sugar-free jams and gluten-free baked goods

·         Locally roasted fair-trade coffee

·         Take-home BBQ, bratwurst, chowders and bisque

·         Natural, locally-produced body care products

·         Hand-crafted jewelry, sewing crafts, photo cards, and other hand-made crafts

·         Sip coffee, tea, cider, and hot chocolate while you shop!

 Remaining markets this season: May 5, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.            

For more information, please contact Kim Porter, kim.porter@wyo.gov, or Cindy Ridenour, cindyr@meadowmaidfoods.com.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Randall Terry isn't a "bona fide Democrat" so can't claim any Wyoming delegates

This man ain't bona fide
Democrats may hear a strange name being batted around during the April 14 county caucuses.

According to the Casper Star-Tribune, anti-abortion zealot and wingnut Republican Randall Terry is trying to get 1,000 Wyoming Republicans to register as Democrats next month in the state Democratic caucuses and vote for him in a guerrilla campaign to oust President Barack Obama.

The Wyoming county parties will hold conventions on April 14 to elect delegates to the state convention. Those people will be vying for a spot in Wyoming’s delegation to the Democratic National Convention in September in Charlotte, N.C.

Wyoming Democratic Party Executive Director Robin Van Ausdall said Terry has filed the necessary letter for participation in the Democratic caucus and will be allowed to make speeches, but he will not collect any delegates. “We’re instructing our counties to not award delegates to him,” she said Monday, noting Terry is not a bona fide Democratic candidate.

On March 6, Terry’s weird campaign received a boost when he won 18 percent of the vote in Oklahoma’s Democratic presidential primary. Last week, in a move similar to what Wyoming party officials have planned, Oklahoma party officials said they wouldn’t give Terry his share of delegates because he didn’t follow the required procedures and because he’s not a bona fide Democrat.

Terry complained he was the victim of “political insider trading.”

But he did get plenty of media attention. On Monday in Casper, he described the fallout from Oklahoma as “rage from the [Democratic National Committee], excitement from the pro-life community, awe from the press.” He labeled the vote a “disaster for a sitting president.”

Terry recently qualified for next month’s Alaska caucus, but Kansas Democratic Party officials banned him from their state’s caucus. Terry told the Wichita Eagle he will go to court to challenge the Kansas decision. Kansas Democratic Party attorney Joe Sandler told the Wichita Eagle that Terry failed to meet two mandatory deadlines. In addition, Sandler said, Terry “is not a bona fide Democrat, as determined by his actions.”

Shay & Hernandez co-host open mic

My favorite daughter (O.K. -- my only daughter) and one of my favorite spoken-word performers will be co-hosting an open mic session at the Laramie County Public Library this evening in Cheyenne. Annie Shay and Mikey Hernandez invite you to bring your poems, stories, songs, comedy routines and snappy patter to the library's Cottonwood Room beginning at 6 p.m. Snacks provided! More info at 307-514-1131.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

New to the WY Progressives' blogroll: The Bucking Jenny

Pleased to add The Bucking Jenny to hummingbirdminds' Wyoming Progressives blogroll (see right sidebar). She launched the blog in February, tackling the big topics: the Republican war on women, the state legislature's weird need to drug-test everyone but themselves, controversy over the Trayvon Martin shooting, the GOP's vengeful God fixation, etc. Especially liked her exploration of the spirituality in Norman Maclean's "A River Runs Through It." Jenny, I wish you many thoughtful comments. 

We're number three! -- on the list of most corrupt states

At least we're not number one: States with the most lax anti-corruption laws

Help send Meg to blogger summer camp

Blogger, DJ, activist and perennial hell-raiser Meg Lanker of Cognitive Dissonance in Laramie seeks your vote in the annual Netroots Nation scholarship competition sponsored by Democracy for America. I nominated Meg and am proud as punch of my fave blogger. She's sixth in the standings now and rising fast. Cast your vote at http://democracyforamerica.com/netroots_nation_scholarships/1681-meg-lanker-cognitive-dissonance

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Job fair for veterans March 27 in Casper

From Wyofile:

The Wyoming Department of Workforce Services will host a veterans job fair in Casper on Tuesday, March 27, from 9 a.m. to noon at the McMurry Training Center, 2220 N. Bryan Stock Trail.

Employers in the fields of construction, energy, manufacturing and government are scheduled to participate. There is no fee to attend the job fair. Job seekers are encouraged to bring resumes and dress for potential interviews.

“I strongly encourage veterans seeking employment opportunities to take advantage of this job fair which has had a great turn out in previous years. We are expecting that tradition to continue this year,” said Joan Evans, director of the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services.

Biased statements (and proposed legislation) don't just scare away gay people -- they scare away everyone

Some Republican Legislators talk up economic development but also sponsor and support anti-gay legislation. They may want to rethink that strategy.

Interesting article by Melissa Maynard in stateline.org about the crucial role that businesses play when it comes to the gay marriage debate.

Washington state recently passed a gay marriage bill that had support of the governor, key Republican legislators and high-profile businesses such as Microsoft, Boeing and Nike. Bill sponsor Sen. Ed Murray, a Democrats, said this is "how we got moderate Republicans and conservative Democrats to vote for this."

LGBT activists have been successfully lining up business support for years. It's paid off in Washington, Maryland and New York. There's now a looming battle over the issue in North Carolina. On May 8, voters will decide whether to further codify the state's gay marriage ban by putting it in the state constitution.

These are all big states with a strong corporate presence. These businesses want to attract the young workforce and "fear being left behind in places seen as backward by gay workers and other young employees who feel strongly about the issue."

While Wyoming is not exactly a hipster destination (with the possible exception of Jackson), it runs a risk that its biased attitudes may hinder attempts to land new businesses. None of us lives in a vacuum. Outrageous statements travel like wildfire in our social media age.

Stephen Dull V.P. with North Carolina-based VF Corp. (a Fortune 500 company) put it this way: "If you're sending a signal to the world that you're biased, it just doesn't scare away gay people. It scares away everyone."

Laramie County Democrats hold convention on April 14 at LCCC

The Laramie County Democratic Party wil hold its county convention on Saturday, April 14.

The event beguins at 11 a.m., with registration at 9:30 a.m., at the Training Center, Laramie County Community College, Cheyenne.

On April 14, Dems will vote for their preffered presidential candidate and elect delegates to the state convention. The list of candidates is a lot shorter than the one in 2008.

Anyone registered as a Democrat no later than March 30 is eligible to vote at the convention and to seek election as a delegate to the state convention.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

REMINDER: Open Mic Night March 28

Laramie County Community College students Annie Shay (music) and Mikey Hernandez (theatre) have put together this open mic night March 28, 6-8:50 p.m., at the Laramie County Public Library in Cheyenne. Bring your poetry and and prose and scripts and music to the library for a fine time.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Wyoming DemoCatz take a page from Woody Guthrie's songbook


Wyoming DemoCatz -- "Party Brave" by Alan O'Hashi. Filmed at the Historic Atlas Theatre in downtown Cheyenne. See if you can spy some familiar faces.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Grassroots Coalition holds casino night and costume party fund-raiser March 24

Don't forget - This Saturday, March 24, is the Mardi Gras Casino Night & Costume Party! 

Where: In Cheyenne at Suite 1901, 1901 Central Avenue 

When: 7:30-11:30 p.m.

The cost is $20.00 per person, which includes hors d'ouvres and $20,000 in 
play money. Bring a friend and get an extra $10,000 in play money to enjoy the casino 
games. 

This is a big fund-raiser, so come out and support your Laramie County Democratic Grassroots Coalition!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Occupy Jackson Hole addresses the Teton County Democrats

Small business owner, veteran and Occupy Jackson Hole activist Pete Muldoon gave a speech recently to the Teton County Democrats. It eloquently sums up the motives and beliefs of many of us in the Occupy movement. I was tempted to print the entire speech or provide excerpts, but it's best to read it all in context on the Occupy Jackson Hole blog.

Check out Nancy Sindelar's e-newsletter for progressive happenings around Wyoming

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

On a South Dakota St. Patrick's Day, I toast Sen. George McGovern and his populist legacy

Book jacket from the shelves of the
bookstore at the 
McGovern Center
at Dakota Wesleyan University.
When in South Dakota last weekend, I kept thinking of Sen. George McGovern.

Bomber pilot, U.S. Senator, anti-war presidential candidate, international champion of hunger relief, writer, friend of the working man -- Sen. McGovern has led a long, rich life (he'll be 90 this year) and remains one of my heroes.

I looked out on that yawning open pit mine in Lead and thought about McGovern's book on the West's coalfield wars, the era that gave us the Ludlow Massacre and strong labor unions. It's called "The Great Coalfield War" and represents McGovern's commitment to labor unions. McGovern was born in Avon and grew up in Mitchell where his father was a conservative Methodist minister (and a staunch Republican). He grew up with farmers and small town people and reflected their Prairie Populist values, honed during the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. His World War II experience allowed him to look at the Vietnam War through a warrior's eyes and he didn't like what he saw. Nixon clobbered him in the 1972 election. I'm proud to say that I cast my first vote for president for McGovern. I lived in Massachusetts at the time, the only state (along with D.C.) that went McGovern's way. Boston is a long way from the West's wide-open spaces where I now make my home. But I still remember that day almost 40 years ago. The loss was tough but it felt good to be 21 and voting for someone you really believed in.

South Dakota is a bigger and more complicated place these days. I don't pretend to know the details, but Prairie Populism has turned to Tea Party Populism and the results aren't pretty. Still, there's a feistiness behind the Tea Party that one can see in the small towns that gave birth to McGovern and his family and his politics.

Before we leave South Dakota, I have a few things to say about Rapid City. We spent a couple days wandering around and I liked what I saw. The downtown is vital and filled with cool shops. On each corner is a sculpture of a president. That reflects its "City of Presidents" motto taken from nearby Mount Rushmore, the granite mountain that looks down on Rapid City. Funny to think that favorite son McGovern could have been one of the corner statues. Nixon is there instead. Someday, a statue to our first black president will rise from a corner.

Rapid City has the great Firehouse Brewery, home to the Smoke Jumper Stout that I quaffed on St. Patrick's Day. It's housed in what once was the city's main fire house. The food's good, too, and it boasts its own theatre for plays, comedians and musicians. When we were at the mall on Friday, we came upon the Black Hills Community Theatre. When the 43-year-old theatre company lost its old home, it found a new spot at the mall next to J.C. Penney and Radio Shack. The evening we were there, patrons were pouring in to see the classic "Our Town." The Firehouse Theatre's next play is "39 Steps" which, coincidentally, is the show that opens this weekend at Cheyenne's Historic Atlas Theatre. The Dahl Arts Center downtown offers a full slate or art shows and classes.I didn't get to it, but I hear that the South Dakota School of Mines has a nifty art gallery.

We spent Saturday at the St. Patrick's Day parade downtown, and then drove off to Mount Rushmore. You can see a long way from up there, all the way to the Dakota prairie, all the way back to McGovern's roots.

That night, over corned beef and cabbage at the Firehouse, I toasted Sen. McGovern. Here's to you -- one of the good ones. Your like may never be seen again.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Demographic shifts spell doom for GOP, but not in Wyoming

Why are these aging white guys laughing?
This comes from Reader Supported News:

Pew Research Center Director Andrew Kohut had this to say following the release of a survey last Wednesday that showed support for the GOP tanking among college-educated, young and non-white voters:
"The Republicans really are the party of white people, and especially older white people," Kohut told reporters as the poll was released. "They've done nothing in this campaign to make themselves be more favorably viewed" among other parts of the electorate.
Republican strategists such as Karl Rove keep arguing that the Republican Party needs to find ways to reach out to other demographic groups, particularly Latinos.
The example of what could happen if the party does not do so is California, where the GOP became alienated from Latinos just as their voting percentage began to rise rapidly. Over the last five election cycles, California has moved from being a swing state to being one of the most solidly Democratic states in the country.
Republicans don't face that sort of dire situation nationwide, in part because the nation's demographics differ from California's. Whites without a college degree form a much larger percentage of the voting population nationwide, and that group has become a bastion for the Republicans. But as the country becomes less white and more college-educated, the picture is changing. And the numbers in the Pew survey provide some bad omens for the GOP. 
Latinos, for example, view the Republican Party unfavorably by a 2-1 margin (30% favorable, 60% unfavorable). By contrast, Latinos view the Democrats favorably, 56%-31%. The picture among Americans under 30 is almost as negative, with 34% viewing the GOP favorably, while 53% have an unfavorable view. Their view of Democrats is almost the exact opposite, 54% have a positive view, and 35% negative. 
Among those with a college degree or more, only 31% said they had a favorable view of the Republicans, while 66% were unfavorable. That group, which was a key to Barack Obama's victory in 2008, views Democrats favorably by 55%-42%. 
No chance any time soon that Wyoming will waver from its Republican voting patterns. The state is 91 percent white and is aging rapidly. Until serious cohort replacement takes place, it's the Democrats who are doomed in The Equality State.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Smoke and Black Hawks and history in the air over Mount Rushmore

We cruised up to Mount Rushmore National Memorial yesterday afternoon. It's a 27-mile drive from Rapid City past a weird assortment of tourist attractions -- sprawling waterslide parks, Bear Country USA, Reptile Gardens ("See Maniac, America's Giant Crocodile"), Old MacDonald's Farm petting zoo ("Pig races!"), Black Hills Maze, Sitting Bull Crystal Caverns, etc. Most are closed for the season. A few are closed for good.

Anyway, we got to Mount Rushmore. I've been there but my wife Chris has not. I took the kids there 13 years ago when my son was at Boy Scout summer camp near Custer. It's an impressive place. It took 14 years and 400 workers and a million dollars and tons of dynamite to carve the faces of four presidents into Harney Peak Granite. Why bother, you might ask. But therein lies the tale. Local promoters thought it would be a great celebration of American freedom and a terrific tourist attraction. They were right about the latter. The former is still being debated, which seems fitting. The ranger at the visitor center said there was a recent History Channel documentary that called Mt. Rushmore a "testimonial to white privilege." Or maybe that was "testament to white privilege." He seemed upset by the idea. But you have to admit that those are some big white faces up there on a mountain that is still claimed by High Plains Indian tribes. I'm not privy to the current state of white-Indian relations regarding Paha Sapa. But it's always been testy, not to mention bloody.

We took many photos. We walked the Presidential Trail. A beautiful day in the Black Hills. As we made our way from one interpretive placard to another, we heard the sounds of a helicopter. Looked up to see a Black Hawk hovering nearby. We wondered if it was some sort of spring weekend military demonstration. Or maybe a visit by a V.I.P.? A president, perhaps? But we would have heard about that.  

The Black Hawk dipped behind the trees, hovered, and the buzzed off. We forgot about it until we got back to our car in the parking lot and saw a plume of smoke on a nearby ridge. Uh oh. The Rapid City Journal's cover story Saturday morning talked about the extreme fire danger caused by unseasonably warm temps and high winds. On our return to Rapid City, we passed fleets of police cars and firefighting trucks blocking a side road. Smoke was in the air. So was a Black Hawk.

Good news. The authorities jumped on the fire and put it out quickly. The cause appears to be target shooters, as shotgun shells littered the charred ground and targets were affixed to surrounding rocks. Not sure what to say about that. There are many things one can do safely in a tinder-dry forest. Discharging firearms is not one of them. 

Saturday, March 17, 2012

St. Patrick's Day -- a look back

On the road to the Black Hills this St. Patrick's Day. Too preoccupied with the upcoming St. Patrick's Day Pub Crawl in Deadwood to write anything original. So I'll leave my readers with this St. Patrick's Day column from 2011. It covers a lot of Irish genealogical history: Potato Famine, Irish Diaspora, excessive drinking, superiority of Irish literature, Catholicism, etc. Read it here.

See it now -- Wyoming Video Contest

Big Horn Samurai Sinema's home-grown filmmaking talent on display in Wyoming Video Contest. Scary, too. Music by Ten Sleep's Jalan "Trailer Park Fire" Crossland.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Felicia Follum's "Make it Plain" exhibit to be held in conjunction with the Shepard Symposium at UW


Artist and fellow progressive blogger Felicia Follum (see blogroll on right sidebar) will be featured in an exhibition "Make it Plain," March 19-April 2 in Gallery 234, room 004 in the lower level of the UW Union. A reception for the exhibit is scheduled for Wednesday, March 28, from 6-8 p.m. Admission to both events is free and open to the public. It’s an African-American view of history and religion, as well as an exploration of the ways we persecute members of society today. This exhibit is being shown in conjunction with the Shepard Symposium for Social Justice , March 28-31.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Classic Alfred Hitchcock thriller -- with a twist -- opens March 23 at the Atlas Theatre


Tickets are on sale now for the CLTP production of The 39 Steps. Directed by Steve Lien.
Take a classic Alfred Hitchcock thriller, stir in a healthy dose of spy novel noir and a heaping dash of Monty Python hilarity and you might start to understand this intriguing, riotous and fast-paced comedy. A cast of 4 plays more than 150 characters in this full-throttle tale of an ordinary man on an extraordinary adventure to save all of Britain from a shadowy cadre of devious spies.
Performances are March 23-April 1 at the Historic Atlas Theatre. Special $10 ticket performance on Thursday, March 29, 7:30 p.m. 

Contact 307-638-6543 or online at www.cheyennelittletheatre.org

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Soldier-poet Brian Turner will talk about his work at Equality State Book Festival Sept. 14-15 in Casper

Brian Turner
Here's some exciting news. The Wyoming Arts Council announced yesterday that soldier-poet Brian Turner will serve as judge for its creative writing fellowships in poetry. Turner will travel to Casper Sept. 14-15 for the Equality State Book festival to read from his work with the three poetry fellowship winners. He also will participate on a panel with fellow Iraq War vet Luis Carlos Montalvan. He's a U.S. Army Iraq War veteran and author of "Until Tuesday: The Story of a Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him." Here's some info on Turner and his books:
He is a soldier-poet who is the author of two poetry collections, Phantom Noise (2010) and Here, Bullet (2005) which won the 2005 Beatrice Hawley Award, the New York Times “Editor's Choice” selection, the 2006 Pen Center USA "Best in the West" award, and the 2007 Poets Prize, among others. Turner served seven years in the U.S. Army, including one year as an infantry team leader in Iraq with the 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division. Prior to that, he was deployed to Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1999-2000 with the 10th Mountain Division. Turner's poetry has been published in Poetry Daily, The Georgia Review, and other journals, and in the Voices in Wartime Anthology published in conjunction with the feature-length documentary film of the same name. Turner was also featured in Operation Homecoming, a unique documentary that explores the firsthand accounts of American servicemen and women through their own words. He earned an MFA from the University of Oregon and has lived abroad in South Korea. In 2009, Turner was selected as one of 50 United States Artists Fellows.
At the Casper College Literary Conference Sept. 14-15, 2012, Brian Turner will read from his work together with the fellowship winners. He also will participate on a panel about soldier-writers.
Here’s what critics had to say about Here, Bullet
 "In sharp, straightforward, yet lyrical language, Turner exposes the many costs of war.” — Library Journal 
“The day of the first moonwalk, my father's college literature professor told his class, ‘Someday they'll send a poet, and we'll find out what it's really like.’ Turner has sent back a dispatch from a place arguably more incomprehensible than the moon—the war in Iraq—and deserves our thanks...” — New York Times Book Review
Printed fellowship applications will be available next week on the WAC blog and web site.
The postmark deadline is June 8, 2012.For more information, contact Michael Shay, 307-777-5234 or mike.shay@wyo.gov, or visit the WAC web site at www.wyomingartscouncil.org.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Celtic harp, with narration, enlivens St. Patrick's Day

I'm not going to be in town, but maybe you will be and are looking for something a little less green-beer-oriented on St. Patrick's Day:
"The Story of St. Patrick: Celtic harp with narration and friendly conversation" by Michael Riversong at the Paramount Cafe, 1607 Capitol Ave. Cheyenne, on Saturday, March 17, 5:30-8 p.m. This is an informal family friendly performance by Michael Riversong. Children are especially welcomed. FMI: Michael Riversong, Biblical Bards, http://home.earthlink.net/~mriversong 

A few photos from the filming of Democratic Party video at Cheyenne's Atlas Theatre

The band warms up the audience (and vice versa) for the 3/11 filming of a Democratic Party video filmed at the Historic Atlas Theatre in downtown Cheyenne. The video, filmed and produced by filmmaker Alan O'Hashi, will be out later this month. Stay tuned... Photos by Marguerite Herman.

It's been bumpy at times, but consider the Republican alternative


"The Road We've Traveled" premieres March 15. We've traveled a long and scary road the past four years. Just think of how bad it would have been with McCain/Palin at the helm or -- shudder to think -- just Palin. But we are motoring down the road into the future. The Republicans want to put us all into a stagecoach and transport us back to the past, all the way to those golden days of the '50s -- the 1850s!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Four years after: March 2008 caucuses bring out endangered toads and grizzled old coots

In my attempt to return to the heady month of March 2008, in which hope was in the air and the Wyoming Democratic Party caucuses were mobbed, I'm reprinting some blog posts. Here's one from four years ago today:
Julianne Couch is a writer in Laramie. Her column about the caucuses appeared in this morning's Wyoming Tribune-Eagle. The Obama-Clinton surge meant a lot to Wyoming "Non-Republicans," whom Julianne likened to "a rare species to toad -- a curiousity that is easily squashed by the heel of a heavy boot when it gets in the way of progress." 
She was happy that the caucuses "took the Wyoming Democrats off the endangered species list, at least temporarily."
Julianne now lives and works in Ames, Iowa. Her move contributed to the thinning of the WY Dem ranks. And the "endangered species" remark seems especially poignant four years later.

The WY Dem caucuses also received national attention from "The Daily Show."
Monday night on "The Daily Show," Jon Stewart had a great time picking on Wyoming. He noted that there were 59,000 registered Dems in the state. "I have more Democrats in my building," he quipped. If he's in New York, I'm sure he does. Later, Samantha Bee broke down the caucus numbers for us. Supporting Obama were the rugged outdoorsmen, grizzled old coots, ornery drifters and mustache guys. Hillary won over the hearty prospectors and cowardly saloon owners. Jon Stewart asked about gay cowboys, and Samantha Bee said that hadn't been in issue for about a year (remember the hubbub over "Brokeback Mountain?") and that those numbers were no longer tabulated.
And I thought that all of those grizzled old coots supported another grizzled old coot -- John McCain?

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Anti-racist author Tim Wise is keynote speaker for UW Shepard Sumposium

 From a UW press release:
Tim Wise, anti-racist essayist, author and educator, is the keynote speaker Wednesday, March 28, for the University of Wyoming's 16th annual Shepard Symposium on Social Justice. Wise will speak from 4:30-6 p.m. in the Wyoming Union Ballroom. "Identities: Dismantling the Boxes" is the theme of this year's Shepard Symposium, which runs March 28-31. 
Wise, who is among the nation's most prominent anti-racist writers and educators, has been called "one of the most brilliant, articulate and courageous critics of white privilege in the nation," by best-selling author and Georgetown University Professor Michael Eric Dyson. 
Wise is the author of six books, including the highly acclaimed memoir, "Affirmative Action: Racial Preference in Black and White"; an essay collection, "Between Barack and a Hard Place: Racism and White Denial in the Age of Obama"; and his recent book, "Dear White America: Letter to a New Minority." 
In 1997, former UW College of Education faculty members Omawale Akintunde and Margaret Cooney organized the first symposium, then called "The Symposium for the Eradication of Social Inequality." Since then, the symposium has evolved into a major national conference that engages participants in discussion and analyses of strategies and actions that can eliminate social inequality. 
Honoring the work of the Shepard family and the memory of their son, Matthew Shepard, a UW student and social activist who was murdered in 1998, the symposium's name was changed in 2002. That spring, the Shepard Symposium received funding from an anonymous endowment given to UW to pursue social justice activities throughout the campus. 
The symposium is a living reminder of the need for information and dialogue about social justice concerns in America and beyond. 
"We want people to deconstruct and interrupt the ways in which proscriptive identities are forced upon members of marginalized groups by society," says Chair Angela Jaime in explaining the latest theme for the symposium. "Specifically, we hope that attendees will critically examine the ways in which society forces people to identify with certain membership groups." 
Various presentations will be made during the symposium. Highlights include: 
Beth Loffreda, UW Department of English associate professor, will present the plenary speech, "The Consequences of Identity," at the noon luncheon Thursday, March 29, in the Wyoming Union Ballroom. She is the author of "Losing Matt Shepard."
Bridget Kisling, a junior music therapy and psychology student at Anna Maria College (Paxton, Mass.), will use a life-size version of the 1950s Barbie doll to shed light on how the media plays a significant role in shaping a young girl's sense of body image. Her presentation is Friday, March 30, 1:45-3 p.m., in the Wyoming Union Big Horn Room. 
An endnote student panel discussion, "Boxed In," will be presented Friday, March 30, at 11:30 a.m. in the Wyoming Union Ballroom. UW students will discuss complex and misunderstood identities. 
The second annual Shepard Symposium Friday Night Party is from 10 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at the Library Bar and Grill. All proceeds benefit the recognized student organizations that have contributed time and efforts to the Shepard Symposium. Tickets are $5 at the door or $4 in advance, and can be purchased at the symposium.
For more information about the Shepard Symposium, visit the website at http://www.shepardsymposium.org/, or contact Jaime at (307) 766-3991 or email jaimea@uwyo.edu.


Here's some info on Tim Wise's book, "Dear White America":
In America, being white has long meant never having to think about race. Whites have been able to assume that the culture, political leadership and their own neighborhoods would “look like them,” and the economy would work for them, so long as they played by the rules. Now, facing chronic economic insecurity, a multicultural pop culture, a black president and a future in which they will no longer be the majority, whites are growing anxious. This anxiety has helped create the Tea Party phenomenon and is characterized by the call to “take the country back” to a mythologized past. Using racialized nostalgia, the right seeks to enlist fearful whites in a movement for reactionary social and economic policies. But as Tim Wise explains, such an agenda will only further harm the nation’s people, including most whites. Only by embracing a progressive, multicultural future, can the hope of American democracy survive.