Kate's Point of View

The Product of Creative Frustration

Month: October 2010 Page 2 of 3

The Highest Point in Clifton

Cincinnati has been undergoing tremendous efforts to remodel or build new schools. It seems that everywhere I look there is a new, beautiful public school. Hughes High School is a landmark in Cincinnati and fortunately other agree with me. Rather than build a new school to replace it, a lot of money (35 million) was invested into restoring it to its original grandeur.

Often when I am showing out-of-town friends around the city and point out Hughes High School, the response is always one of surprise that the building is not part of the University of Cincinnati. It’s just so big and stately looking that you don’t associate it with a high school.

For many years Hughes High School hasn’t been looking so hot. So when Wonder Boy and I saw the restoration starting, we were thrilled. We were even more thrilled this past weekend when we got to tour the building and see the results. The building looks amazing. But the coolest part? We got to go up in the tower above the school to the highest point in Clifton.

It was a once in a lifetime event.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

David Sedaris

“What’s the worse thing you can hear when blowing Willie Nelson?”

“I’m not Willie Nelson.”

That was only one of the many things David Sedaris said this past Sunday that had me busting a gut. I often describe Sedaris as the man I would marry if I weren’t already married, he weren’t so short and he wasn’t into dudes. Hysterical. I love, love, love him.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Redhawks Versus Bobcats

I have made fun of the Redhawks one too many times and yesterday the city of Oxford and Mother Nature took revenge on me. I spent yesterday afternoon at a conference at Miami University. When it let out at 5 I got a bit turned around on my way to my car. Right about the time I got myself sorted out, it started to rain. Pour. Torrential downpour. Dime-size drops landing everywhere. It was if everything turned against me and said, “You think Athens is better than Oxford? You think Ohio University is better than Miami University?” I do, by the way. “Then take this.”

I was quickly drenched and at the end of the 20 minutes it took me to get to my car, I was soaked to the bone. One boy did take pity on me and offer me a ride but it was when I was within yards of the parking garage.

In my car, paying no attention to social rules, I stripped out of my soggy clothes and put on workout clothes that had been in my trunk. And both regretted mocking Miami University and missed Ohio University.

Go Bobcats. (Some people never learn.)

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Combating Modern Day Slavery

When I was in college I had the opportunity to graduate a quarter early. Aghast at not graduating with my friends, I scrambled for any opportunity that would let me stay in Athens. It turns out there was a way! I could take two graduate level courses as an undergraduate (and at the price of an undergraduate) and I leapt at the opportunity. (It actually set me up well for graduate school a year later so it was a wise move.)

One of the classes I took was all about militias in the United States and it introduced me to the work of Morris Dees and the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). It also taught me that the world is filled with so much more hate and ignorance than I had ever been exposed to. After that class I started donating money to the SPLC because I believed in its cause. They in turn kept me educated about the atrocities they were fighting in the US and trends in hate. Isn’t that awful? You can actually trend hate. Types of hate. Expressions of hate. Recipients of hate.

Here in Cincinnati we have the Freedom Center, a jewel that we’re lucky to have. The museum focuses on people who don’t have freedom, how others have achieved it and the heroes who help others achieve freedom. (Plug: If you go on Tuesdays and are exploring the exhibit walking you through the Civil War, keep an eye out for my Uncle Ray, a volunteer at the Freedom Center. He’s a great resource and able to tell you just about anything you would ever want to know about the Civil War!) For many people, the museum can achieve the same purpose as that graduate course I took: it can open their eyes to some of the hateful things that have happened and are happening around the world, as well as celebrating the people who are making great strides in fighting for freedom.

The newest exhibit at the museum is called Slavery Today and it focuses on the fact that slavery is still very much in existence, including in the US, though we might not always recognize it. Among the examples of slavery illustrated are forced labor, bonded indenture, child slavery and sex trafficking. According to the museum’s website, “an estimated 12 – 27 million people are caught in one or another form of slavery. Between 600,000 and 800,000 are trafficked internationally, with as many as 17,500 people trafficked into the United States. Nearly three out of every four victims are women. Half of modern-day slaves are children.”

Through statistics, pictures and videos, visitors are exposed to the horrors people are putting other people through. While walking through the rooms, I saw people slack-jawed, ghostly white, crying. I specifically remember one video that turned my stomach. A man was speaking of the farm he had and his employees. Except that his employees were indentured servants – yes, like you learned about in grade school – and he was so proud of himself. He talked about how much money he was making and his disregard for the men. I had to turn off the video and walk away midway.

The curators at the Freedom Center did a great job at making Slavery Today impactful, emotional and informative. If I had any suggestions for improvements, it would only be to use more examples of US slavery to make the reality more real within our own country. I’m always scared of people ignoring numbers and thinking, “That happens, but not here.” That said, this is definitely an exhibit I will be recommending to friends and family.

For people who are interested in visiting the Freedom Center but not in being barraged with only negative statistics, be assured that Slavery Today does end in a positive way. It empowers visitors by telling them what they can do, much in the way I felt empowered to battle hate by supporting the SPLC. The museum gives people information about antislavery activities that are happening around the world, including:

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Most Dangerous City in America Not Looking So Dangerous Anymore

It pisses me off royally when people talk about my neighborhood being dangerous. I love my neighborhood and feel perfectly safe in it. Yes, it has it has its share of violence and crime but I believe every neighborhood does. I think in urban areas it is a little more public. (You can read that however you’d like. I am trying very hard not to make some political statement about race, class, injustice, etc. Oh wait, I sort of just did.)

I have had people “helpfully” call to tell me about some shooting near me. I never return with helpful stats on the amount of date rape in their neighborhood. But I could. I have had people look up sex offenders in my neighborhood and tell me how bad the numbers are but then fail to do the same in their own neighborhood. What?

Honestly, I know my neighborhood is not a suburb and I don’t pretend it to be. I do, however, know it is a fine place to raise kids because I see families with great kids all around me. I also know those kids are raised with street smarts. And those street smarts are the same that I have to apply in my day to day living. I’m talking basic stuff here: don’t leave your crap sitting out in your car, don’t leave your windows open at night, lock your doors and be aware of your surroundings.

Wonder Boy and I wanted to live in the city and that is where we ended up. Last year we were a short walk from what was considered the Number One Most Danger City in America. That was enough to elicit some more unwelcome comments and advice as well as some questioning about my own choices.

But guess what? Now Cincinnati is number 24. And yeah, I know we’re still on the list, but improvements are being made. And I’m glad, because I love my city!

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

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