Albany PL Trustee Candidates Forum May 5

May 19 voting locations may differ from the general election

Swiped from here about the Albany Public Library: “The Trustee Candidates Forum is a moderated Q&A with the candidates running for Library Trustee.” It will be held on Tuesday, May 5, at 6 p.m., in the large auditorium at the Washington Avenue branch, 161 Washington Avenue.

“The questions and answers are prepared in advance, and the forum is moderated by a current trustee. The purpose of the forum is to give candidates a chance to share their views on libraries with the community, and for the community to hear the candidates out in preparation for the Library Budget Vote and Trustee Election on May 19.”

“Nine candidates will be on the May 19 ballot vying for three seats on the APL Board of Trustees. The following library trustee candidates submitted valid nominating petitions to the City School District of Albany and will appear on the ballot in this order, which is determined at random by the district:

1. Kathryn Bamberger
2. Lori Kochanski
3. Matthew Reed
4. Jenna Kersten
5. Smriti Sinha
6. Kayli McTague
7. Sarah Macinski (incumbent)
8. Kenneth Louzier
9. Leslie Dykeman

“This year, there are three open trustee seats: two full five-year terms and one partial one-year term. The two candidates who receive the highest number of votes are elected to the five-year terms, and the third highest vote-getter is elected to the one-year term.”

“This event also includes a brief Community Report & Budget Information session with APL Executive Director Andrea Nicolay.”

Here are the current and proposed library budgets.

Exercising the franchise

I will say there is one candidate I’m definitely voting for on May 19 from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., and two who are likely, but I will wait until the forum to decide for sure. I’m very excited that there are so many candidates. 

Also, I’m voting YES on the library budget. The increase is due in part to the usual demands on a system. Also, in some years past, before the current library director took over, the budget was NOT submitted to the public. The upside was that the previous year’s budget was automatically passed at the same level. But the downside was that the income didn’t keep pace with expenses.  

I’m voting YES on the school budget and the two propositions.

There are three candidates for two slots on the school board:

Tabitha Wilson (incumbent)

Quinn Lee, who is involved in public health

Serena White Lake, an attorney at Albany Law School

The three candidates will debate virtually on Monday, May 18, at 6 pm; the link should be available on the school district website in a few days.

If you are looking for where to vote, which is likely DIFFERENT from where you vote in primary and general elections, go here.

Sunday Stealing Looks Back on April

Stories & Spoken Word Poetry at The Madison

Welcome to Sunday Stealing. Here we will steal all types of questions from every corner of the blogosphere. Our promise to you is that we will work hard to find the most interesting and intelligent questions. Cheers to all of us thieves!

We’re stealing this meme from last month from Life of a Fool. This blogger maintains that this meme has “been seen everywhere.” The questions only require a yes or no, but if you’d like to elaborate, we’d like to hear what you have to say.

In the Past Month Meme: Looks Back on April

During April, did you …

1. Drink alcohol?

Actually, yes. One tequila sunrise after I participated on the 27th, the fourth Tuesday of the month, in Stories & Spoken Word Poetry at The Madison, a theater on upper Madison Avenue in Albany.   

“Bring a 5-minute story or spoken word poem/piece to perform. Tellers are encouraged to share a story in the style of The Moth – personal stories with no notes. Not in the mood to tell a personal story… how about a folktale? Don’t have a story or spoken word piece to perform? Grab a beverage from the bar and be part of the audience – support the artists and the Madison! Not up for a late night? Neither are we – you’ll be on your way to your next destination by 8:30! “

In April, I talked about getting arrested and a subsequent hitchhiking excursion. Back in March, I spoke about James Archer. This month, on May 26th, I’ll talk about…

Something fishy

2. Eat sushi?

No. I’m not that fond of sushi. But my wife, daughter, and I ate at a sushi restaurant in downtown Amherst, MA, the weekend of the daughter’s art show.  THEY like sushi. I had General Tso’s chicken, far less oily than I’ve had in the past.

3. Go shopping with friends?

I hate shopping, and I certainly don’t go with my friends. It’s likely my wife and I went grocery shopping before we visited our daughter in Amherst.

4. Eat an entire box of cookies by yourself?

No. But I did buy a box of Golden Oreos for my Dad’s Group on Wednesday, the 22nd. The guy who usually eats the most of them wasn’t there. His loss! So I brought them home, and the package was empty within a week; my wife helped. 

5. Dye your hair?

What hair?

My blog can drink legally in every state

Dustbury, ABC Wednesday, Forgotten Stars, AmeriNZ

My blog is so old that it can drink legally in every state. So I decided to credit (or blame) 21 people (more or less) who facilitated that. Some I’ve mentioned before.

Won – Rocco, my friend and fellow employee of the comic book store, ran into me in the autumn of 2004. He asked me, “Are you reading Fred’s blog?” I said, “I don’t read ANY blogs.”

Too – So I started reading the blog of Fred Hembeck, the somewhat famous cartoonist with Marvel, DC, FantaCo, et al., which had started in January 2003. He wrote every day, or nearly every day, and he wrote a LOT. Eventually, I started emailing him with ideas for his posts. I know he noted Herb Alpert’s 70th birthday at the end of March 2005, and he credited me.

Tree – Mark Evanier, the guy who was an assistant to Jack Kirby, wrote cartoon shows, and a bunch of other things, appeared on Fred’s extensive linkage page. ME wrote a LOT, though not nearly at the word count of FGH.

For – I don’t know if I came to Steve Gerber (d. 2008) via Hembeck or Evanier. In any case, his pledge to write every day, which he stuck to until he got sick, was the final push to get to start my own blog.

Fie! -When I first started blogging, I was also looking at a number of blogs from Fred’s roster. A fair number of the bloggers seemed to be somehow connected to one Chris (Lefty) Brown. I got involved with a mixed tape exchange, OK, mixed CDs. The group included Eddie Mitchell, SamuraiFrog, Thom Wade, Johnny Bacardi, Mike Sterling, and others, including…

Cease – Greg Burgas, who still writes about his current consumption of pop culture, as well as My Daughter Chronicles.

The game show

Sen – So what would I write about? One of the topics, I suppose, needed to be about JEOPARDY, the game show I appeared on in November 1998. Six and a half years later, I figured I had better write about it soon. So I’ll attribute this angle to Adenia Yates (1908-1966), my mother’s maternal aunt, whom I would see at lunchtime each weekday. She turned me onto the game. I suppose Merv Griffin and his then-wife, Julann, who designed the game’s format, Art Fleming, and Alex Trebek, should get a piece of the credit.

Ate – As I admitted repeatedly here, my wife and I got one or two of those baby books, in which one is SUPPOSED to write down all of those milestones (first step, first tooth, etc.) that the Daughter reached. Well, I SUCKED at this. So I vowed to write about her every month on the 26th. And I have.

Nein – Ken Levine was a writer on TV shows I used to watch, such as MASH, CHEERS, FRASIER, THE SIMPSONS, and DHARMA & GREG. He started his blog shortly after I did. He would solicit Friday questions. I’d ask some, and he answered most of them. He eventually started a podcast. At some point, he stopped blogging and limited his posts to podcasts.  Those ended in 2023. You can find the blog – though not the audio for the podcasts – here.  

The Times Onion

Tin – In the late 1990s, Mike Huber was involved with these community webpages, housed on the Times Union website. Then he was in charge of the community bloggers on the TU site. Since  I was posting every day, he wanted me on the TU blog farm. I resisted for a couple of years, but in 2008, I relented. I wrote about that experience here; the TU community blogs died in 2021.

Leaven- One of the TU bloggers was Chuck Miller. He’s also an everyday writer. After he left the TU blog farms, he has lifted up other local (or local-adjacent) bloggers every Saturday

Too well – J. Eric Smith, once a TU blogger, is now in Arizona but still on Chuck’s roster. Among other topics, Eric writes a lot about music and film. He mentioned me kindly a couple of times.

Thirsty -Charles Hill, a/k/a Dustbury, was a legendary blogger from 1996(!) until he died in 2019. He commented on my blog almost daily, and I enjoyed the interaction. I’m extremely sad that his stuff wasn’t captured by the Internet Archive. I still follow my fellow Dustbury acolyte, fillyjonk

Every week

Fortran – I came across one of those groups, an abecedarian meme called ABC Wednesday, where one participates with others, literally from around the world, in sharing a picture, a poem, an essay, SOMETHING with the various letters of the alphabet. It was run by Denise Nesbitt. My first post there was in October 2008 in Round 3, letter K. By the end of Round 5, I was assisting her. And from July 2012 to July 2017, I ran the thing, assisted ably by Leslie from British Columbia and others. Then, from that date until the end of 2019, I helped Melody.

Iffy- Arthur Schenck. I found AmeriNZ, a blog and podcast by a US expat now in New Zealand, via the demographically similar Nik Dirga. (How I found Nik, I have no idea.) Anyway, I’d comment on Arthur’s platform and steal, er, borrow ideas.

Cistern – I didn’t even know what a Byzantium Shores was, but I started following Kelly Sedinger regularly. Even my wife, who doesn’t read these things, knows that Kelly is the overalls guy from the Buffalo area.  He moved the site to Forgotten Stars about five years ago.  He’s a real writer who’s published books! HE’s a budding photographer! But he STILL hasn’t done a pie to the face in far too long.

Severed teen -Alan  David Doane was one of those FantaCo kids whom I really got to know when he was an adult. Among many things, he convinced me that I could write about comic books on a now-defunct platform. It was challenging and fun!

Irwin Corey’s brother-in-law (really)

Ate teen – Arnold Berman was a kind of relative. Charlotte, one of his sisters, married my maternal grandmother’s brother, Ernie. Arnold’s fascination with his genealogy has made me more interested in mine, which has become a recurring theme on my blog. He died a couple of years ago.    

Nein teen -Ken Screven – The legendary CBS 6 (WRBG-TV) newsman was a TU blogger after he retired. He turned out to be more pointed than he was on the air, which probably influenced me to be a little more direct in my opinions.  He died in 2022, and I miss him.

Too Auntie – Steve Bissette, the great artist of Swamp Thing and a whole lot of other stuff, met at FantaCo in 1987, I believe. He was doing some horror art, and I did, among other things, the mail order and shipped out items he helped create.   We fell out of touch, but reconnected when I found his blog in 2008, which I wrote about here.

Too Auntie One – Amy Barlow Liberatore is Sharp Little Pencil, a blogger from near my hometown of Binghamton, NY. 

#1 pop hits of 1946

To Each His Own

These are the number one pop hits of 1946. Fascinatingly, of the 20 recordings, the same song went to the top by two different artists (The Gypsy and Oh! What It Seemed ) or even three artists (To Each His Own).

This is a function, in large part, because between 1944 and 1958, there were multiple charts. In 1946, it was Best Sellers, Juke Box, and Disc Jockey. That’s why there are 96(!) #1 hits that year.

The Gypsy – Ink Spots (Decca), 13 weeks at #1, gold record. Even though they came out long before I was born, I always loved the group.

Oh! What It Seemed To Be – Frankie Carle and his orchestra with Marjorie Hughes, vocals (Columbia), 11 weeks at #1. Co-written by Carle. Hughes is Carle’s daughter.

Rumors Are Flying – Frankie Carle and his orchestra, with Marjorie Hughes, vocals (Columbia), 9 weeks at #1

To Each His Own – Eddy Howard and his orchestra, vocals by Eddy Howard and trio. (Majestic), 8 weeks at #1, gold record. The song is from the film To Each His Own.

The Gypsy – Dinah Shore, orchestra under the direction of Sonny Burke (Columbia), 8 weeks at #1. I recall some of her talk shows and even some of her later variety series.

Oh! What It Seemed To Be – Frank Sinatra, orchestra under the direction  of Axel Stordahl (Columbia),  8 weeks at #1

The Old Lamp-Lighter – Sing and Sway with Sammy Kaye with Billy Williams and choir (RCA Victor),  7 weeks at #1

(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons -the King Cold Trio (Capitol), 6 weeks at #1

Winter hit

Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! – Vaughn Monroe and his orchestra, vocal by Vaughn Monroe and The Norton Sisters (Victor), 5 weeks at #1. Written by Sammy Cahn and Jule Styne. This didn’t chart until 12/22/1945 and peaked on 1/19/1946. So this was a real winter, rather than a Christmas song

Five Minutes More – Frank Sinatra, orchestra under the direction of Axel Stordahl (Columbia), 4 weeks at #1

Prisoner of Love – Perry Como with Russ Case and his Orchestra (RCA Victor), 3 weeks at #1, gold record. He had a musical variety show from 1948 to 1963, which I vaguely recall

To Each His Own -Freddy Martin and his orchestra, with Stuart Wade, vocals (RCA Victor), 2 weeks at #1, inspired by the Paramount picture, To Each His Own

Personality – Johnny Mercer and the Pied Pipers, with Paul Weston and his orchestra (Capitol), 2 weeks at #1. “Dorothy Lamour introduced on-screen this great Johnny Burke-Jimmy Van Heusen song in the Hope-Crosby film ‘Road To Utopia.'”

Symphony – Freddy Martin and his orchestra, with Clyde Rogers, vocals (Victor), 2 weeks at #1

Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief – Betty Hutton, orchestra and vocal quartet conducted by Paul Weston (Capitol ), 2 weeks at #1. Here’s Betty Hutton performing the musical number from the 1945 Paramount movie “The Stork Club”.

Ole Buttermilk Sky – Kay Kyser and his orchestra, with Michael Douglas and the Campus Kids (Columbia), 2 weeks at #1, song from “Canyon Passage.” Michael Douglas later became TV host Mike Douglas, whom I would watch occasionally

These are all one week at number one

Surrender – Perry Como, with Russ Case and his orchestra (RCA Victor)

To Each His Own -Ink Spots (Decca ), gold record. Song written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans

I’m A Big Girl Now – Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye with Betty Barclay, vocals (RCA Victor)

White Christmas – Bing Crosby with Ken Darby Singers and John Scott Trotter and his orchestra (Decca), a holiday Song. This is the 1942 version, the last year it charted before it was supplanted by the 1947 take. The Irving Berlin composition from 1942 was the eighth-most-recorded song between 1890 and 1954.

April rambling; alternative world order

Sid Krofft

Defective hotel clock

Amnesty International’s annual report on human rights around the globe described a push for a “predatory alternative world order.”

His Erratic Behavior and Extreme Comments Revive Mental Health Debate

The Most Ludicrous, Morally Obscene, and Dangerous Man in the World

The deaf, dumb, and blind cult is still dazzled by the nastiest, most naked ‘emperor’ ever, and Jordan Klepper Gets MAGA’s Take on the Iran War & the War with the Pope | The Daily Show

‘Anytime you engage the Border Patrol in interior enforcement, the wheels are going to fall off.’

Google Broke Its Promise to Me. Now ICE Has My Data.

The insider trading suspicions looming over this regime

Flu vaccine no longer mandated for US troops, Hegseth says, citing “medical autonomy” and religious freedom.

When Ezekiel 25:17 Meets Psalms 3:16

The Pentagon doesn’t want you to hear about threats to the editorial independence of Stars and Stripes. They fired their ombudsperson.

He Wrote an Op-Ed. Then the police tracked him. A legal case in Kansas shows how surveillance technology can distort policing priorities. When authorities can monitor anyone cheaply, the temptation to target critics increases.

Jimmy Kimmel Provides an Alternative White House Correspondents’ Dinner Roast

AfA

Astronauts for America is a nonpartisan organization of former NASA astronauts who have sworn to defend the Constitution of the United States,  committed to science, evidence-based decision-making, public service, and the rule of law.

Measles Took My Daughter. This Is What I Want Everyone to Know.

The Death of a Superman. How clothing donation bins quietly kill homeless people across North America.

988 Launch Tied to Drop in Youth Suicides

The Short and Ridiculous Trial of a Protester Arrested in an Inflatable Penis Costume. An Alabama cop who confronted the No Kings protester claimed she posed a risk to public safety.

The product liability legal case of the century arrives this summer: Coyote vs. Acme, the movie

Gerry Conway, Former Marvel EIC, Dies at 73. The first Spider-Man comic I read was the Death of Gwen Stacy, which he wrote, among MANY other pieces for Marvel and DC. He also wrote for television, including Diagnosis: Murder and, my favorite of his, Law & Order: Criminal Intent. 

Sid Krofft: About and Memories,  and H.R. Pufnstuf, Witchiepoo, Joy the Bugaloo, and me

Marvel Confirms 2019 ‘Avengers: Endgame’ To Be Replaced Before ‘Doomsday’ Released- a good reason to give up on the MCU, IMO

William Shatner is selling Kellogg’s Raisin Bran

“Your settlement payment of $9 for the In re EpiPen Marketing, Sales Practices and Antitrust Litigation, Civil Case No. 2:17-md-02785-DDC-TJJ is now available.” I’m rich!

Crease and Desist and The Cat Phone Came Back and The Crime of Borrowing a Teenage Witch? and The Good Advice That The DMV Rejected

MUSIC

Antichrist Superstar from Colbert

Aeolian Beauty by RZA · Colorado Symphony · Christopher Dragon

Goodbye Henry – RAYE, feat. Al Green

Solsbury Hill -MonaLisa Twins

Gladys Knight’s title tune for 1989’s Bond movie Licence To Kill

Meaning Business – Wendy Eisenberg
Coverville 1577: 50th Anniversary of Ramones and 1578: Dave Mason Tribute and Paul Carrack Cover Story
Favorite Songs By Favorite Artists (Series Four) #1: HOUSE Of ALL

Angel Of The Morning – Merrilee Rush

Kiss – Prince

Ramblin' with Roger
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