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The Bethlehem Blog Times


 State Senator Jeanette Reibman, 1916-2006
 

(Please Note: Henceforth I will be posting here every Sunday. I'd have started this schedule next week, except that the news of Senator Jeannette Reibman's passing pushed the matter to the front of my agenda.)

It is always too bad to lose someone of Senator Reibman's caliber, especially since they seem to be making relatively few of them any more. I remember being in high school when an interesting thing happened in neighboring Northampton County--that is, a woman was elected to serve in the state legislature, where in fact she became the first woman speaker of the house. I found my attention drawn to her sporadically through the years, as she became the first woman elected to serve a full term in the state senate, and challenged unsuccessfully for the United States Senate and the House of Representatives.
She championed all the "women's issues," by which I mean issues that deal particularly with the survival of civilization as we have known it--things like education and the arts. Because of her political adroitness, she was enormously successful in promoting her causes, which also included the cause of working people.
I had the luck to make her personal acquaintance when I served briefly as a member of the Bethlehem and Northampton County Democratic Committees. Little as I ever knew her, and unimportant as I was, I found her friendly and outgoing, with a special charisma that accounted for her high standing with voters. I imagine she was not as friendly toward those who opposed her political purposes; she reminded me, because of her achievements, of the old phrase "iron fist in velvet glove." (Although, come to think of it, I doubt if she ever made an actual fist. She came across as a lady.)
I last saw her in the mid-fall of 2004,when she, her late husband Nathan Reibman, a friend of mine and I happened to be in Southside Bethlehem's Bridgeworks Restaurant at the same time. At that point she had been retired for 10 years; yet to my astonishment she looked as well and seemed as mentally alert as she had ever been.
And that's the way she will stay in my mind.
Posted by Berengaria at 12:36 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 On Vacation
 

This blog is going on vacation until the writer has more time.
Posted by Berengaria at 12:49 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Historic Depredations And Disabilities
 

On Monday, for the first time in many years, I attended a school board meeting. There were many reasons for the long lapse--part of the time I was out of town, writing either "In The Lion's Mouth" or "Smokestacks And Black Diamonds." Most of the time I simply found other local issues more compelling than school issues.
This time, though, as the founder of the South Bethlehem Historical Society, I bestirred myself to get there. My intent was to put in a word in a last-ditch effort to save historic Broughal Middle School, which the board plans to raze.
Predictably, I made no headway with them. Having made a wrong-headed decision, they merely recommitted themselves to it. With the money they could save by an intelligent redesign of the old school, they probably could supply each and every child in the district with a laptop computer. This is a goal that seems highly important to them, but not important enough for them to call off their historical depredations.
Getting to this meeting was well over half the challenge. It was held in the school district's offices in the former Edgeboro School, a building with no elevator. Two flights of stairs--perhaps a total of 40 to 60 steps, separated by a landing--led up to the meeting room. Hard going indeed for a person with a prosthesis and a walker.
There was some nasty discussion (initiated by me) over this fact. The Powers That Are apologized, claiming they did not know I was coming. My contention was--and is--that they had to ASSUME that either I was coming, or that some other disabled citizen was coming. If the Americans With Disabilities Act still means anything, it means THAT.
I will be going back whenever it seems necessary and potentially useful.
Posted by Berengaria at 12:04 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Apologies To My Readers
 

Hello. A combination of general holiday downtime (we ARE in the vicinity of America's Christmas City, after all), my own technological ineptitude, and my need for personal downtime, all have contributed to scant postings lately. My apologies. I intend to pick it up now, all things being equal; and I also intend to start another blog, this one having to do with health and wellness. In this new one I hope to share what useful things I have learned in my battle with diabetes and other health problems. Also, I hope to learn from readers--and to pass on to other readers--things they have discovered to be useful in keeping or regaining health.
So stay tuned for that; and meanwhile, let us contnue our delayed consideration of what will become of Bethlehem. Which way to the future?
Can the place survive with a casino? Can it survive without one? Who will replace the powerful State Representative T.J. Rooney, and what difference will that make?
We'll talk about these things beginning tomorrow.
Posted by Berengaria at 10:19 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 We Need A Little (More) Christmas
 

My views on how Bethlehem can survive--if it is going to survive at all--may seem hardboiled. Seeing no alternative, I am an unabashed advocate of casino gambling.
But I am also an advocate of using the city's heritage to best advantage, far better than it has ever been used before, to draw visitors here and educate and entertain them. This also will strengthen the economy--rather significantly, if it is done well.
This means doing much better than has ever been done before with the city's name, its three-plus-century-old story, its multiethnic background (NOT multicultural, since there can only be room for one culture in a country). Take all the riches that are already here, add some serious thought on how to present it well; and then--Make it so.
Somebody has said Bethlehem will always be a place of great potential. This ironic statement suggests that Bethlehemites will never work together for the common interest. And certainly that has seemed true up until now. I have seen good iniatives go down, time and again, as a result of personal and intergroup conflicts. For once, let us get it right. We are not a world capital. We certainly have seen better days. But we are a wonderful place. If we work together we can be better yet. If not, the consequences could be dire.
More coming up on working together. Plus a personal vision of that better future.
Posted by Berengaria at 7:10 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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Author: Berengaria
From Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA
 
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