Tonight – “The Accidental Activist” : Jim Peterson presentation at the Library
February 9, 2009 | Filed Under Events, Seriously/Real Stuff, Around town | Leave a Comment
Tonight at the Library, listen to Jim Peterson talk about, and show images from, his journey to India last year. Jim took part in the march for Tibetan human rights. He is passionate and dynamic on this important topic. I remember him sharing this incredible story during an interesting and animated conversation over breakfast at Pinky’s Cafe when he came back from that first trip to India, and I look forward to hearing more, and seeing the photos tonight. Jim is headed back to India in a couple of days.
From the flyer for the event:
How one Montana man went to India and ended up marching 750 miles with Tibetan nuns and monks.
Jim Petersen left Livingston last January to go to India for the first time. He wanted to learn some cultural aspects of the Tibetan people in exile. He took cooking lessons, tutored some young Tibetans in English and attended the spring teachings from the Dalai Lama. He learned of the Tibetan Peoples Uprising Movement and the planned march from Dharamsala to Delhi and on to the border of Tibet. He invites you to come to the audio visual presentation documenting the events of this noble march for Tibetan human rights.
Tonight, February 9 at 7:00 PM in The Bev Steveson Community Room at the Livingston Public Library.
Click the image below to see the flyer. Peterson is at right in the photos.
Park County Cares “Food for All” program
February 5, 2009 | Filed Under Seriously/Real Stuff, Around town | Leave a Comment
Livingston based civic organizations, churches, businesses and non profits are joining together to help combat hunger in Park County. The Livingston Food Pantry will be the beneficiary of money collected during the “Food for All” drive January 19th – February 19th, 2009.
Created to serve as a community service project in honor of Martin Luther King’s birthday, this month long initiative will enable the Livingston Food Pantry to reach more families in need.
A group of supporters assembled Monday in front of the Food Pantry to kick off the project, which originated with a meeting at Dr. Laurel Desnick and Jim Baerg’s home to discuss a focus for community outreach and support. Since that meeting, a new floor has been installed and a dishwasher provided by the Crazy Mountain Ranch at Livingston’s Loaves and Fishes.
“We’re all in this together, those with very few resources and those with many. This a community that cares about ALL its members,” said Laurie Francis of Community Health Partners. CHP is joining together with the Chamber of Commerce, Vision Livingston, Wheat Montana, Montana Women For, Livingston Schools, and several local churches, groceries, growers and businesses to help support “Food for All.”
“What started as a service day has grown into an important project with far reaching potential,” said Margie Kidder, of Montana Women For. “The ‘Park County Cares’ idea is something we will keep going with all year. Literally every person we’ve contacted has said, ‘How can I help?’ ‘Food for All’ can use money, time and energy from everyone in the community. There are so many ways to get involved and we want to urge everyone to do just that.”
“The need is great,” reports Michael McCormick of the Livingston Food Pantry. “At this moment, I’m looking at my shelves and see an empty hole where powdered milk should be. Your donations can help us help this whole community. I want to thank all of these business owners and neighbors for coming up with this great project.”
In addition to providing food for families with economic hardship, there will also be information and classes to help all of Park County manage during tough economic times. “This affects all of us. We all need to stretch our food dollars these days,” said Joni Kresich.
All public representatives from Park County – Bob Ebinger, John Esp and Joel Boniek support this initiative and have agreed to lend their names to the project. The Livingston City Council is discussing the project at tomorrow evening’s meeting. Others at Monday’s event included Lou Ann Nelson from the Livingston Chamber of Commerce, Livingston School superintendent Hannibal Anderson, Vision Livingston’s Karyle Frazier, Michael Sanders of the Environmental Adventure Tour Company, Hebbard Blesius, Jon Ellen Snyder and Amanda Knuchel of ERA/Landmark Real Estate, Joni Kresich, Joanne Gardner and Margie Kidder of Montana Women For, Edie Linneweber who (along with Katherine Dunlap) is coordinating the churches in Livingston to participate, Laurie Francis of CHP, Jim Baerg and his daughters Nastia and Larisa and Michael McCormick of the Livingston Food Pantry.
Dorothy Bradley of Clyde Park attended Monday’s meeting to offer game to the Livingston Food Pantry and to discuss how Clyde Park can get involved with it’s own program. Leaders of this program plan to reach out to Gardiner, Clyde Park and Wilsall in the next few days.
The public can get involved by making monetary donations to the Food Pantry. Volunteers are also desperately needed to help at Loaves and Fishes and the Livingston Food Pantry.
Watch for donation jars in local businesses and in churches, and join Park County Cares for a neighborhood walk during the month. Families will be going door to door to raise money for this project. A $39.95 donation can feed a family of four for one month through the Livingston Food Pantry.
Other focus projects already underway include interacting with all elementary schools to ensure children are getting enough nutritional food daily, a “crockpot” program, outreach to seniors and special needs citizens and the Livingston Shoveling Brigade. For more information contact Michael McCormick at the Livingston Food Pantry - 222 –5335, Margie Kidder at 222-7040, Bonnie Hyatt Murphy at 222 – 2302 or the Livingston Chamber of Commerce.
Hurry up, Congress, these babies won’t last!
February 2, 2009 | Filed Under LOL Feature Stories (satire) | Leave a Comment
The US Treasury Secretary’s plan to buy bad debts from struggling banks has inspired a creative reaction
from citizens in Livingston who used to be just plain angry at taxpayers’ money being used to pay for spa weekends, private jets, executive bonuses, expensive shoes, pearl-handled garlic presses, luxury toilets, fine rugs, toupees, cosmetic surgery, limousines, and sky boxes for Knicks games.
“We figured that instead of protesting the TARP plans, we’d give regular Americans the same opportunity to sell their bad assets to the government,” said Lester Lanover of Take Our Useless Crappy Assets Now (TOUCAN). The group started by setting up tables at Albertson’s, Town and Country, and in front of Action Pawn to offer fellow Livingstonians the chance to sell their very own piles of crap to the US government.
But the government knows full well that it is not actually welcome in Livingston, so the group has moved its wares to the Web.
Some of the bad assets to be found there include 2008’s Montana Millionaire tickets and a dried chip of bison poop from the Lamar Valley. The idea is to recoup much more than the assets are worth, “because that’s the American way.”
That means the seller of the lottery tickets, which cost $20 each, expects to have the government pay $430 for each of the failed tickets. The purveyor of the bison chip claims that “You can see the face of Teddy Roosevelt” in the chip. “I could get, like $250,000, for this on eBay, but I am offering it here for just $120,000.”
Other items at press time (but hurry, Congress, these babies won’t last) included these from the buymtcrap.com Web site: 
TOUCAN has promised to use some of the money for sponsorship of a lavish booth and party at the annual state Fly Fishing Championship and Tractor Pull. A laudable goal, but the group’s impact on Livingston’s high stakes and lucrative flea market business could have a devastating ripple effect on the local economy.


