Jean Baker Miller, 78; psychiatrist challenged how society viewed women (obituary from last Aug.)

June 30, 2007

ED - I just found out the Jean Baker Miller died!  Her work was very influential in terms of my own thinking around women, especially with regards to concepts of mental health.

from http://www.boston.com/news/globe/obituaries/articles/2006/08/05/jean_baker_miller_78_psychiatrist_challenged_how_society_viewed_women?mode=PF

By Gloria Negri, Globe Staff | August 5, 2006

Well before the feminist movement took hold in the 1970s, Jean Baker Miller, a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, was pondering the role of women in modern society, questioning why so many of her patients were developing aches and pains for which medicine had no answer. “As they talked about how much of their lives was spent on meeting the needs of others," she told the Globe in 1981, “the women I met as friends when our children were young expressed the same doubts about their own self-worth as the patients. In general, women seemed to feel there must be something wrong with us." Dr. Miller, a practicing psychiatrist for almost 50 years, set out to prove there was nothing wrong with women, but rather with the way modern culture viewed them. Her groundbreaking 1976 book, “Toward a New Psychology of Women," was a best-seller in the fields of psychology and women’s studies. In it, Dr. Miller, a social activist as well as a feminist, examines dominant and subordinate roles in relationships between men and women and draws a similar comparison in societal and global interactions. Dr. Miller, founding director of the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute at Wellesley Centers for Women at Wellesley College, died last Saturday at her Brookline home after suffering from post-polio syndrome and a 13-year struggle with emphysema. She was 78. “Jean was always concerned about injustice and inequalities among people," said her husband, M.S. “Mike" Miller, former chairman of the sociology department at Boston University. “She felt that if people built connections among themselves, there would be concern for one another and that if they tried to do things together, to build rather than isolate, that this would lead to a larger social change." Judith Jordan, who became director of the institute when Dr. Miller stepped down six months ago, said yesterday that the main contribution of Dr. Miller’s book “was to take what were then seen as weaknesses of women and show us the ways in which they were actually strengths and essential to the well-being of all people." “I would say that although Jean worked primarily in the field of psychiatry, her real passion was for shifting the world in the direction of more social justice and social change," she said. Dr. Miller had all the qualities to effect change, Jordan said. “She had a great sense of perspective, which was often revealed in her deep sense of humor. She really lived her message, She was truly humble and had incredible courage about her vision." Since Dr. Miller’s death, Jordan said, the institute has received calls and e-mails from all over the world. “Most women say she made them felt heard. They felt seen. They felt validated." Dr. Miller had sandy hair and pale skin and eyes. Her slight stature belied her steely resolve to change society’s view of women as dependent and subordinate. As former director of the Stone Center for Developmental Services at Wellesley College, she said in a 1984 Globe story that what was considered a female trait of caring about relationships was “the human characteristic most needed at this time . . . in this day of nuclear threat, even connected to the survival of us all." Amy Banks, a Harvard Medical School psychiatrist at the institute, recalled staff meetings held at Dr. Miller’s house with a kettle boiling for tea. “We talked about how we were going to change the world, and those conversations continued [until] shortly before Jean died. Her eyes still lit up with every new idea." Born in the Bronx to Henry and Irene (Mustard) Baker, she was named Jean Teutonia Baker. She contracted polio when she was 10 months old and underwent several operations before the age of 10 that left her with an atrophied leg and a limp. The polio made her “quiet and sensitive to other people," her husband said, but it didn’t stop her. “I think it was one of the elements that shaped her ideology," he said, “that made her concerned about the elements of equality and decency for others." Dr. Miller was one of three children in a poor family, and the girls in her neighborhood didn’t go to college, Miller said. But “Jean felt she had to support herself — that was part of it — but also that she was very smart and felt she wanted to achieve something," he said. She won a full scholarship to Sarah Lawrence College, where she changed her major from history to premed and graduated in 1948. She then won a full scholarship to the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, where she was one of 10 women in a class of 100. She graduated in 1952. After her first-year internship in internal medicine at Montefiore Hospital in New York City, she decided to switch to psychiatry and did her residency at Bellevue Medical Center, Jacobi Medical Center, both in New York City, and Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse. The Millers, who met at a political meeting in New York City, were married in 1955. Between 1956 and 1972, Dr. Miller had private practices in psychiatry and psychoanalysis at different times in Manhattan or Syracuse. While juggling a full academic and clinical schedule, she was also a full-time mother to their two sons. “Socially, mother was delightful and a great storyteller," her son, Edward D. of New York City, said. In 1972-1973, the Millers lived in London, where Dr. Miller was working at Tavistock Institute, a psychological and social sciences center. They moved to Boston in 1973 when her husband was appointed at BU, but returned to London in 1976 for a year while Dr. Miller worked at the Charing Cross Hospital studying the impact of stillbirth on families. After coming back to Boston, Dr. Miller carried on her private practice and taught at Boston University School of Medicine and at Harvard Medical School before beginning at The Stone Center in 1981. The Jean Baker Miller Training Institute was founded in 1995. In her last published article at Wellesley this spring, Dr. Miller discussed the dilemma of women having to choose between work and full-time motherhood. “Women have made tremendous strides in advancing our options," she wrote. “We don’t want to get bogged down now. . . . Society needs to help women, men, and families find new multiple-choice alternatives today." In addition to her husband and son, Dr. Miller leaves another son, Jonathan F. of Sleepy Hollow, N.Y., and a grandson. A memorial service will be held at Wellesley College in the fall.

Tari Wala Murg (Chicken Curry)

3 lbs. chicken pieces, skinned

3 tbs. butter

1 1/2 cups onions, roughly chopped

11/2 tsp. ginger, chopped

6 cloves garlic

1 tbs. fresh coriander, chopped

1 1/2 tsp. tumeric

2 tsp. garma masala No. 1

2 tsp. pepper mix

1/2 cup low fat yogurt

2 tomatoes, skinned and chopped or 1/2 cup canned tomatoes

2 tsp. salt or to taste

1 tbs. fresh corander, chopped, for garnishing.

Cut chicken into serving pieces. Puree onions, ginger, garlic, and coriander in blender.

Heat butter and bleded puree together in sauce pan and fry for 5 minutes. Add spices and fry for another minute.

Stir in yogurt and tomatoes and fry until liquid evaporates and butter leaves sauce.  Add chicken and salt, stirring in spice mixture until well coated.

Reduce heat, cover and cook until chicken is tender, about 20-30 minutes.  Uncover, stirring gently to preent sauce from scorching to base of pan.  Add water if extra sauce is needed Adjust seasoning accordingly.

Transfer chicken to serving dish and garnish with coriander.

Serve with chappati, raita and papad.

thai red cabbage slaw

The peanuts and sesame seesds are added at the last minute to preserve their crunch and flavour.  You can buy fish sauce at large supermarkets and oriental grocery stores.

1 lb. red cabbage, cored and finely shredd

1/2 cup coarsely chopped mint

1/2 cup coarsely chopped cilantro

4 green onions, thinly sliced

2 cloves garlic, minced

3 TBSP. lemon juice

1 1/2 tsp. sugar

1/2 tsp. salt

`/1 tsp. pepper

2 TBSP. fish sauce

1/2 cup vegetable oil (substitute olive oil?)

1/2 cup coarsely chopped peanuts

1/4 cup sesame seeds, toasted

Combine the cabbage, mint, cilantro and green onion.  Stir the garlic, lemon juice, sugar, salt, pepper and fish sauce together.  Slowly beat in the oil.  Pour over the cabbage mixture and toss well.  Toss in the peanuts and sesame seeds just before serving.

Serves approximately 6.

lane

lifted from TPL’s pix!

US - “Banks ’set to call in a swathe of loans’”

June 28, 2007


By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 7:25am BST 26/06/2007

 

from telegraph.co.uk

 

The United States faces a severe credit crunch as mounting losses on risky forms of debt catch up with the banks and force them to curb lending and call in existing loans, according to a report by Lombard Street Research.

 


 

The group said the fast-moving crisis at two Bear Stearns hedge funds had exposed the underlying rot in the US sub-prime mortgage market, and the vast nexus of collateralised debt obligations known as CDOs.

"Excess liquidity in the global system will be slashed," it said. "Banks’ capital is about to be decimated, which will require calling in a swathe of loans. This is going to aggravate the US hard landing."

Charles Dumas, the group’s global strategist, said the failed auction of assets seized from one of the Bear Stearns funds by Merrill Lynch had revealed the dark secret of the CDO debt market. The sale had to be called off after buyers took just $200m of the $850m mix.

"The banks were not prepared to bid over 85pc of face value for CDOs rated "A" or better," he said.

"God knows how low the price would have dropped if they had kept on going. We hear buyers were lobbing bids at just 30pc.

"We don’t know what the value of this debt is because the investment banks shut down the market in a cover-up so that nobody would know. There is $750bn of dubious paper out there in the form of CDOs held by banks that have a total capitalisation of $850bn."

US property writer Paul Muolo described the Bearn Stearns crisis as the “subprime Chernobyl”, saying the bank had created a “cone of silence”.

Abandoned by fellow banks, Bear Stearns has now put up $3.2bn of its own money to rescue one of the funds, a quarter of its capital.

This is the biggest bail-out since the Long-Term Capital Management crisis in 1998, which Bear Stearns refused to join at the time. Bear Stearns is now alone, a case of rough justice being served.

Lombard Street’s warning comes as fresh data from the US National Association of Realtors shows that the glut of unsold homes reached a record of 8.9 months supply in May. Sales of existing homes slid to an annual rate of 5.99m.

continued at …. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/06/26/cnusecon126.xml&CMP=ILC-mostviewedbox

laptop is in ‘puter hospital

June 20, 2007

as the hard drive went poof.  The technician says I have lost ’some’ files.  I haven’t had a computer at home for days now.   Reminder to self:  save information on disc regularly!

CCPA’s S.O.S Medicare 2: Looking Forward, Online Video Links

June 11, 2007

To access all sessions listed below, go to the CPAC website’s Public Record Archive, and scroll down to the SOS Medicare 2 conference. Direct links to each session are also listed below.

SESSION #1: Tommy Douglas’ Vision and the Future of Medicare
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/showprmedicaremay3-07-1eng.asx

Introduction: Shirley Douglas, OC, Actress, daughter of Tommy Douglas

Keynote Address: Greg Marchildon, PhD, Graduate School of Public Policy, University of Regina, former Executive Director of the Romanow Commission, "The Douglas Legacy and the Future of Medicare", and Colleen Flood, SJD, LLM, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto

Panelists: Hon. Allan Blakeney, Former Saskatchewan Premier and Minister of Health, Monique Bégin, Minister of Health and Welfare in the Trudeau Government, Tom Kent, Principle Secretary to Prime Minister Pearson, "Forward First for Children", and Judith Shamian, RN, PhD, Victoria Order of Nurses, "Home Care in Canada: The Unfinished Policy"

Panel Moderator: Bruce Campbell, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

SESSION #2: International Perspective
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/showprmedicaremay3-07-2eng.asx

Keynote Address: Uwe Reinhardt, PhD, Professor of Political Economy, Princeton University

Panelists: May Tsung-Mei Cheng, LLB, MA, Princeton University, "Administrative and economic efficiencies of single payer systems", Josep Figueras, PhD, European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, "Currents and Cross-Currents in Europe", Alan Maynard, PhD, University of York, UK, "How to Defend a Public Health Care System: Lessons from Abroad", Marcia Angell, MD, Harvard Medical School’s Department of Social Medicine, "The Truth About the Drug Companies", Arnold Relman, MD, Professor Emeritus, Harvard Medical School, "Market-Based Health Care in the U.S and Lessons for Canada", and Scott Sinclair, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, "Protecting Medicare from Foreign Commercial Interests"

Panel Moderator: Patricia Martens, PhD, Manitoba Centre for Health Policy

SESSION #3: Financing to Achieve Greater Equity
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/showprmedicaremay3-07-3eng.asx

Keynote Address: Robert G. Evans, PhD, Professor of Economics, University of British Columbia, "The Real Anti-Medicare Redistributive Agenda"

Panelists: Michael Mendelson, Caledon Institute of Social Policy, "The Federal Role in Financing Medicare", Colleen Flood, SJD, LLM, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, "Equity and the Supreme Court post-Chaoulli", Diana Gibson, Parkland Institute, "Expanding Medicare: Universal, Accessible and Affordable", and Marie-Claude Prémont, PhD, Faculté de droit, McGill University, "The Impact on Equity of Quebec’s Bill 33"

Panel Moderator: Jack Boan, PhD, Professor of Economics, University of Regina

SESSION #4: Health Care Reforms - Pharmacare, Home Care & Primary Care
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/showprmedicaremay4-07-1eng.asx

Keynote Address: Michael Rachlis, MD, Author of Prescription for Excellence, "Tommy Douglas and the Next Phase of Medicare"

Panelists: Linda Silas, RN, Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, "A Human Health Resources Strategy", Steven Lewis, Health Policy Consultant, "Overcoming Barriers to Health Care Reform", Pat Armstrong, PhD, York University, "Women and Health Care Reform", Joel Lexchin, MD, York University, "The Case for Pharmacare: Equity, Economic Efficiency and Improved Prescribing", Patricia Martens, PhD, Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, "A Strategy for Mental Health", and France Gélinas BSc PT, MBA, Francophone Community Health Centre (Sudbury), "Completing the vision: The second stage of Medicare"

Panel Moderator: Barbara Byers, Executive Vice-President, Canadian Labour Congress

SESSION #5: Social Determinants of Health
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/showprmedicaremay4-07-2eng.asx

Keynote Address: Monique Bégin, Minister of Health and Welfare in the Trudeau Government, "It’s About Equity and Going Upstream: Health for All in Canada"

Panelists: Carolyn Bennett, MD, Former Minister of State for Public Health, Armine Yalnizyan, Social Planning Council of Toronto and CCPA, Cathy Crowe, RN, Street Nurse, Atkinson Economic Justice Fellow, "Dying for a Home", Eber Hampton, EdD, Indigenous Peoples Health Research Centre, "Miyo-M*hcihowin: Self-determination, social determinates and ethical space", and Robert McMurtry, MD, University of Western Ontario, "The Canadian Index of Well-Being"

Panel Moderator: Murray Knuttila, PhD, Professor of Sociology, University of Regina and Chair of the Board, Regina Qu’Appelle Health Region

Stephen Lewis Luncheon Speech
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/PDlewismay4-07eng.asx

SESSION #6: Getting There From Here
http://www.cpac.ca/asx/show
prmedicaremay4-07-3_eng.asx

Keynote Address: Roy Romanow, Former Premier of Saskatchewan, Chair, Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada, Atkinson Economic Justice Fellow, "Canada’s Shared Destiny and the Future of Medicare"

Panelists: Danielle Martin, MD, Canadian Doctors for Medicare, Andrew Petter, QC, Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria, former British Columbia Minister of Health, Elisabeth Ballermann, LLB, President, Health Sciences Association of Alberta/NUPGE, "It’s all about People", Maude Barlow, Chairperson, The Council of Canadians, "Profit is not the Cure, Committing to Health Care for All", Marcy Cohen, British Columbia Hospitals Employees’ Union, "Talking Solutions", and Doris Grinspun, RN, MSN, PhD (cand), O.ONT, Registered Nurses Association of Ontario

Panel Moderator: Kathleen Connors, Chairperson, Canadian Health Coalition

CCPA’s new report: “No Bang for the Buck: Military contracting and public accountability,” by Steven Staples

Dear CCPA subscriber,

Today we released the latest in our Foreign Policy Series — a report called "No Bang for the Buck: Military contracting and public accountability," by Steven Staples. The news release follows below, and as always, you can download the report free from our website at www.policyalternatives.ca.

I am also pleased to let you know that video footage from the SOS Medicare conference is now available online, including a speech by Stephen Lewis. See below for a list of all the sessions you can watch. Thank you to CPAC for making this available.

Finally, for those of you who received a message in the last few days dated December 6, 2006, please accept our apologies. A programming error in our newsletter system caused the archived message to be sent out. The problem has been fixed, and your should not receive any more repeats of old messages.

Sincerely,
Bruce Campbell, Executive Director

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives l News Release
For immediate release: June 11, 2007

"No Bang for the Buck" report finds that forty percent of military contracts are "non-competitive"

(Ottawa) Federal spending on multi-billion dollar military contracts has been mired in complaints of improper conduct as the government embarks on its $17 billion build-up of aircraft, helicopters, warships and vehicles.

A study released today by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives called "No Bang for the Buck: Military contracting and public accountability" supports the frequently heard charges of unfair competitions. It found that the government itself has classified more than 40 percent of the nearly 20,000 National Defence contracts awarded in FY2006-07 as "non-competitive."

Even more, the percentage of public dollars spent on "non-competitive" military contracts has doubled in the last two years, according to the study which examined thousands of federal contracts reported in the Business Access Canada’s publicly available Contract History database.

"This report raises the alarm on the use of public dollars, and the need for greater transparency and federal accountability in military contracting," said Bruce Campbell, Executive Director of the CCPA.

The report has four main conclusions:

  • The government should not sign any new major military contracts pending reports by the Auditor General and the Commons Standing Committee on National Defence, expected by the end of the year.
  • Ministers involved in defence procurement, especially the Defence Minister, should have at least a five-year separation from the employ of any government contractors.
  • The Defence Minister should be given clear responsibility for defence procurement.
  • A new parliamentary standing committee should be established with responsibility for defence procurement and monitoring programs.

"This study shows that when fair competition and Parliamentary oversight are exercised, soldiers get better, more effective equipment, sooner and cheaper," said Steven Staples, the author of the report and Director of the Rideau Institute on International Affairs.

-30-

For media interviews, contact Bruce Campbell, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives t. (613) 563-1341 x302, or Steven Staples, report author and Director of the Rideau Institute on International Affairs, t. (613) 565-9449 c. (613) 290-2695

Download the report at www.policyalternatives.ca

“Developers are the Games’ real winners” (url)

June 10, 2007

 at http://www.straight.com/article-93176/developers-are-the-games-real-winners

Tunisian restaurant in Vancouver

Carthage Cafe, 1851 Commerical Drive

604-215-0661