Friday, December 05, 2008

Dickens returns to a recovering Galveston


This weekend's Dickens on The Strand is Galveston's first major event since Hurricane Ike struck in September, and could indicate how quickly this island city can revive its vital tourism industry.

The 35th year of the festival, which recreates the 19th century with period costumes, also is an attempt by Galveston businesses to let the outside world know that most of its restaurants and hotels and many of its attractions are up and running.

We're going down for the day. I've posted about our prior trips here. There's a Chris Bell event in Galveston County at lunchtime on Saturday, and then we'll spend a few hours at one of the best street festivals in Texas before returning to Houston.

Despite the strain, all 130 vendors and booths will return along with 50 entertainment groups, said Dwayne Jones, foundation executive director.

The storm cost the foundation about $6 million in damage to its historic properties and lost revenues, Jones said, forcing it to cut in half its usual budget of $150,000 to $200,000 for Dickens on The Strand.

The foundation also had to lay off 40 of its 70-member staff and lost much of its Dickens equipment to the storm surge, he said. ...

Storm water fouled the 500 lamps that are normally scattered throughout the festival area at night, forcing the event to close three hours earlier than normal Saturday, Jones said.

Dickens on The Strand will run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, he said.

The event is usually within a 10-block area between 20th Street and 25th Street on The Strand and Mechanic Street, but this year it will be limited to The Strand, Jones said.

The Galveston Historic District was inundated by more than 10 feet of sea water that left floors caked with slimy mud and store interiors in shambles.


The Festival of Lights at Moody Gardens is up and running, though also smaller:


Hurricane damage forced Moody Gardens to alter and slightly shorten the path of lights and reduce the number of exhibits from 100 to about 75, said Moody Gardens spokeswoman Jerri Hamachek.

The Festival of Lights is open Thursday through Saturday through Dec. 17 and nightly Dec. 18-31. Tickets have been reduced $2 to $3.95, she said.

Jones is expecting about half as many visitors to Dickens on The Strand this year because of the ailing national economy and the perception that nothing is open in Galveston because of the storm. Online ticket sales are less than half of last year's tally, but most of the proceeds are from gate sales anyway, he said. About 32,000 tickets were sold last year.

Gaskins said Galveston hotels were nearly full and only about 50 rooms were left on the entire island as of Thursday because of bookings for Dickens on The Strand and company Christmas parties.

Hamachek said the Festival of Lights drew about 5,000 visitors Thanksgiving weekend, about half as many as last year, but described it as a good showing considering the storm and the economy.

Several companies donated services, such as portable bathrooms, and 15 of the 17 entertainers have agreed to forgo their usual fee, Jones said.

There would be no better way to give Galveston a hand up than to pay them a visit this weekend (and drop a little coin).

Thursday, December 04, 2008

The Boogie Man Rag

Dunbar's latest

"Even if you question the accuracy of my constitutional interpretation as proof of the inappropriateness of a state-created, tax-payer supported school system, still the Scriptures bear witness to such an institution’s lack of proper authority in the life of the Christian family."

That's State Board of Education member Cynthia Dunbar, from page 102 of her book One Nation Under God. Want more from this Jesus freak?

Dunbar (on p. 100) calls public education a “subtly deceptive tool of perversion.” She charges that the establishment of public schools is unconstitutional and even “tyrannical” because it threatens the authority of families, granted by God through Scripture, to direct the instruction of their children (p. 103). Dunbar, who has home-schooled her children and sent them to private schools, bases that charge on her belief that “the underlying authority for our constitutional form of government stems directly from biblical precedents.” (p. xv)


I know. You gotta have more...

“This battle for our nation’s children and who will control their education and training is crucial to our success for reclaiming our nation,” Dunbar writes (p. 100), after earlier condemning what she calls a secular society that resembles Nazi Germany just before the Holocaust. Those at risk today are “the devout, Bible-believing Christians,” she writes (p. 2).

Dunbar argues that the Founders created “an emphatically Christian government” (p. 18) and believed government should be guided by a “biblical litmus test.” (p. 47) She also endorses a “belief system” that would “require that any person desiring to govern have a sincere knowledge and appreciation for the Word of God in order to rightly govern.” (p. 17)

Dunbar sees public schools as a threat to that belief system: “Our children are, after all, our best and greatest assets, and we are throwing them into the enemy’s flames even as the children of Israel threw their children to Moloch.” (p. 101)


How is that a person can help govern a public education system she loathes? Because she intends -- sort of like Grover Norquist drowning government in a bathtub -- to destroy it.

Dunbar sits on the state board’s Committee on Instruction, which guides the SBOE’s policies on curriculum and textbook adoptions. Earlier this year Dunbar used her position on that committee to win approval for vague guidelines that some public schools have used to offer deeply flawed and blatantly sectarian Bible classes. Even worse, she then joined three other board members in endorsing a constitutionally suspect Bible course curriculum that Odessa public schools had been forced to remove from classrooms after being sued by local parents.

The SBOE is currently debating a revision of science curriculum standards for the state’s public schools. Dunbar is part of a bloc of creationists who want public schools to teach students that evolution is not established, mainstream science.

Texas Freedom Network today called for Dunbar to be removed from the Committee on Instruction. It can't happen fast enough.