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May 27, 2011

Marvin Gaye's legendary album, "What's Going On," released 40 years ago this month; and...

          Now, it's 40 years later. One ought well ask, again, today, now, with Gaye's lyrics in mind... what's going on?

     Gaye's album appeared during tremendous political and social chaos in the United States (and by extension, worldwide). The civil rights movement was dying a slow death. MLK Jr. was no more, and... neither was Bobby Kennedy. Richard Nixon had been elected president. The Vietnam War still raged despite its growing unpopularity. Millions of people in Southeast Asia were dead, and 50,000 U.S. soldiers dead as well. The "war on poverty" was over. Poverty's troops had won; riots had broken out in inner cities as a result with little course change.

     Marvin Gaye's album dropped into this, my, America on May 21, 1971.

     "What's Going On" cried for a world where war was not the answer; one where only love could conquer hatred. Quite the record.  "Inner City Blues" dealt with the problems of urban America. "Save the Children" focused on the children of the world. "Mercy, Mercy, Me" condemned environmental destruction. And etc.

     40 years later?

     We (the U.S.; the world) are still engaged in wars abroad that have (for good or naught) taken a huge financial and human toll. Today, racism still lurks beneath the surface (decidedly not good) of this, of my, America; and poverty and economic inequality remain with us around the globe... and corporate interests continue to (needlessly) destroy the environment.

      Indeed, what's goin' on?

     Pull out that old LP and listen again my friends; it's well time. Overdue, in fact.  Time, yes:  time, these two score years later.

May 20, 2011

Stephen Hawkings likely is correct; at the same time:

      "I believe that man will not merely endure. He will prevail. 

       He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance."


-American author, Nobel, Pulitzer, etc., Prize winner, William Faulkner


A FRENCHMAN was arrested yesterday in Poland...

for stealing two pieces of barbed wire from the Nazi German-era death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau officials said.  The man, in his fifties, was detained after a scanner detected the wire in his hand luggage during a security check at the airport in Krakow, 60 kilometres from the site of the camp.

     "He admitted having taken the pieces as a souvenir of his visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau," said airport spokesman Marcin Pulit.  The man's name was not disclosed.

     Jaroslaw Mensfelt, spokesman of the Polish state-run memorial and museum at the site, condemned the theft.  "This was an act of desecration of a place of memory. Every object here is priceless," he said.

     Auschwitz-Birkenau has become an enduring symbol of the Holocaust, Nazi Germany's wartime campaign of genocide against Europe's Jews.  A year after invading Poland in 1939, the Nazis opened what became a vast complex on the edge of the southern town of Oswiecim - Auschwitz in German.  They later expanded it at the nearby village of Brzezinka, or Birkenau.

     Of the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust, one million were murdered at the site, mostly in its notorious gas chambers, along with tens of thousands of others including Poles, Roma and Soviet prisoners of war.

May 19, 2011

Philip Roth, giant of American letters, has won the 2011 Man Booker International award.

The author, a perennial contender for the Nobel prize in literature, Pulitzer Prize Award winner, National Book Award winner, etc., was named winner of the Man Booker International at the Sydney Writers' Festival today, beating a stellar, if eclectic, shortlist. Also in the running were the British children's author Philip Pullman, award-winning Chinese writer Su Tong, American authors Anne Tyler and Marilynne Robinson, Australia's David Malouf and a reluctant John le CarrĂ© who had asked – unsuccessfully – for his name to be withdrawn from contention.  Announcing the winner, Rick Gekoski, chair of the judges, said that for 50 years, Roth's books have "stimulated, provoked and amused an enormous, and still expanding, audience".

May 18, 2011

Recommended organization/resource...

     As the largest and most comprehensive center of its kind in the nation, Minnesota Center for Book Arts (MCBA) celebrates the book as a vibrant contemporary art form that takes many shapes. From the traditional crafts of papermaking, letterpress printing and bookbinding to experimental artmaking and self-publishing techniques, MCBA supports the limitless creative evolution of book arts.

     In 1983, a group of book arts practitioners and enthusiasts in the Twin Cities began plans to create an institution, a true book arts center, where artists could create, students could learn, fine art could be exhibited, and a generally under-acknowledged artistic discipline could be elevated into focus and take its proper place in the Minnesota arts community. Two years later, in 1985, this dedicated group opened the doors of the brand new Minnesota Center for Book Arts. MCBA's first public home was in the McKesson Building, on North Third Street in the Warehouse District of downtown Minneapolis.     

     After more than two years of research and planning, the Spring of 2000 saw Minnesota Center for Book Arts, The Loft Literary Center and Milkweed Editions become the principal tenants in the Open Book Building at 1011 South Washington Avenue in Minneapolis. The building creates a lively destination for a diverse public interested in books, book arts and literary endeavors of all kinds.

     The soul of MCBA is the studio spaces where you find masters and novices working at letterpress printing, hand bookbinding and papermaking. In addition to the studios, there is an exhibition space, a studio shop, an archive and reference library, and offices. Visitors are welcome to observe the book art activity close-up. MCBA serves artists, students, teachers, designers, writers, families, youth, and book lovers through a variety of participatory programs. More than 20 years after opening its doors, MCBA is the most comprehensive independent book arts center in the nation.

May 13, 2011

Picasso painted a famous portrait of her...

   Jacques Lipchitz did her imposing features in bronze.

   She was the subject of prints by Andy Warhol and Red Grooms.

   She made the cover of Time magazine.

   Best remembered now for her form-stretching prose, widely quoted apercus and bohemian panache, Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) was dominant in her day as a force majeure in the visual culture of expatriate Paris. A big part of that story has to do with the stellar modern art collection she and other members of her family accumulated and displayed in their Paris apartments.

   An exhibition devoted to the Stein collections, which includes Picasso's great Gertrude portrait, opens this week at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

   "Seeing Gertrude Stein: Five Stories," which premiered last week at the nearby Contemporary Jewish Museum, offers a probing and intimate perspective on the visual realm Stein herself inhabited, projected and created. Comprising numerous formal portraits, photographs of her at home, clothing, domestic objects from her life with her longtime partner, Alice B. Toklas, rare film footage, books, theater posters and more, the show explores what co-curator Wanda M. Corn calls "the complexity of Gertrude Stein as a personage."

   The exhibition, a joint venture with the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, is divided into five sections, or what Corn regards as "at least five stories about Stein we don't know."

May 9, 2011

Some news am not sure what to make of...

     This week saw a rare find off Cape Cod as fishermen caught a yellow lobster.

     The crustacean was delivered to the Lobster Pot Restaurant in East Wareham. 

     Yellow lobsters are the result of a rare genetic mutation. The odds of finding one are 1 in 30 million.

     Owners of the restaurant will not be cooking the lobster (they assert). It is being donated to the National Marine Fisheries Service for their Woods Hole aquarium and research center.

May 8, 2011

Especially today...

     Rita Sue (nee Rothberg) Young (1928-2002).  I really, really miss you, mom!

May 6, 2011

3.2 Million Opening Bid...

Still, we are talking of the auction of The ChĂ¢teau des Thons, a French import, and quite the residence.

     At the end of a long driveway in Long Island, winding uphill through dense woods stands a clearing. There a cobblestone courtyard leads to a castle with two ivy-clad turrets. A family crest is carved in the stone above the imposing 10-foot-high paneled front doors in the entry tower. Limestone balustrades edge the veranda, leading to formal gardens with spouting fountains. A lead-domed wishing well and whimsical stone statuary lend an enchanting aura to the walled garden.


   It IS quite the scene; later today, I will try and upload a picture of said ChĂ¢teau.


   The ChĂ¢teau des Thons originally went up in the 18th century near Dijon, France. In 1927 the financier Ashbel Barney had a wing of it shipped across the Atlantic and rebuilt here as a memorial to his son who'd served in France in WWI. It is known as Voltaire’s Castle... after the French philosopher.


   An aristocratic history but a melancholy fate. After more than two decades of being listed/ relisted by its owner, Stephen Brown — first for $30 million — the chĂ¢teau is to hit the luxury auction block at noon on May 15, with a minimum opening bid of $3.2 million. (The auctioneer is out of Manhattan Beach, Calif.).  Mr. Brown, 73, bought the castle in 1987 for his bride at the time (he has had three), who “decided she wanted to live in baronial style” with “visions of a Rolls-Royce crunching up the driveway.” The couple drew up plans for renovation but broke up shortly thereafter. She moved to the West Coast, he to Manhattan. "I'm not enamored of living in the suburbs,” Mr. Brown's said [rather dryly, methinks].


   The turreted chĂ¢teau became a model for other houses in this neighborhood once laden with Vanderbilts, Pratts, Woolworths and other tycoons has 6 bedrooms and 6 1/2 baths, along with herringbone floors and a 300-year-old banister. The kitchen has been updated, the dining room embellished with a mirrored and coffered ceiling. Leopard-print carpeting runs up the curved front turret staircase into the master bedroom suite. The his-and-hers baths were recently renovated in white marble. The swimming pool, hidden within a series of hedges, was retiled last year.



   The decision to delist and instead auction the house was made after Mr. Brown's home in the Malibu colony, CA auctioned in February for $5 million. “In this economy,” he said, “houses are not moving in the traditional manner through real estate brokers [...] the auction is very powerful,” The winning bid commands an 8 percent buyers premium and a 10 percent deposit. Mr. Brown says he is confident that the gavel will end his involvement with the chĂ¢teau. Without disclosing the reserve price, he added, “I will take whatever the market decides it’s worth.”

May 5, 2011

Osama Bin Laden’s...

violent anti-modern brand of Islam has little to do with the Middle Ages, Eli Lehrer -- Frum Forum -- opines... as medieval Muslims were, mostly, more tolerant than their Christian counterparts, he asserts.

     Still, a glance at his hideout’s floor plan reveals some real similarities to a western European medieval siege castle. (And bear, e.g., some resemblance to Richard the Lionheart’s famous Chateau Gaillard in France)

     Although the building techniques were a lot different, the hideout had "all the basic feature" of the medieval castle: There's a central “keep,” outer, middle and inner wards for defense and even a “curtain wall” (which the Washington Post labels a “privacy wall”) around the “keep."

     Whoever designed it likely absorbed some of the ideas of medieval castle building.

     Though we may indeed never know more than this supposition.

May 2, 2011

Other things to celebrate than a U.S.-sanctioned assassination...

   National Hamburger Month has arrived (well, I am excited... shh!!). At least let me honor my Midwestern roots noting that we have White Castle to thank for this chance to be bovine-ly celebratory in May.
You see, White Castle, recognized as America’s first fast food chain, started National Hamburger Month back in 1992. 

   And, hear this:  White Castle turned 90 on March 10th; and still offers the small thin, square patty hamburger known as The Original Slider. (Topped with onions and pickles and sitting on a steamed bun, White Castles sliders have gained what insiders call "a loyal following known as Cravers." In 2001, White Castle launched the Cravers Hall of Fame, in which a select number of Cravers are inducted each year based upon entries judged by “brand loyalty, creative presentation, originality and magnitude of the crave”.)

   And, so?

   White Castle began in 1921 when Billy Ingram and Walter Anderson (fine boys, both) scraped together $700 to open a small hamburger stand in Wichita, Kansas. The rest is Slider history.  Besides giving birth to the fast food industry and standardization, White Castle is also credited with a number of other (if perhaps dubious; at least a few I say!) firsts.  They were the first chain to package burgers in cardboard cartons for takeout, the first to advertise in newspapers, the first to run a coupon campaign and the first to market square burgers and use perforated burgers for even cooking. 

   The number of restaurants does not compare in size-wise to the thousands of locations of many other chains, but (in part) this is due (so goes the company lore) to the fact that each location is company owned and not franchised.

   White Castle helped make the hamburger America’s favorite food, and changed the dining habits of a nation (is this a good thing?).  And... 90 years later, it still serves up a mean slider (okay, not all bad!).

May 1, 2011

Hmm...

"I hold that the parentheses are by far the most important parts of a non-business letter."
Letter to Blanche Jennings, 15 April 1908, Letters of D.H. Lawrence (1979), James T. Boulton, ed.

Apr 25, 2011

Chilean poet Gonzalo Rojas dies at age 93.

Chilean poet Gonzalo Rojas, regarded as one of Latin America's greatest modern writers, has died in Santiago at the age of 93, his family has announced.

He won numerous literary prizes, including the 2003 Cervantes Prize, the top award for Spanish-language literature. Rojas was forced into exile for some years after the 1973 military coup led by Gen Augusto Pinochet.

Rojas had been in a serious condition since suffering a stroke in February.
His death was a "great loss for Chilean literature", Education Minister Joaquin Lavin was quoted as saying.

Rojas produced a huge body of work, with his poems translated into several languages. His works included The Misery of Man, Against Death, Dark and On Lightning.

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Apr 23, 2011

Well-deserved recognition to...

Reporters from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, just down I-95, who just won a Pulitzer for their incisive story on genetic sequencing and a young boy fighting for his life.

More than 2,400 entries are submitted each year in all categories in the Pulitzer competition... and only 21 awards are normally made. This, then, the culmination of a year-long process beginning w/the appointment of 102 distinguished judges who serve on 20 separate juries and are asked to make three nominations in each of the 21 categories.

In the major literary and book Pulitzer awards (a few a bit surprising)...

FICTION - "A Visit from the Goon Squad" by Jennifer Egan (Alfred A. Knopf)

DRAMA - "Clybourne Park" by Bruce Norris

HISTORY - "The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery" by Eric Foner (W. W. Norton & Company)

BIOGRAPHY - "Washington: A Life" by Ron Chernow (The Penguin Press)

POETRY - "The Best of It: New and Selected Poems" by Kay Ryan (Grove Press)

GENERAL NONFICTION - "The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer" by Siddhartha Mukherjee (Scribner).

Apr 20, 2011

Caroline Kennedy opens up with new book of poems

CAROLINE KENNEDY READS FROM SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY

◆ 7:30 tonight

◆ Barnes and Noble, 55 Old Orchard Center, Skokie, IL.

Caroline Kennedy’s She Walks in Beauty: A Woman’s Journey Through Poems (Voice, $24.99) has been compared to a vase filled with flowers. With poems carefully picked by Kennedy and arranged into sections that go through the phases of a woman’s life, the book is a lyrical exploration of love and life, friendship, marriage, motherhood, work, joy, grief, middle age and growing old. Indeed, images of flowers grace the cover, end papers and pages. Each section is eloquently introduced by Kennedy, providing rare insights into the heart and mind of one of the most private members of the famous family.

The range of poets and styles is richly varied, and includes Sappho, Emily Dickinson, Pablo Neruda, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Christopher Marlowe, Rudyard Kipling, Queen Elizabeth I, W.H. Auden, Dorothy Parker, W. B. Yeats, Mary Oliver, Elizabeth Bishop and Gwendolyn Brooks.

“In a funny way, poems are suited to modern life,” Kennedy was quoted as saying in an interview Tuesday at the Ritz-Carlton hotel. “They’re short, they’re intense. The biggest problem is people are afraid of poetry, think they can’t understand it or that it will be boring. So I tried to pick poems that I responded to, and hopefully others will, too.”

Poetry has been important in the Kennedy family, the finding and sharing of poems with family members. Kennedy traces the tradition to her mother, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and notes “obviously my father cared a lot about words and language and ideas and how to express them, and invited Robert Frost to the inauguration, which we just celebrated the 50th anniversary of."

The process of gathering poems for this book began when Kennedy turned 50 in 2007, and this collection is an outgrowth of prior works that contained poems from her childhood and family.

Apr 18, 2011

Thought for the day...

"What I like in a good author is not what he says, but what he whispers." - Logan Pearsall Smith

Feb 22, 2011

NO... not international boundry changing news but maybe a welcome respite... on this day...

In the retail sector in the U.S., J.C. Penney introduced a new logo on Tuesday in an effort to update the department store's image. This is the first logo redesign for J.C. Penney in its 40-year history.

Apparently these logo changes are not without deep thought and fraught with subtleties and symbolism, or say would intimate the department store chain's corporate spokespeople.


"We've made significant progress transforming our company over the last several years by infusing great style into our assortments, delivering world-class customer service, and introducing new and innovative retail technologies that have made J.C. Penney a retail leader in the digital age," Myron E. Ullman, III, chairman and chief executive officer, said in a statement. "Our new logo reflects the modern retailer we've become while continuing to honor our rich legacy."

The new logo puts greater visual emphasis on a new, lowercase "jcp" by positioning it slightly off-centered in a red box while still featuring the company's signature red color and Helvetica font. The logo was designed to evoke a sense of movement and discovery as the letters appear to break out of the box, symbolizing an emergence into an exciting, new future, the company said.

Feb 21, 2011

"Have you no sense of decency, sir at long last?"

         TODAY marks the anniversary of the dark day in 1954 following U.S. Senator (Republican, WI) Joseph McCarthy's infamous speech to the Senate.  The speech that lasted until 14 minutes before midnight.  The one with the Senator waving a briefcase of purported evidence of an infiltration of "communist" subversion through the ranks of American society (specifically, that night, as represented by 81 State Dept. employees).  The day (Feb. 21) the Senate myopically voted for an immediate investigation into the Senator's charges.  The one, the vote, which lead, of course, to televised hearings beginning April 22.

June 9 the hearings'd reached their watershed dramatic moment.

McCarthy'd attacked the character of a young legal aide of Joseph Nye Welch (Army Chief Counsel), Fred Fisher, who'd once worked for the National Lawyers Guild (an organization with communist ties).  In Fisher's absence, Welch’s reply became famous: “Until this moment, senator, I think I never gauged your cruelty or recklessness .... Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?”

         The point?  Perhaps this is a question well asked of ourselves from time to time.  Asked, at long last, what we are made of? To reflect on, as MLK wrote, that "the ultimate measure [of oneself] is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."  And so another question:  How?   How we measure. 

What we are made of and how we measure?

At long last...

What and how, indeed?

Feb 20, 2011

For those that've forgotten and the many who've asked...

Adopted by the Legislature of 1999 the state soil of Maine is indeed still Chesuncook.

A soil type that was first identified in Maine and is one of its most widely distributed soil types -- its name comes from the Native American word for converging bodies of water. A lake written about in Henry David Thoreau's "The Maine Woods" also shares the name.

The Chesuncook soils formed in dense glacial till derived mainly from slate and are made up of deep, well-drained soils from hills, mountains, and ridges. The soils scientific name is "coarse-loamy, mixed, frigid Aquic Haplorthods" or, for short "Bob."

Stayed tuned; for this is more to this story indeed.

Feb 18, 2011

In what could be the ultimate

foodie gift for someone - a six volume, 2,400-page book set called "Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking" that teaches science-based techniques for preparing food. Weighing in at a mere 48 pounds its author, Nathan Myhrvold, has said he has absolutely no idea how the public will receive epic book.

Or the discoveries along the way by the former Chief Technology Officer at Microsoft.

"Galileo proved that heavier objects don't fall faster. And prior to Galileo, everyone sort of assumed that heavy object fell faster. Well, Galileo tried it and turns out they don't fall faster. By the same token, plunging food into cold water doesn't make it cool, well it does make the thing cool faster, but if you expect this wave of cold — the core of the food will maintain the same temperature to a tiny fraction of a degree."

"Modernist Cuisine" comes out on Mar. 14 and can be pre-ordered through Amazon or Barnes & Noble.

Feb 17, 2011

[M]any of the world’s great movements...

[...] of thought and action, have flowed from the work of a single man. A young monk began the Protestant reformation, a young general extended an empire from Macedonia to the borders of the earth, and a young woman reclaimed the territory of France. It was a young Italian explorer who discovered the New World, and 32-year-old Thomas Jefferson who proclaimed that all men are created equal. “Give me a place to stand,” said Archimedes, “and I will move the world.” These men moved the world, and so can we all. Few will have the greatness to bend history; but each of us can work to change a small portion of the events, and in the total of all these acts will be written the history of this generation. Thousands of Peace Corps volunteers are making a difference in the isolated villages and the city slums of dozens of countries. Thousands of unknown men and women in Europe resisted the occupation of the Nazis and many died, but all added to the ultimate strength and freedom of their countries. It is from numberless diverse acts of courage such as these that the belief that human history is thus shaped. Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring those ripples build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.

Robert F. Kennedy, Day of Affirmation Address, University of Capetown, June 6, 1966.

          April 4, 2011, will mark the 43 years since a crowd gathered in an Indianapolis park at 17th and Broadway streets several years later to hear Robert F. Kennedy speak during a campaign rally. Most of the people, who were both black and white, had no idea that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had been assassinated earlier that evening in Memphis.  Against the advice of many on his team, Kennedy chose to attend the rally and to deliver the devastating news. The impromptu words Kennedy spoke called for peace.

A life well lived...

Noted on 2/16/11...

Margaret K. McElderry, influential children's book editor, publisher, dies at 98 -- People involved with children's books know the name, Margaret K.McElderry. According to the New York Times, Ms. McElderry, who was an influential editor and publisher in the children's book industry, died in her Manhattan home Monday at the age of 98.

Ms. McElderry was the first children's book editor who had an imprint named after her -- Margaret McElderry Books at Atheneum. Her imprint survived several corporate mergers and is still in use today at Simon & Schuster. Ms. McElderry helped nurture the careers of many of the biggest names in children' literature, both writers and illustrators.  Such names include Susan Cooper, Eleanor Estes, and Helen Oxenbury.

Many of her books won Newbery or Caldecott awards. In 1952, Ms. McElderry had the rare distinction of editing both of that year's winners -- Eleanor Estes's Ginger Pye picked up the Newbery that year, while Nicholas Mordinoff won the Caldecott for his book with Will Lipkind, Finder's Keepers.