Music Monday ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’

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This reunion of Simon and Garfunkel  was the musical event of my lifetime.  I had been a fan from the beginning of their  folk-rock career in the transitional time  of the 60s. The lyrics told stories of universal experiences that are still heart touching today.  And the blend of the voices of  Art Garfunkle and Paul Simon still bring tears.hqdefault Professor, to no surprise, preferred Led Zeppelin!  Need I say more?  But this is my blog.

Last week, I decided to try a Music Monday post for today, and each Monday, as long as it seems to work, and “Bridge Over Troubled Water’ would be my first post.  This is my all time favorite song bar none.  The really wacky thing is that this morning as I sipped coffee, watching one of the morning TV shows, and it was announced that on  March 10, 1971,  this song was number one!  It seemed to validate my decision at least for today!

Now let me tell you that for us to go to this reunion in Central Park was totally out of character, but we were there.  Some former students who were living and working in The City invited us!  It was to start at 6:30 so we headed to the park about 4:30 and we could only find seating on the grass so far from the stage it seemed a dot on the horizon.  I remember all sorts of ‘street theater” or field theater of mimes, drama, musicians, lots of long hair,  pot smoking , and very long lines at the porto-potties.

The concert began and we could see on large screens set up at various places.pocahontas  Sound equipment was also blasting out the music. I remember thinking it could all be a recording and we would never know, but it was free and a memorable event.

All was well until it was over.  People had arrived at different times in the afternoon but at the end all 500,000 fans rose to leave atsimon3

the same time.  New York and  changed the traffic pattern  and blocked the streets from cars, cabs, and buses  so that people could all walk into the streets from Central Park.  We were just lifted up and carried by the crowd.  We had our children, and our son was only 6.  I had to take the cooler and professor carried him because we were afraid  he would fall and be crushed.

From YouTube, I chose the video from this concert.  The quality is not as good as the studio original or maybe even the reunion in Madison Square Garden.   But the memory of singing with Simon and Garfunkel and 500, 000 other fans is very special to me! It must have been a little like attending an Indian political rally where the crowds are equal or larger!

This is Music Monday!

Google images, public domain

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Tim’s Vermeer Collision of Art and Technology

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‘The Girl with the Pearl Earring’ is one of Vermeer’s most famous paintings.

How could a painter who lived from 1635-1675 create paintings with the detail of a photograph  two hundred years before photography was invented in 1839?  The artist was a Dutch master named Johannes Vermeer . Often he  has been described as using light instead of paint on his canvas.  The source of light is a mystery in his dramatic works most most often paintings of interior domestic  Dutch life.

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“This Is the Girl in the Red Hat’. Are you wondering about the source of the light colliding with the  subject?

Tim Jensison, a successful Texas inventor, ponders this question of Vermeer’s methods as he  tries to discover  the mysteries and  duplicate the painting techniques of Vermeer. Is it possible that a genius in the  field of desktop video revolution of the 21st century  can  solve the mysteries of Vermeer’s photo realistic  paintings, produced long before photography was invented?

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‘The Music Lesson’ was the painting Jenison decided to try and duplicate.

This was a film that both my husband and I enjoyed.

Google images Public Domain

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Senator (Dr.) Rand Paul

Granted he was speaking at the Conservative PAC meeting yesterday, where  later he won the straw poll of the audience. This may be the man who will carry the conservative/Republican line in the election of 2016 for the presidency of the United State.

I would love to hear my WordPress friends’ opinions of Dr. Paul’s message. I certainly believe in freedom of speech so feel free to disagree with me. I am leaning more and more toward the conservatives and am very impressed by Dr. Paul’s strong constitutional, libertine message for the United States.

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A Scout Camp – Capturing Innocence

Celebration of humanity!

furterbuys's avatarMigrating after Myself

I love camping!

Especially if it’s with my girlfriend on a barren beach in a one man tent that couldn’t possibly fit one man!

I went on a scout camp with some of my students last week. The setup was exactly what the first line suggests: super-cramped and overloaded with terra-firma.

I am an English Teacher and thus didn’t have to do ANYTHING on this camp. I assigned myself the position of Head – Photographer and I think I’d be able to run a scout-camp-photography-course after my endeavours.

I woke up on Tuesday morning and quickly threw a few stuff in a backpack. The most important thing on every single trip I take is my camera and gear, so I checked and re-checked that, filled the scooter up with some zoomjuice and hit the road!

An hour later I parked the scooter under some pine-trees. I had windblown hair and…

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Jantar Mantar Jaipur

Posted  first on March 14, 2013by 

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These handsome guards asked if we wanted pictures with them, so of course we did. Then they asked for money!   Jaipur is definitely more of a tourist town.  They got us!  We were ready later.

This is one of the five observatories built by Sawai Jai Singh II and is the best preserved and  largest. The park contains sixteen instruments and after four hundred years some are still used to forecast hot summers, the expected date of arrival, intensity and duration of the annual monsoons as well as the possibility of floods and famine. The observatory has been described  as a “most realistic and logical landscape ever made of stone.” Image

This sundial shows the time of day for the two hemispheres following the solar cycle.Image

This small sundial calculates Jaipur’s time to an accuracy of 20 seconds!

Our visits to this observatory and the one in Delhi were an assignment  for the students. They were to draw and observe, as research, for their final design project.  The project is to design an Astronomical Research Center as part of the development of the riverfront in Ahmedabad, while  incorporating Le Corbusier’s Millowners’ Building which is directly behind the site.  David studied Physics in college and grad school and has still maintained his passion for astronomy.  During the last few years, he has integrated astronomy and architecture in design projects giving students some insight into Physics.  One student, on his own, has bought and read The Theory of Relativity and now is reading a Stephen Hawking book.

India has a long history with interest in astronomy. It is widely believed that one of the Wise Men in the Christmas story was from here. Much to David’s disappointment, the Indian love for the stars seems not to have started with a passion for science,but because of a cultural curiosity for astrology.  Every morning horoscopes are an important section of the news for the day and are consulted when Indians make life decisions.

Nameste….T I I

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This is a section of the 12 piece structure representing the signs of the zodiac. It is used by astrologers to draw up horoscopes.

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This is incredible India!   T I I I !
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From the Top of the World One World Trade Center

” After twelve years of anticipation, the tallest skyscraper in the western hemisphere is ready for a  close-up.  There is a story and incredible 360 degree photographs in the current issue of Time Magazine.  How 10,000 workers (not one died during the process) lifted 104 floors, gave life to an international symbol, and created one spectacular view.”  Time Magazine wtc_tout1

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Welcome back World Trade Center !

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Spring Seems Far Away from Frozen Niagara Falls

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View out from under the frozen falls. . . . .

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This is the second time this winter the falls have frozen completely, but the light show goes on. . . .

Beautiful pictures. . . . but so would be a robin or tiny green shoots peeping trough the soil . . . . . . .Sign of spring on flickr group

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Dreams of Spring. . . . . . .

Google images public domain

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Seven Awards in One Amazing Bundle

This award comes in seven, an amazing bundle!

Sevens part one Sevens part two My friend Mark at  markbialczak.com  has nominated my blog for this amazing award. He is one of the interesting, multifaceted people I am now friends with on WordPress.  You will want to visit him through his blog  and not in person in Syracuse, New York, the home of  Syracuse University, ” the snowiest university” in the US!  Mark is a sport’s journalist by trade but a truly gentle-man who posts about films and the homeless in Syracuse.  He clearly exemplifies the descriptive adjectives of this award:  For  heart, peace, and hope. One very special story about Mark, is that he writes a personal response to any comment on his blog. Well, you might say, all bloggers do that.  Yes, but Mark always uses the person’s name in his response. It is as if he is speaking directly to you !   Very personal, considerate and thoughtful.    Thanks Mark!
Here are the rules for The Seven Awards:
1. Display the logos somewhere on your blog.
2. Link back to the person who nominated you.
3. State seven things about yourself.
4. Nominate 15 bloggers for the award.
5. Notify the nominees about their nominations.
Some facts about me are:
1. Two of my favorite films are ‘Lost in Translation,’ and ‘In Bruges’.
2. My two favorite “faith films” are ‘The Way,’ and ‘Of Gods and Men.’ I have not seen ‘Son of God.’ 3. I have lived all over the US in Virginia, Maryland, Kansas, and Arizona.
4.  Before you ask, I always say that I live  in ____, but I am from Virginia! The accent attests to that.
5. Virginia is a “state of mind.”  I am Virginian at heart with all my quirks  both endearing and annoying!
6. I am really hooked and horrified at Netflix ‘House of Cards.’ Oh can it be true about Washington, DC?
7 I also love ‘Downton Abbey’ the BBC Masterpiece  winner!  Oh, the costumes, social manners, elegant parties, and tragedy of life in the early 20th century England.
Here are my nominees. They are cool. They are hot. They are honest. They are passionate. Check out their blogs!
foodbod.wordpress.com
prayingforoneday.com
lauramacky.wordpress.com
kyangel17.com
belsbror.wordpress.com
tuesdayswithlaurie.com
etinkerbell.wordpress.com
abitofwiggleroom.wordpress.com
spicyessence.wordpress.com
thevoicesinmystethoscope.wordpress.com
russellchapman.wordpress.com
avian101.wordpress.com
moncoindufrancais.wordpress.com
theurgetowander.com
talesofatravelor.com
dalocollis.com
Thanks to all of you for  the lovely reading and learning I have gotten from your posts.  Happy blogging!
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Can a Simple Toilet Change the Life of India’s Poorest People?

This video is also from Rajasthan, but the city of Alwar. One of the challenges often  used to criticize India and rightly so , is the lack of sanitation.  This 20 minute video is about the untouchable caste of 1/5 of the population in India and one man, Dr. Pathak, a Brahman of the highest caste, who has committed his life to solve this problem.  He started a movement in 1973 called the Sulabh Foundation to work to improve life for the Dalits or the Untouchables.  Today, other developing countries in Africa are also  producing these simple toilets and in India, Sulabh has become the synonym for public toilet.

This monumental national problem is starting to be overcome. Is there much more to do, of course.  Remember Rome was not built in a day!  The Indian  entrepreneurial spirit of problem solving is evidenced here. Listen hard when Dr. Pathak tells the story of his grandmother when he, as a little boy,  touched a Dalit . Today Pathak is an Indian hero!

If you have been following my blog, you know I don’t really like to dwell on the tremendous challenges in a country with 1.3 billion people. I was a guest there, everyone is aware of the problems, it is very easy to criticize, I think  progress is being made , and  the country is only 60 years young as a democracy.  When I found this video, I had to post it, though it is long.  This  is for those of you with the time  to watch for even just a bit,  and /or those who have admiration for or are in awe  of  these incredible Indian  people, as am I !

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This Is Incredible India!   T I I I !

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Filled with anticipation, I arrived in the Pink City of ‘The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.’ In fact, it was my first question to our guide. He laughed and told me of another tourist who planned her whole trip around sighting scenes from the movie. The hotel actually is in a nearby city but the shots of the arches and the pink buildings were shot in Jaipur. The reputation of the Pink City is so important to the local economy, that the government furnishes just the correct color for painting the buildings inside the walls of the old city. hawa-mahal-wind-palace-jaipur-india

This was only a photo opportunity of the front facade of the Palace of Winds where you can see the pink color of the buildings.

To give you an idea how important Jaipur is for travelers to India, Eyewitness Guide India gives no less than fifteen pages to the Pink City and surrounds. There are at least three palaces, many temples and Mosques,  endless narrow shopping streets, as well as the  monumental arches. I have decided to share The Amber Fort and palace along with  Jantar Mantar from my time in this finest example of an Indian planned grid city.

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The Amber Fort established in 1592 by Man Singh I is on the site of the ruins of an 11th century fort.  The palace buildings added by Jai Singh I are the magnificent centerpiece of the site. Chittorgarh may have the designation as the largest fort, but Amber Fort is the most beautiful. ImageAs we approached, we noticed a long line leading to elephant rides to go up the cobblestone walkway into the fort. We decided not to stand in line for several hours but we wanted a ride. The guide suggested an alternative plan of visiting the elephants where they live later in the day and going for a ride there.

The screen seen in the first picture with pattern design, from the palace, is to allow the ladies to see through but not be seen from the other side. Muslim architecture is filled with these simple elegant carved screens made of either stone or wood.   There is also a hall of tiny ceiling mirrors which is transformed into a starlit sky by the reflection of a single candle.  It is different from Versailles’ Hall of Mirrors but equally enchanting. Another room connected to the Audience Hall has vibrant Murano stained glass windows, imported from Venice.

As we left, we stopped for a photo of a cobra tamer.  All is safe because the snakes’ fangs have been removed. Image

We arrived at the elephants’ barn,where they were being washed and fed after their 5 trips up  and back to the fort.  The animals are treated very well as they are the handlers’ source of income. ImageMy favorite was the one painted as a tiger, but all had some decoration, gently painted on them each morning. Notice the anklets.  The price was less than $10 for a 2o minute ride.  Turns out they are all female because they are calmer.  Our ride was down a street instead of up the hill to the fort. The ride was quite bumpy and reminiscent of the bus ride we had been experiencing on the trip.ImageBut we can check elephant ride off the bucket list. It was enjoyable, but once was quite enough for us!

This is indeed India…the India of every child’s  dreams. .

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