From today's NEW YORK TIMES website:

Sam Sifton, The Times's culture editor, is answering reader questions this week about arts coverage at The Times. E-mail your question to asktheeditors@nytimes.com
Photo by Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times
From today's NEW YORK TIMES website:

Sam Sifton, The Times's culture editor, is answering reader questions this week about arts coverage at The Times. E-mail your question to asktheeditors@nytimes.com
Photo by Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times
Posted on Monday, July 09, 2007 at 07:01 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Posted on Friday, February 16, 2007 at 01:46 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)
Yesterday, The Crimson reported on their efforts to verify the rumour of Faust’s nomination. Check the last paragraph.
Faust’s whereabouts proved difficult to pin down: an evening call to her house on Brattle Street revealed that she was in Philadelphia, attending a Board of Trustees meeting at Bryn Mawr. The individual who answered the phone—possibly her husband, Harvard professor Charles Rosenberg—said he did not know when she would return to Cambridge.
Calls to Philadelphia-area hotels did not yield any confirmation of Faust’s location, and Faust’s cell phone was turned off throughout the evening. Her daughter, Jessica Rosenberg, also had her cell phone off and could not be reached at the New Yorker, where she works.
Individuals connected to the University and the search process stayed quiet as well. Several members of the Board of Overseers contacted by phone refused to comment, as did the University’s official spokesman.
Two of the other presidential search finalists—Provost Steven E. Hyman and Law School Dean Elena Kagan—kept a low profile. Hyman, whose Mass. Hall office was dark by 6:15 p.m., declined to come to the door when two Crimson reporters appeared at his house. And Kagan smiled and went into her house when approached by a reporter.
In an apparent coincidence, the Boston Symphony Orchestra is set to play Berlioz’s “Damnation de Faust” on Monday, the day after Faust is expected to be named the University’s 28th president.
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 at 04:46 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Woolly breasts appeal goes global
The breasts are a cheaper alternative to latex models
The breasts are a cheaper alternative to latex modelsA hospital which appealed for volunteers to knit fake breasts has had offers from across the world.
The woolly breasts are used by Liverpool Women's Hospital to show new mothers how to breastfeed and how to express milk.
Kate McFadden, infant feeding co-coordinator, said the response to its appeal has been "amazing".
The knitting pattern for the breasts is being made available online for volunteers to download.
The breasts are produced in a variety of skin shades and are cheaper than sourcing latex models, which cost around £35 each.
BBC NEWS | England | Merseyside | Woolly breasts appeal goes global.
Posted on Saturday, February 10, 2007 at 05:35 PM in Current Affairs, Knitting | Permalink | Comments (0)
Sad news from Russia:
Rostropovich Being Treated in Moscow Cancer Clinic By Matthew Westphal
08 Feb 2007The cellist and conductor Mstislav Rostropovich is undergoing treatment at Russia's top cancer clinic; visits are restricted and doctors are concerned about his condition.According to a report in today's edition of Komsomolskaya Pravda, the hospital to which Rostropovich was admitted two days ago is the Blokhin Cancer Center in Moscow, the nation's top oncology clinic. The paper says that, after falling seriously ill in Paris on Monday (February 5), he "refused the services" of physicians there and flew to the Russian capital the following day.
The 79-year-old maestro has undergone "a complex operation,"according to KP, and his doctors are "seriously worried" about his condition. Currently only his closest relations and associates are allowed to visit him; a special exception was made for President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.
Posted on Saturday, February 10, 2007 at 09:41 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Posted on Monday, February 05, 2007 at 05:34 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Help to reestablish hurricane-devastated New Orleans Public Library
When New Orleans' levees broke under Hurricane Katrina's storm surge, a natural disaster became an urban catastrophe. Eighty percent of the city's area was inundated by water that remained in place for weeks. Total damage to the New Orleans Public Library System is estimated at over $18 million. As New Olreans has begun to recover, the New Orleans Public Library is renewing itself as well -- helping people get the information they need to rebuild their lives. With your support, the New Orleans Public Library is coming back better than ever.
Please donate a book today!
Posted on Wednesday, April 26, 2006 at 08:27 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Help to reestablish hurricane-devastated New Orleans Public Library
When New Orleans' levees broke under Hurricane Katrina's storm surge, a natural disaster became an urban catastrophe. Eighty percent of the city's area was inundated by water that remained in place for weeks. Total damage to the New Orleans Public Library System is estimated at over $18 million. As New Olreans has begun to recover, the New Orleans Public Library is renewing itself as well -- helping people get the information they need to rebuild their lives. With your support, the New Orleans Public Library is coming back better than ever.
Please donate a book today!
Posted on Wednesday, April 26, 2006 at 01:24 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
lots of other stuff. mainly organizing -finally– my study/stash room. i seem to have a little energy today and am taking advantage of it to get the remaining boxes unpacked so that the hallway is finally free of boxes …the other half (where the bedroom is)is done. maybe photos tomorrow , too embarrassed today to show them. and then hem the other lace panel and put that up and the hall windows will be done.
this is one of the holdbacks that are now holding back the curtains (sage velvet to match the sage green walls). since the entire side of the house (its a railroad apt) faces south i needed heavy curtains for the winter wind (there are old double hung windows with LOTS of holes) and the summer sun – so i got velvet curtains on e-bay and then double lined them with that wonderful heavy blackout lining. it seemed to help this winter – i could tell the difference between the one that has the double and the one that doesn't – have to finish that one too.
and then i found beautiful lace on ebay from a wonderful ebay store in england – unhemmed panels for very reasonable prices – so did one of them in a spurt of energy awhile ago and will do the other this week (energy holding up).
My carpenter (wonderfulman!) built fabulous shelves in an old corner closet and then a beautiful extension on the side of it to extend out to the edge of the room . the shelves in the new side are done. now i have the old closet to rearrange and organize.
ok, so enough procrastination . ;o maybe photos later this week.
Posted on Tuesday, April 25, 2006 at 10:03 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)
Saturday, April 22, 2006
Nagin, Landrieu head to runoff
By Frank Donze and Gordon Russell
Staff writers, Times-Picayune
Ray Nagin, the embattled but far-from-vanquished incumbent, rolled to a surprisingly comfortable first-place finish in Saturday’s crowded New Orleans mayoral primary, finishing ahead of Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu in the first election since Hurricane Katrina’s floodwaters changed the course of the city’s history.
Nagin, who has governed under the harsh glare of an international spotlight as his crippled city struggled to regain its footing, now heads to a May 20 runoff against Landrieu, who is attempting to follow in the footsteps of his father, former Mayor Moon Landrieu, the city’s last white chief executive.
Given the city’s plight – with vast swaths of once-vital neighborhoods forlorn and empty, and tens of thousands of residents scattered across the nation eight months after the storm — the election played out before a worldwide audience. Logistics were a hurdle for candidates and voters, not to mention elections officials, who went to great lengths to ensure that displaced voters had an opportunity to cast ballots, either in person or by mail. The effort seemed to pay off as by most accounts the election went smoothly.
More than 20,000 voters took advantage of the early-voting process. It’s unclear to what degree turnout was effected by the difficulty in voting from afar, or whether many evacuees have put down roots in other communities and may no longer wish to be a part of New Orleans’ civic affairs.
This much seems clear, though: The out-of-town vote proved to be less important than some analysts initially thought possible. Turnout appeared to be remarkably high in precincts that remained dry after Katrina, and lower in those that didn’t. And while thousands of residents indeed drove long distances to the polls on a picture-perfect day, the armadas of buses some predicted would ferry voters from Houston, Atlanta and other hubs never materialized in great numbers.
A clue to the diminished significance of the diaspora came at forums held in those hubs and others. Though many candidates traveled to out-of-town debates, few voters attended most of them. And perhaps as a result, candidates didn’t pour money into out-of-state media buys at the rates some had expected.
Posted on Sunday, April 23, 2006 at 01:20 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 at 08:09 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

You're Anna Karenina of Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy!
Take this quiz!
Posted on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 at 01:06 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Aftermath of Dreaming
by DeLaune Michel
Other than the little problem that she wakes up screaming in the middle of the night, things are going great for Yvette Broussard. Her jewelry design career is taking off, she's back with her sort-of boyfriend, and best of all, she no longer thinks about her once-in-a-lifetime love, international movie star Andrew Madden. Until a chance encounter with him changes everything.
Swept up by memories of her estranged father, and juggling the demands of her bride-to-be sister and her male best friend who is jealous of other men, Yvette is plunged into an obsession with Andrew which ultimately forces her to confront the past she thought she had left behind. Set against the glittering worlds of Los Angeles and New York, Aftermath of Dreaming explores with both humor and pathos the universal themes of abandonment and forgiveness in a knockout debut that's sure to be one of the most talked about books of the season.
Read an excerpt
Read reviews here
BUY THE BOOK from an independent bookstore through BookSense, Amazon, or Barnes & Noble.
DeLauné Michel was raised in south Louisiana in a literary family that includes her uncle André Dubus, her mother Elizabeth Nell Dubus, and her cousin James Lee Burke. She has worked as an actor in theater, television, and film. The first two stories Ms. Michel wrote won recognition by the Thomas Wolf Short Fiction Award, and later work won the Pacificus Foundation Literary Award. Her first novel, Aftermath of Dreaming, will be published by William Morrow in April of 2006. She is currently working on her second novel which will be published by them, as well.
She is the founding producer of Spoken Interludes, a salon-style reading series where award-winning, best-selling, and up-coming writers read their own work. Through Spoken Interludes, she developed, has taught in, and continues to run outreach writing programs for at-risk teenagers. Ms. Michel's husband, Dan Fried, is an owner of H & H Photography Studio which specializes in event photography. If you would like to see their work, please visit their website. Ms. Michel lives in Westchester County, New York with her husband and son.
Posted on Saturday, April 08, 2006 at 04:00 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
the good news – its not the flu.
why is that good news? three weeks sick? this is NOT the flu
but the bad news – its not the flu.
its no fun when your body fails you.
at least for my sanity i have knitting, TCM, NetFlix, Audible and all those operas i have recorded over the years that i can listen to … and my two cats who seem thrilled that i am home otherwise i will be mad very soon.
Posted on Thursday, March 16, 2006 at 12:46 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
have been sick with the flu since last tuesday. it was Friday before i could sit up and do anything other than lie on the sofa and watch mindless TV [ yes you know you do too] caught up with four months of saved to DVR episodes of Gilmore Girls. (ok so i want to grow up to be loreli gilmore)
sad to miss Mary Dunleavy's role debut in Violetta at the MET on Friday night
Really had wanted to see it. but from some posts on Opera-L it seems to have gone exceedingly well which is grand for Mary deserves to be singing more at the MET than some other people whom I could name.
do whatever you can to not catch this - its a bad one.
Posted on Saturday, February 25, 2006 at 07:51 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
ok so its not an earth shattering topic of concern – except when you are confronted with a long length of lace and make a curtain and then… how long do you make it?
Lace in the Victorian Era go there and read the current thinking THEN… . as this is a house built in that time period but i dont really want to deal with loops and pleats and all forms of top dressings, i think i am going to go with the glass curtain idea and make them the length of the bottom windowsill – these are hanging in the hallway anyway and will be exposed to a lot of traffic and dust, etc.
so wish me luck while i go and cut! yikes!
Posted on Monday, February 13, 2006 at 08:51 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
yesterday was beautifully scary – my cats were incredibly amazed – glued to the windows – there are quite a few here – and staring at the white stuff – i don't think they have seen this much snow ever!
my backyard looks like a fairy land – i had cleaned up the patio on Saturday in anticipation of the storm. well, kinda moved things around in smaller piles and raked the leaves. cleared off the table of all the pieces of leftover wood from our various carpentry projects of the fall – saving them for blocks for my nephews to play with when it gets warmer – put safely in a heavy plastic bag. and closed all the folding lawn chairs up and leaned them against the kitchen wall.
moved the last boxes out of the music room down to the basement – now i just have to figure out where to hang all my pictures and where to put all the hooked rugs. still have to finish unpacking the study and the katchkas but i hung lace curtains over the kitchen sink window yesterday and with the white out in the yard – its very pretty.
today i am at home dealing with the latest in the household drama - forget not having a porch light to come home to at 930 at night when i get off work, and a front door lock that works half time, today i get to wait for the plumber all day - i don't trust my landlord any more… sigh.
off to hem some lace for curtains for the two hall windows- at least my windows can look pretty if i don't (no hot water and what’s coming out is ORANGE!).
Posted on Monday, February 13, 2006 at 05:28 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
i had a great day on Saturday – one of those lovely days when i practiced all day – 45–60 mins at a stretch and then would take a break and do a little chore or eat or read email or whatever.
and then yesterday i guess i felt guilty and spent the day and night doing a lot of chores and other stuff and dealing with the detritus of life – still unpacking the last boxes – the desk/study stuff – its taking me much longer than i thought
but also was in a rotten mood – partly due to the fact that i knew that there was all this STUFF to do and i kept doing it and wishing i could spend the day at the piano again.
and then i over slept the alarm this morning and woke in a really bad mood - and realized – i feel sick. ah ha the reason for the bad mood on Sunday and this morning.
i do not like to be sick.
it messes up my schedule - and with only a few hours to practice in the morning and THATS IT FOLKS if i miss them i am screwed for that days music. so when the week starts its a roller coaster til Saturday.
but yet i realized it . a big step for me. usually i just get angry and stay that way but lately i am working on stopping and analysing whats actually happening. Nine times is me and my attitude. and then i can handle whatever the issue/situation is that i THOUGHT i was angry about.
hmm.
so today i gave myself a break – i am going in an hour later – took a long hot shower to help the migraine (thats why i don't feel good – its the start of one and they always make me feel really icky). took my medicine and ate some yogurt (about all i could handle) and read some work email – it helps so that i am not hit with issues/problems when i walk in; even made a phone call to my carpenter about some work that needed to be done and was able to handle the conversation in a calm manner.
and now off to work, even feeling crappy.
A really good thing to report – I found the RECEIPT* for my BROKEN IPOD with the applecare info etc !!!! so i can either send it in (NOT) or take it to the SOHO store and REPLACE IT…. there will be joy in mudville soon!
*see there is a reason to be packrat!
Posted on Monday, January 30, 2006 at 10:40 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
too much happened last week…. a visit from my mom up from Louisiana – my two nephews’ bdays(thu and fri) - off from work to sightsee etc with mom .
Visited Met Museum – Fra Angelico (saw all the originals in Florence but its still a lovely exhibit ) , French Drawings from the British Museum – more on both later.
saw Elaine Stritch Live at the Carlyle (82 ? cant be!) – Andrea Marcovvici at the Algonquin (all Fred Astaire – fabulous!) – Goode and Budapest at Carnegie Hall (incredible energy ) – TWO nights of NYCB (the last SWAN LAKE and a great 3 of 4 Balanchine evening including the fantastic Symphony in C).
and then a birthday party for the two nephews and 14 of their friends and parents on sunday – and then i crashed last night.
back to a normal schedule this week - except i am so wired i am still up …. got up at 630 am and practiced 2 hours this morning – decided on a new Mozart (YEAH) more later and reviewed Bach.
NO STUCK KEYS! yahoo! more about the piano tuners comments anon.
and now that alarm will be ringing soon so off to snooze
Posted on Tuesday, January 24, 2006 at 01:43 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
This weekend, I am organizing my study - its been a long time since i had a room dedicated to my office/knitting/sewing/hobbies - the first apt i had in manhattan - on the upper west side on 109th st many years ago when it was TOTALLY UNSAFE for three white girls to leave there - but we were fairly broke - i had the front two rooms of a railroad - the front room i turned into a study with a mirror and ballet barre along one wall and a wall of steel bookcases and then a big butcher block table (which i STILL have) on wheels (thanks to a sweet stagehand at the Met where i was working) and it was great - of course i wasnt knitting then.
The next apt was a studio and then two small tiny one bedrooms - now in this six room railroad - i have a study/studio/office finally - its the last room to do as you can imagine its the hardest because of all the stuff - paperwork, knitting mags, gardening mags, home improv mags, opera mags, sewing supplies, yarn, yarn and more yarn. and lots of other stuff.
i had ordered some lovely bookcases from Gothic Cabinet Craft and they came sat am. look great. my great and lovely carpenter had put up standard/bracket shelves on one wall and we convereted an existing closet by adding shelves and then he built out onto the side of the closet - out to the edge of the room - more shelves - and then an long additional shelf across the front of the room (its one of the interior rooms that has the "hallway" along the outside wall i have created two interior rooms - a bedroom with a sleeping loft and walkin closet underneath and then this study - by using bookcases i had to create the "fourth wall" so when you look from the front room or the back room down the hallway you will see bookcases and louvred doors that my carpenter suggested we do - its really very nicely done but it wasnt cheap . but it will be worth it - i dont see leaving anytime soon - my last apt i was there 15 years and thought i would be there 1!
anyway, as is my usual method - i spent most of yesterday afternoon rearranging the bookcases so that they would be in the best spot - and i have two lower bookcases which will go under the wall shelves - so now i am in the "lets figure out where to put everything"
i was going to put the yarn in baskets on the top of the bookcases but they dont really work well as they are open - so until i buy the rubbermaid storage bins - i will use the boxes they are in now. cotton will go down into the basement and the wool will stay up here with cedar in them. i am getting my carpenter back this week to put some boards on the other side of the top of the bookcases to close off that top section and then the plastic bins wont be in view.
i must have been a bear or a kangaroo in a previous life - i love small enclosed spaces. and usually nest in them very effectively. i dont know what i would do with a real house with real rooms and lots of space - it would be overwhelming for me i think. i have lived in such small apts for all my adult life - since i left home after college - dont know if i will ever get a house of my own. oh well. this is fine for now - the biggest space i have had on my own.
ok back to work. photos and progress report later!
Posted on Monday, January 16, 2006 at 12:16 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)